| Colonel
Edward Tuite Dalton Soldier - Anthropologist 1815 - 1880 |
Report on the Mutiny in Chota Nagpur Home Background Context The Book References Maps Bibliography
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This Report was found in the possession of the Tuite Dalton family. It is Edward's account of the Mutiny of Chota Nagpur that took place in 1857.
Below the links to the Report pages is an extract taken from http://chatra.nic.in/history.htm.
This gives another perspective on the events.

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http://chatra.nic.in/history.htm Chatra,
the gateway of Jharkhand particularly of Chotanagpur, has a glorious
past having an eminent historical heritage. The land has been the
silent spectator of the vicissitudes of the historical unfolding of
human drama. ANCIENT CHATRA
It is stated that during Asoka's reign i.e. 232 B.C. the "Atavi"
or the forest states too acknowledged the supermacy of the Magadhan
Empire. It is said that Samudra Gupta marching through Chotanagpur
directed the first attack against the kingdom of south Kaushal in the
During Tughlaq's reign, Chatra
came in contact with Delhi Sultanate. Daud Khan, the Mughal Governor
of Bihar, during the reign of Aurangzeb occupied Kothi Fort on 5th May
1660 A.D. without much opposition and then he moved towards the fort
of Kunda which had a very strong fortification as it was situated on a
hilltop.This fort was finally occupied
by him and was completely destroyed on the 2nd of June, 1660
A.D. Kunda Fort was under the possession of Ramgarh Raja in the 17th
century. Aliwardi Khan advanced towards Kunda in 1734 A.D. after
defeating the rebel Zamindars of Tikari( MODERN PERIOD
The British, for the first time, came in contact with these regions in
1769 A.D. It is interesting to note that Raja Ram Mohan Roy,
the prominent social reformer, worked as a 'Sirishtedar' at
Chatra in 1805-06 and lived both at Chatra and Ramgarh in this
capacity.
Chatra offers another fascinating chapter in the history of national
movement in
The inscription informs: "56 men of Her Majesty's 53rd Regiment
of foot and a party of sikhs were killed at Chatra on
On the other hand the inscription on the bank of the Phansi Talab
immortalises the two revolutionary subedars as hereunder:
"JAY MANGAL PANDEY NADIR ALI,
DONO SUBEDAR REY,
DONO MILKAR PHANSI CHARHE,
HARJEEVAN TALAAB REY. NATIONAL MOVEMENT The national movement picked up momentum in 1921 . One of the most striking features of 1942-- Quit India Movement, was the escape of Shri Jay Prakash Narayan along with six other from The Hazaribagh Central Jail on |
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CHATRA THROUGH THE AGES |
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It
would be surprising, rather shocking, to note that the present Chatra
district was the Divisional administrative headquarters of south Bihar
and it continued to be in the glorious position for about fifty four
years, but the declining trend in prosperity started; it was reduced
to a subdivision and is the silent spectator of the vicissitudes it
has seen from the earliest time to the present day.
Chatra, the gateway of the Jharkhand, particularly of Chotanagpur lies
on a comparatively level tract of land between the
upper plateau of Hazaribagh and the tangled mass of rock and
ravine from Gaya and the Gangetic valley to the south and west of
Chotangpur. It is 43 miles north-west of Hazaribagh and 48 miles
south-west of Gaya and 90 miles from Ranchi in the North-west. It is
at a height of 1400 feet from the sea level and is connected with the
railway at Koderma railway station by metalled road. It is linked
with G.T.Road at two points i.e. Dobhi 30 miles North & Chauparan
30 miles east which leads to Barhi (12miles) on the G.T.Road. The
G.T.Road was the most important means of military communication
between the lower provinces and the north of India from 1780 to 1858. Ancient
Chatra :- It is
stated that during Asoka's reign i.e. 232 B.C. the " Atavi "
or the forest states too acknowledged the supremacy of the Magadhan
Empire and this may justify the conclusion that Chotanagpur was
included in the Mauryan Empire, at least in his (Ashoka's) reign.
There was frequent intercourse between Kashi (Varanasi) and Hazaribagh.
Parshvanath, the 23rd Trithankara, attained 'Nirvana' at the summit of
the Parasnath Hill in the 8th century
B.C. Swami Shitla , the 10th jain Tirthankara got 'Nirvana' at the
hill of Kolhua (Kauleshwari hill in Hunterganj) in about 10 or 12th
century B.C. It is a place of
pilgrimage for the Hindus and it is considered to be of Hindu origin.
Dr. M.A. Stein visited Kolhua Hill in 1900 A.D. and he was satisfied
with his observations of its Jain-origin. The Jains built it and
venerated it as the 'birth place' of Swami Shitla, the 10th
Trithankara and continued to pay homage here till about 1867 A.D. It
is ironical to note that it is now quite unknown to the ordinary Jains
and is believed to be associated with the Pandvas.
The top of the hill is quite distinctive and is known as Akash Lochan
(Sky eye).There are some ancient temples of 'Kali' or 'Kauleshwari
Devi'. On Basant Panchami and Ram Navmi every year, a large number of
pilgrims visit the hill top to worship and sacrifice of goats in front
of the temple is common.
In a cave, there is a small image which is now worshipped by the
Hindus. The image is clearly that of Parshvanath with a hood over the
head. When it is observed closely the hood looks like the hoods of
several serpents. The 'Dhyani Mudra' image of Parshvanath, with
snake-hood over the head is common. The Jain relics at Kolhua hill are
of Digambar Jains.
Bhaduli is another important historcal place of Chatra which is 22
miles away on the north-west of Chatra on the Chatra - Chauparan road
only a few hundred meters from
the Itkhori Block. It has Budhist relics; there is an image of
'Sahasra Lingam Shiva' at the top of which there is a cavity where
water percolates and it is not known to anybody as to where it comes
from. There is an inscription on the pedestal of the idol.
An ancient temple of Goddess 'Kali' is still existent there. These
temple ruins have not been scientifically tested which would have
thrown some light on the date of Hindu immigration into Chai (a
village of Itkhori ) Medieval
Period :- To the Muhammadan historians the whole
of Chotanagpur was in the tract
which they knew as the Jharkhand or the forest country. It remained
practically independent through out the Turko-Afghan period (1206 to
1526 A.D.) in India. The Rohtas fortress was the farthest limit of
actual penetration made by them towars it.
Shams-i-Shiraz Afif the author of Tarikh-i-Firoz Shahi enlivens us
that Firoz shah Tughlaque after his second campaign against Bengal
(1359-1360) proceeded
towards the Rai of Jai Nagar (Modern Orissa) from Jaunpur and coming
to terms with the said Rai returned by some route through Jharkhand.
Dr. Qanungo opines that Shershah threatened his way to Rohtas through
the jungles of Jharkhadn as best he could (second attack on Gaur
(Bengal) 1538 A.D.)The Ain-i-Akbari informs us that Chotanagpur or
Kukra pradesh was included in the suba of Bihar with the advent of
Akbar on the throne of India in 1556. A new chapter was opened
in the history of Chotanagpur. Alamgir
- Namah enlivens us that kothi lies 25 kos (50 miles) and kunda at the
distance of 7 kos(14 miles) from palamu,Daud Khan the Mughal governer
of Bihar during the reign of Aurangzeb occupied Kothi on 5th may 1660
without much opposition. He then moved towars the fort of Kunda which
had a very strong opposition being situated on a hill. This fort came
to be occupied and was completely destroyed on 3rd June 1660. Daud
Khan stayed here during the rainy season. He also built fortified
encampments at short intervals between kothi and kunda forts in each
of which he placed a garrison. A personal servant of Aurangzeb named
Ram Singh a descendant of Garhwal Rajput of Bundel Khand was granted
" thane dari jagir" by Daud khan and Mangal khan in the
Fasli year 1076 i.e. 1669 A.D. for the care and guarding of the roads
. The analogy of Garhwal would suggest that he was a chieftain of a
locally predominent race 'Kharwar'.
Kendi situated in the Chatra p.s. was in the possession of Ramgarh
Rajas in the 17th century. At about1770 A.D. Kendi was reduced by
Muhemmadans to the position of Zamindari and the earliest available
information shows that one Nahir Singh was the proprietor at the
beginning of the 18th
century and his son Fateh Singh was making khorposh (maintenance grant
in 1783 A.D.) Chai was subjugated by Mukund Singh of Ramgarh (1770
A.D.) and was partitioned amongst the chieftains of whom apparently
four paid tribute to the fifth Raja Lakhan of Jagodih. Mention is made
of Chai & Champa in the Ain-i-Akbari as assessed to revenue as a
post of Suba Bihar but perhaps this simply indicated Kendi. Latter
Mughal Pediod :- After the death of Aurangzeb in 1707
the Mughal Empire almost collapsed and Muhammad Shah was the Regent of
the Mughal Empire from 1719 to 1748. Sir Buland Khan the then governor
of Bihar who attacked chotanagpur in 1724 and was back after taking a
huge wealth and diamonds. According to Shitab Rai Fugairud-daula
proceeded for kunda (Hazaribagh) in 1730. The new Governor of Bihar
Aliwardi Khan advanced towars kunda in 1734 after defeating the
rebellious zamindars of Tikari (Gaya). He attakced the Chatra fort and
the fort was demolished. Ghatwal Bishun Singh of Ramgarh Rajya and
Aliwardi Khan possessed Rs. 12000/-
form Ramgarh and Rs. 5000/- from Palamu and for sometime
Ramgarh and Palamu Raj was handed over to Tikari and Senaut.
In 1740 A.D. Aliwardi Khan the Governor of Bihar Bengal & Orissa
again sent an expedition against Ramgarh in the command of Hidayat Ali
Khan , Jai Kishan Singh the Raja
of Palamu and
Siros, the Zamindar of Kutumba and Sherghati Sunder Singh was with
Hidayat Ali Khan. They
subdued the Ramgarh Raja and the Chatra fort of Ramgarh Raja was
conquered (See Bihar through the ages p. 503 and P.C. Roy Choudhury
1857 in Bihar , Ramgarh Raj.) . There is no trace of the fort of
Chatra now, but a Mohalla Dibha known as Garh par in Chatra proper is
said to be the place where the fortress was erected. At two points
" Surang " underground path is traceable and "garh
par" is situated on a height and the road which leads to
Karbala(Chatra) via Chhath Talab is downward. At " Khancha Dabar"
(Dibha) some statues of Hindu dieties are to be found,Scattered and
unidentified. Modern
Period :- The
year 1765 A.D. opens a new epoch in the history of Chotanagpur as on
12th of August 1765. Emperor Shah Alam II granted the Diwani of
Bengal,Bihar and Orissa to the East India Company. As Chotanagpur
forms a part of Bihar the East India Company was entitled to recieve
tribute or Ramgarh, Kharagdiha,Kendi and Kunda. The Britishers for the
first time came in contact of these regions in 1769 and captain Camac
first subdued the Rajas
of Kharagdiha and Kunda. In 1771. He was the Military collector of
Ramgarh district which was comprised of Nagpur, Palamu, and the
present district of Hazaribagh and its headquarter was at Chatrfa.In
1780 captain Camac was succeeded by (Captain Heatley & the latter
by captain Ramus - Military Collector ship) Mr. Chapman, was the first
Civilian administator of chotanagpur " The conquered
province". Mr. Chapman acted as a judge , a magistrate and a
collector of revenue, his court was alternatlely held at Sherghati and
Chatra, and his authority was enforced by the newly formed Ramgarh
Battalion which was stationed at Hazaribagh.
In the year 1799 a Munsif was appointed for the first time and
was staioned at Chatra. Ranchi settlement, Report indicates that in
the year 1778, an establishment of five companies of sepoy was odered
to be staioned at Chatra where the collector of Ramgarh resided for
use in the district under his control. There was a vigorous apposition
by the merchants of Chatra on the proposal of W.Hunter, the Judge
Magistrate of Ramgarh for shifting of the administative headquarter
from Chatra to Ichak (42 miles west of Vishnugarh & 6 miles north
of the Silwar Dawk-station).
Governor General in Council thought it proper that the district
be continued to remain at Chatra (Ramgarh Collecotr's Despatch
Register no.6 page. 126)) and thus Chatra continued
to be the district headquarters of Chatra or Ramgarh Zila from
1771 to 1833 A.D.
It is also interesting to note that Raja Ram Mohan Roy the
father of Modern India worked as a sub-registrar at Chatra in 1805-6
A.D. and lived both at Chatra and Ramgarh in this capacity. When Mr.
William Digbay was tranferred to Bhagalpur he took Ram Mohan Roy with
him to his new place of Assignment. The old stone building housing the
Sub-treasury and Sub-registrar's office was the same building where
Raja Ram Mohan Roy worked some 195 years ago, which has been shifted
near by. The old banyan tree standing infront of the office of the
S.D.O. and Subtreasury is a mute witness to that historical glory of
Chatra which it possessed. Hand written documents of Raja Ram Mohan
Roy are to be found in the record room of the regristry office in
Hazaribagh.
There was KOL Rebellion in 1831 against the Britishers which
rocked the very foundatiuons of the English rule in chotanagpur. The
results of this rebellion were far reaching in the administrative
annals of Chotanagpur as the Ramgarh Zila was passed into a
administrative control of the south western Frontier Agency with its
headquarters at Ranchi. Chatra lost its past glories but something was
compensated in the year 1914 when Chatra was made a sub-divisional
headquarters of the Hazaribagh district.
Chatra offers another fascinating chapter in the history of
freedom movement in Bihar . Just behind the State Bnak of India,
Chatra Branch, there is a tank named ' Mangal Talao' and popularly
known as 'Phansi Talab' where Sahid Park is made. It is here Jai
Mangal Pandey and Nadir Ali Khan the two Subedars were hanged on a
near by Mango tree during the great glorious rebellion of 1857. There
is one pillar construction on the eastern bank of the said Talao(pond)
where there is an inscription of a local poem immortalising the two
sepoys :
"JAY MANGAL PANDEY NADIR ALI
DONO SUBEDAR RE
DONO MILKAR PHANSI CHARHE
HARJIVAN TALAB RE
The most important engagement fought between the insurgents and
the British Chotanagpur during the Mutiny of 1857 was the battle of
Chatra. The two detachments of the 8th N.I.staioned at Hazaribagh
broke into rebellion at 1.00 P.M. on 30th July 1857. Captain Dalton
reoccupied Hazaribagh on 23rd September 1857 though stiffly resisted
for the two month. They decided to leave the province by way to
Chatra to join Babu Kunwar Singh of Bhojpur (Jagdishpur) who
had rebelled against the Britishers at the age of eighty and had taken
a vow drive them out from India. On the way a local zamindar Bhola
Singh joined them and the mutineeres reached Chatra via Kuru, Chandwa
and Balumath.
At Chatra they were attacked by a mixed force consisting of a
portion of the 53rd Regiment of British troops and a detachment (
of 150) of Rattray's Sikh , numbering in all 320 men.
Definitely they were surprised but they took up a strong position on
the brow of a hill.
The hill is known as 'Kalipahari' two miles south west of
Chatra. The small but locally important and decisive battle of Chatra
was fought on 2 October 1857 near
Chatra Jail (Mangal Talab). The Victoria cross Lieutenant J.C.C.
Daunt of the 70th Bengal Native Infantry and sergeant Dynon of the
53rd Foot are stated to have acted with " conspicious gallantry
in capturing two guns by pistolling the gunners, who were moving down
the detachment with grape". Seventy seven bodies of mutineers
were buried in one pit on the 3rd October 1857 and a large number of
them were wounded and their arms and ammunitions were captured that
some external assistance to the mutineers was suspected Major English
asked for one hundred men from Calcutta as "the guns will have to
be dragged across many swamps and the road is very difficult". (Hazaribagh
old Racord P.C. Roy p.102).
The Rebellions were crushed mercilessly. Jai Managal Pandey and
Nadir Ali Khan subedar of the Battalion were caught and brought before
simpson on 3rd October 1857 and were sentenced to death on 4th October
1857 under the provision of the act of XVII of 1857.
A little away from Chatra town - say one K.m. away there is one
village behind the Divisional Forest Office near Catholic Ashram,
where an old cemetry over grown with bushes still bears testimony to
the heroic battle fought by about 30 sepoys of against the Britishers
during the sepoy mutiny in 1857. The inscription on the cemetry says
that the Battalion of the army men had to be brought from Ramgarh
Cantt. to destroy barely 20 sepoys during the great Mutiny. The
inscription runs as follows.:-
In the grave are buried
The British chroniclers have given a very perverted account of
what is known as the 'MUTINY of 1857' in Chotanagpur which needs
exploration and probe as the movement was very popular, wide spread
and acute. National
Movement :- On
December 12th 1912 Bihar and Orissa and Chotanagpur were seperated
from Bengal by a Royal Proclamation to form a separate provice under
a lieutenant General in Council. In Nov. 1914 Chatra
Subdivision was formed with Chatra as its headquarter. Orissa was
separated from Bihar in 1936.
The national movement picked up momentum in Bihar in 1921. Dr.
Rajendra Prasad the first
President of free India visited Hazaribagh the same year and addressed
a meeting at Chatra and Hazaribagh, there was also a move to boycott
the local Schools.National schools were started at Chatra , Hazaribagh
and Dhanwar, but these schools collapsed due to financial hardships.
One of the most striking feature of 1942 i.e. Quit India
Movement was the escape of Shree Jai Prakash Narayan and seven others
from the Hazaribagh
Central Jail. Here notable congress leaders were lodged on the Night
of Diwali (9th Nov.1942) Jai Prakash Narayan
escaped from the Jail and came to Tatra ( a village of Chatra).
All efforts for their detection failed.
Chotanagpur Keshri Babu Ram Narayan Singh of p.s.Hunterganj
fought bravely and gave stiff resistance to the Britishers and
took rest only after driving them out of India (1947). And now
Chatra has become a district of Bihar
since July 1991.
The
Revolt of 1857 began in the tribal and hilly area of Chotanagpur on 30
July when the sepoys stationed at Hazaribagh rose in revolt and all
the Europeans deserted that station. The soldiers of the Ramgarh
battalion stationed at Doranda, near Ranchi, sent to control the
situation at Hazaribagh, themselves revolted in the way and returned
to their station, making Ranchi and Doranda, the two newly created
townships, the centre of their revolt .The Commissioner of the
Chotanagpur Division,E.T.Dalton,left Ranchi along with other Europeans
and remained at Bagodar ,Barhi and Hazaribagh for about seven weeks.
Meanwhile the rebels plundered the treasury and burnt houses at
Hazaribagh and Ranchi both . They also tried to enlist the support of
the local zamindars .As Dalton and others were frantically seeking
reinforcements from Calcutta , the British rule in Chotanagpur seemed
to have ended.
It is only with the arrival of the Madrasis and the Sikhs in
September that the local authorities could do something to restore the
order.
As F.B.Bradley-Birt says,"The five hundred Madrasis and
the detachment of Her Majesty's 53rd Foot must have been a welcome
sight as they came up the Grand Trunk Road."1
But before these troops could act,the Hazaribagh and Ranchi
mutineers had left these stations and Colonel Fisher lamented on 24
September that "the Ramgarh mutineers ,with their guns,are
,moving about in a small
province,and not an official,civil and military,can tell where they
are to be found."2
On 11 September the rebels left Doranda and at Chutia they were
joined by a zamindar named Bhola Singh.Then through Kuru and Chandawa
they reached Chatra,presumably to march further to Rohatasgarh to join
the rebel chief Kunwar Singh of Jagdishpur in Shahabad (west Bihar).3
Since the rebels have not left any written account we have to
rely on the records of the English East India Company which often
gives a blurred picture
of the movements and actions of the rebels.So we do not know much
about how they reached Chatra,forty miles away from Hazaribagh.4
Dalton sent 150 men of the 53rd Food of the British Army and 50
of Rattray's Sikhs under Major English in pursuit of the rebels. At
Hazaribagh they were joined by Captain J.Simpson ,the Deputy
Commissioner of that district,5 and then they moved towards the
rebels.
According to the statement of Jaimangal Singh before Simpson,
when the rebels reached Chatra their leader,Madhav Singh a
Jamadar,seized the local Mahant's horse and tried to rob him off.But
as they heard of the arrival of the European and Sikh forces in a
neighbouring village Dhoree , they thought this was a rumour6 and
continued with their Robinhood syndrome as well as the shooting
practice of their new recruits from Bhojpur and elsewhere , According
to Simposon , their want of behalf in the approach of the English army
proved must fatal.
By 30 September the Comapy's forces under Major English headed
towards Chatra and when the rebels were convinced that a class was
inevitable they took up" a strong position" in the western
part of this town' with the whole city on their east, the narrow
streets which could not
be passed through ' without endangering the small British forces. The
rebel army led by the former subadars
and jamadars of the Ramgarh battalion and a few
zamindars, knew fully well the geopolits of the area and stationed
themselves at a place of strategic importance. The road to the town
was over a bridge and there were"deep rice fields"to the
north of the bridge, making it difficult for the company's forces
"to pass with rapidity" However due to the suddenness of the
English attack the rebels who were plundering the city could not join
the main body of the rebel force.
Major Smith who was somewhat familiar with the area drew up a
rough plan of the Chatra town and its approach on the basis of which
Major English decided to launch the attack after rounding the south of
the city and coming opposite the position of the rebels near the old
jail.
According to an official estimate the total number of the
rebels at the Chatra encounter was 3,000 and the English side had
Rattray's Sikhs from Burhee and Hazaribagh in all 320 rank and file
form the 53rd regiment as well as from the Bengal police battalion.10
The advanced guards located the main body of the rebels on the
heights and immediately the skirmishers got to the north across a
narrow belt of rice ground and engaged the rebels. The Enfield
rifle ball
discharged at a distance of 900 yards proved effective and the
rebels immediately reped by around shot fired towards the
approaching English army . But since the Europeans and the Sikhs had
almost crossed the rice fields not much harm was done to them
.However, a horse was killed and its owner had to advance on foot.
After crossing the rice fields the Europeans moved by the east
of the village Kulotia and Lt Earle commanding the Sikhs with Major
T.Simpson and some men,proceeded through the hamlet and came near the
rebel force . The Europeans were already "hotly engaged with the
rebels at the tops of trees".11
A
large number of the rebels now rushed up in a "skirmishing
order" advancing on the rear of the Company's forces. Simpson
immediately warned the Sikhs of the imminent danger and they took up a
position in the grove and " fired steadily upon the enemy,
killing and wounding some 7 including a former Jamadar with a blue
coat12.
On the English side 56 men were killed and wounded 46 Europeans
and 10 Sikhs.15 the wounds of some of the Europeans were so severe
that four of them had to undergo amputation. Later more than a hundred
men on the government side were hospitalised. On the rebel side 150
died 77 bodies were buried in one pit alone on 3 October and the
number of the wounded was very large, about a hundred found lying in
the jungle. Many of the wounded who had somehow escaped form the
battle field were captured and brought by the rural police(Chaukidars
and Dafadars) and the villagers. Many rebels fled towards Sherghati
after throwing their arms which were picked up by the government's
men.
The clash, one of the biggest in 1857 in Bihar, had lasted one
hour and the rebels completely defeated and routed. Four guns with the
wagons, ten elephants, all the ammunitions and several boxes
containing the looted government treasure and other articles were
captured.16
Simpson spoke highly of the conduct of the troops under Major
English in this battle: the cool intrepidity of the detachment of Her
Majesty's 53rd with every officer attached to in, well seconded in the
attack by the Sikhs under lieut. Earle and the excellent arrangements
of Major English and his staff rendered success certain and although
it has been achieved at (a) considerable loss, yet the object gained
has been great."17
Two Victoria Crosses were won-on by Lt.Daunt of the 7oth Bengal N.1
and the other by sergeant Dynon of the British 53rd foot for
"conspicuous gallantry in capturing two guns by pistolling the
gunners who were moving down the English detachment"18
Such was the impression created by the rebels that L.E.W.O
Brien,the 3rd Assistant in charge, informed Calcutta through
Lt.Stanton on the electric telegraph form Sherghati that Major English
did not feel "strong enough to escort "the captured articles
through the surrounding jungles which werre full of disbanded sepoys
and plunderers'19 He
wanted 10 men more for he had only 25 Sikhs with with him at Sherghati
and he was to march to Chatra with a detachment on the Europeans to
help in bringing in the captured ammunition. In another
message Major English reiterated that his party was "very
weak" to carry the wounded and the guns etc"20
Soon the Company's side changed
its camp from the west of Chatra to Kalapahari, two miles away,
because they could not stand the offensive smell of the corpses strewn
at the battle ground. Two Subadars of the Ramgarh battalion, Jai
Mangal Pandey and Nadir Ali ,who had led the assault at Chatra, were
captured in the jungle on the 3rd, tried under the provisions of the
Act XVII of 1857 and Simpson in his capacity of the Commissioner under
this act, sentenced them to death "on the very ground where they
had made such an exemplary resistance to the British troops two days
previously.'21
The statement 22
of these martyrs sent to Calcutta by the Commissioner, are quite
revealing. Jagatpal Singh, the Lal of Salgi, was in close touch with
his uncle-in-law Kunwar Singh of Shahabad. According to Simpson, eight
of the sepoys of the two companies of the 8th regiment native infantry
who mutinied at Hazaribagh, had joined the chief of Salgi " to
keep up the excitement and spirit of rebellion" already
engendered in the Ramgarh Light Infantry by the machinations of
Jamadar Madho Singh" at Doranda and Ranchi.
The Jamadar Madho (Madhav) Singh escaped from the Chatra battle
and even though a reward of Rs. 1,000 was declared on this prime-over
of the rebellion in Ranchi, like Nana Saheb of Kanpur, he could never
be traced.
The two other rebel leaders, Thakur Bishwanath Sahi of
Barkagarh and Pandey
Ganpat Rai, a former Diwan of the Chotanagpur estate, also escaped and
the Thakur's planquin and two personal servants were found
in the jungle .Sahi returned
to his zamindari in the Lohardaga district, collected a large
number of men, plundered several villages ,burnt the government thana
at Barwa and with 1,100 men proceeded to attack the lohardaga town
when he was captured and all his property confiscated .His associate
Pandey was also arrested and both of them were sentenced to death in a
summary trial and hanged on the trees at Ranchi in April 1858.
This shows that even after the Chatra defeat ,some leading
lights among the rebels were not disheartened; they only shifted the
scene of their operation. As P.C Roy Choudhury remarks
,the English victory at Chatra "crushed the movement in
the Hazaribagh district"24
but the rebels in other areas were not at all cowed down.
After all mere courage could not bring success to the rebels
against a well organised army ,but there is no doubt that the Chatra
engagement was "a grim fight" with a "terrible blood
shed on either side "25
However the support given to the British side by the inhabitants of
Chatra is surprising indeed .The mahajans who had been
plundered at the orders of Bhola singh Baraik of Chutia ,captured the
latter ,shut him in a room and starved him to death.26
In view of the seizure of a large amount of ammunitions at
Chatra Simpson suspected that besides the ones plundered at Doranda
the rebels might have other sources of supply. Moreover, small coins
and a chest of opium were also recovered from the rebels.
While transmitting Simpson's report on the Chatra clash Dalton
rejoiced that" nothing could have been more favourable to the
through re-establishment of the authority of Government and the speedy
restoration of order than the circumstance under which the mutineers
were signally defeated. Since the rebels had brought in their service
hundreds of the labourers of the various regions of the Chotanagpur
division who saw the defeat of the rebel force with their own eyes,
the news spread like wild fire and had " a dampening effect"
on the villagers near by. Dalton called the success at Chatra
"brilliant" and expected "most important results."
The Chatra encounter, he hoped, would have the way for the restoration
of peace at Doranda (Ranchi). On this point he was right, but the
other areas of his division, especially Singhbhum, soon saw a bigger
conflagration than had occurred before the Chatra battle.
In the year 1799 a Munsif was appointed for the first time and
was staioned at Chatra. Ranchi settlement, Report indicates that in
the year 1778, an establishment of five companies of sepoy was odered
to be staioned at Chatra where the collector of Ramgarh resided for
use in the district under his control. There was a vigorous apposition
by the merchants of Chatra on the proposal of W.Hunter, the Judge
Magistrate of Ramgarh for shifting of the administative headquarter
from Chatra to Ichak (42 miles west of Vishnugarh & 6 miles north
of the Silwar Dawk-station).
Governor General in Council thought it proper that the district
be continued to remain at Chatra (Ramgarh Collecotr's Despatch
Register no.6 page. 126)) and thus Chatra continued
to be the district headquarters of Chatra or Ramgarh Zila from
1771 to 1833 A.D.
It is also interesting to note that Raja Ram Mohan Roy the
father of Modern India worked as a sub-registrar at Chatra in 1805-6
A.D. and lived both at Chatra and Ramgarh in this capacity. When Mr.
William Digbay was tranferred to Bhagalpur he took Ram Mohan Roy with
him to his new place of Assignment. The old stone building housing the
Sub-treasury and Sub-registrar's office was the same building where
Raja Ram Mohan Roy worked some 195 years ago, which has been shifted
near by. The old banyan tree standing infront of the office of the
S.D.O. and Subtreasury is a mute witness to that historical glory of
Chatra which it possessed. Hand written documents of Raja Ram Mohan
Roy are to be found in the record room of the regristry office in
Hazaribagh.
There was KOL Rebellion in 1831 against the Britishers which
rocked the very foundatiuons of the English rule in chotanagpur. The
results of this rebellion were far reaching in the administrative
annals of Chotanagpur as the Ramgarh Zila was passed into a
administrative control of the south western Frontier Agency with its
headquarters at Ranchi. Chatra lost its past glories but something was
compensated in the year 1914 when Chatra was made a sub-divisional
headquarters of the Hazaribagh district.
Chatra offers another fascinating chapter in the history of
freedom movement in Bihar . Just behind the State Bnak of India,
Chatra Branch, there is a tank named ' Mangal Talao' and popularly
known as 'Phansi Talab' where Sahid Park is made. It is here Jai
Mangal Pandey and Nadir Ali Khan the two Subedars were hanged on a
near by Mango tree during the great glorious rebellion of 1857. There
is one pillar construction on the eastern bank of the said Talao(pond)
where there is an inscription of a local poem immortalising the two
sepoys :
"JAY MANGAL PANDEY NADIR ALI
DONO SUBEDAR RE
DONO MILKAR PHANSI CHARHE
HARJIVAN TALAB RE
The most important engagement fought between the insurgents and
the British Chotanagpur during the Mutiny of 1857 was the battle of
Chatra. The two detachments of the 8th N.I.staioned at Hazaribagh
broke into rebellion at 1.00 P.M. on 30th July 1857. Captain Dalton
reoccupied Hazaribagh on 23rd September 1857 though stiffly resisted
for the two month. They decided to leave the province by way to
Chatra to join Babu Kunwar Singh of Bhojpur (Jagdishpur) who
had rebelled against the Britishers at the age of eighty and had taken
a vow drive them out from India. On the way a local zamindar Bhola
Singh joined them and the mutineeres reached Chatra via Kuru, Chandwa
and Balumath.
At Chatra they were attacked by a mixed force consisting of a
portion of the 53rd Regiment of British troops and a detachment (
of 150) of Rattray's Sikh , numbering in all 320 men.
Definitely they were surprised but they took up a strong position on
the brow of a hill.
The hill is known as 'Kalipahari' two miles south west of
Chatra. The small but locally important and decisive battle of Chatra
was fought on 2 October 1857 near
Chatra Jail (Mangal Talab). The Victoria cross Lieutenant J.C.C.
Daunt of the 70th Bengal Native Infantry and sergeant Dynon of the
53rd Foot are stated to have acted with " conspicious gallantry
in capturing two guns by pistolling the gunners, who were moving down
the detachment with grape". Seventy seven bodies of mutineers
were buried in one pit on the 3rd October 1857 and a large number of
them were wounded and their arms and ammunitions were captured that
some external assistance to the mutineers was suspected Major English
asked for one hundred men from Calcutta as "the guns will have to
be dragged across many swamps and the road is very difficult". (Hazaribagh
old Racord P.C. Roy p.102).
The Rebellions were crushed mercilessly. Jai Managal Pandey and
Nadir Ali Khan subedar of the Battalion were caught and brought before
simpson on 3rd October 1857 and were sentenced to death on 4th October
1857 under the provision of the act of XVII of 1857.
A little away from Chatra town - say one K.m. away there is one
village behind the Divisional Forest Office near Catholic Ashram,
where an old cemetry over grown with bushes still bears testimony to
the heroic battle fought by about 30 sepoys of against the Britishers
during the sepoy mutiny in 1857. The inscription on the cemetry says
that the Battalion of the army men had to be brought from Ramgarh
Cantt. to destroy barely 20 sepoys during the great Mutiny. The
inscription runs as follows.:- In
the grave are buried "The 56 men of Her Majesty's 53rd Regiment
of foot and a party of Rattrys sikhs who were killed at Chatra on
October 2, 1857 in action against mutineers of the Ramgarh Battalion,
Lt. J.C.C.Daunt of the 70th Bengal Native Infantry and sergeant
D.Dynon of the 53rd regiment were awarded victoria cross fro
conspicuous gallantry in the battle
in which the mutineers were completely defeated and lost all
their four guns and ammunitions.
The British chroniclers have given a very perverted account of
what is known as the 'MUTINY of 1857' in Chotanagpur which needs
exploration and probe as the movement was very popular, wide spread
and acute.
The national movement picked up momentum in Bihar in 1921. Dr.
Rajendra Prasad the first
President of free India visited Hazaribagh the same year and addressed
a meeting at Chatra and Hazaribagh, there was also a move to boycott
the local Schools.National schools were started at Chatra , Hazaribagh
and Dhanwar, but these schools collapsed due to financial hardships.
One of the most striking feature of 1942 i.e. Quit India
Movement was the escape of Shree Jai Prakash Narayan and seven others
from the Hazaribagh
Central Jail. Here notable congress leaders were lodged on the Night
of Diwali (9th Nov.1942) Jai Prakash Narayan
escaped from the Jail and came to Tatra ( a village of Chatra).
All efforts for their detection failed.
Chotanagpur Keshri Babu Ram Narayan Singh of p.s.Hunterganj
fought bravely and gave stiff resistance to the Britishers and
took rest only after driving them out of India (1947). And now
Chatra has become a district of Bihar
since July 1991 |
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