| Mayo College, Ajmer, India | |
|---|---|
| Motto | Let there be light |
| Established | 1875 |
| Type | Private |
| Principal | Mr. Samar Bhaduri |
| Students | 800 |
| Location | Ajmer, |
| Website | www.mayocollege.com |
Mayo College is a public school founded by the 6th Earl of Mayo, who was Viceroy of India from 1869 to 1872.
The school is located in Ajmer, in the state of Rajasthan, India.
With a view to providing the leaders of the princely states with an education to British standards the British Raj built a school to give education to the Indian elite, particularly the princes and nobles of Rajputana.
The idea for the college was proposed on May 28, 1869 by Colonel Walter. The school was founded in 1875 and Colonel Sir Oliver St John became its first Principal.[1]
The founder's intention was to create an Eton of India. The 1st Earl of Lytton, Viceroy of India, said in a speech on campus in 1879:
- " The idea was well expressed long ago by Colonel Walter in an excellent and most suggestive report which may have influenced Lord Mayo when he founded the present college. In that very sensible report Colonel Walter pointed out that what was then most needed for the education of India’s young rulers and nobles was an Indian Eton. Ajmer is India’s Eton and you are India’s Eton boys.” " [2]
Mayo College is one of the oldest Private Boarding Schools in India and is considered amongst the best boarding schools in the country,[3][4].
Students attending school refer to themselves as Mayoites and alumni as Old-Mayoites.
Mayo College has an exchange programme for students to travel overseas to enrich their studies.
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History
The school was founded by Richard Southwell Bourke, Earl of Mayo, and Viceroy of India from 1869 to 1872 known popularly in India as Lord Mayo. Bourke was born on February 21st, 1822 and died on February 8th 1872.
Mangal Singh from Alwar was the first student to be admitted to the institution in October 1875. The second student was Mahatab Singh of Nindar.
A number of Principals have guided the schools since its founding, but the most noteworthy is J. T. M. (Jack) Gibson, Principal from 1954-1969, who gave Mayo College its post-independence identity by hiring young faculty, upgrading the curriculum, and persuading families other than the nobility of Rajasthan to send their sons to the school.[5][6]
Near the time of the institution's inception by the British, the college’s students normally proceeded to Oxford or Cambridge universities after being groomed on how to behave like `British gentlemen’.[7]
College building
The Main Building of Mayo College was designed by Major Mant in the Indo Saracenic style popularised by Sir Samuel Swinton Jacob, the State Engineer of Jaipur. For the construction of the Mayo College Main Building, several designs were submitted in the Indo-Saracenic, Grecian and Kolhapur styles by architects but Major Mant's Indo-Saracenic design was adopted by the Viceroy in June 1875.
The construction of the white marble building of the college began in 1877 and was completed in 1885. Major Mant's design became well known as a classic symbol of Indo-Saracenic architecture and is quoted in architectural courses today.
Coat of arms
This was composed from the design furnished by Mr. Lockwood Kipling, a former Principal of the School of Arts, Lahore and father of the famous Rudyard Kipling.
In the Upper Centre of the Shield are Mayo Arms, and Quarterings, a Lion Rampant and an Open Hand.On the right and left are the Sun and the Moon, typical of Suryawanshi and Chandrawanshi, the two great families of Rajputs. Below are the Panch Rang, the five sacred colours of the Rajputs, Red, Gold, Blue, White and Green. In the centre of which is a Rajput fort - two towers connected by a curtain. The Supports are on the right, a Bhil warrior with string bow and quiver full of arrows. On the left a Rajput, armed at all points, wearing a steel helmet with three plumes, a shield on his back, a dagger and Qatar in his belt, and a suit of chain covered with embroidered cloth and gauntlet on his hand.
The motto is " Let there be Light ". The badge is a peacock, the sacred bird of Rajputana, standing on a two edged, two handed Rajput Sword Khanda.
School Stamp
On April 12th, 1986, the post and telegraph department of the government of India released a special stamp of Mayo College with the Main School building on its face recognizing the school's role in the field of education.[8]
School Museum
Mayo College is home to the Danmal Mathur Museum housed in Jhalawar House, which it shares with the Arts School. The college museum showcases priceless antiques and an armoury section. The museum is considered to have one of the best collections of any school museum in the world.[9]
History and traditions of Mayo College
- Mayo's first student, H.H. Maharaja Mangal Singh of Alwar, arrived at the school gates in October 1875 on the back of an elephant accompanied by 300 retainers and a menagerie of tigers, camels and horses!
- One of the school's traditions is meeting for tea in the lawns known as Mughal Gardens immediately after the Annual Prizegiving Ceremony; it is believed that Mr. MN Kapur (who subsequently went on to become one of Modern School New Delhi's most respected and beloved principals) did away with the act of using a rope to divide English guests and Indian guests at this ceremony.
- The Annual Prizegiving, one of the oldest ceremonies at Mayo, has seen Chief Guests including Lord Irwin, Viceroy of India, Lord Chelmford, Governor General of India, Dr. Rajendra Prasad, Ex President of India, HH Maharaja Sawai Man Singh II of Jaipur, HH Maharani Gayatri Devi of Jaipur, Mrs Vijayalakshmi Pandit, Dr Zakir Husain, Ex President of India, Dr Karan Singh, Mrs. Indira Gandhi, Ex Prime Minister of India, Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw, H.H. Sayyid Faher Bin Taimur of Oman, HM Birendra Shah, King of Nepal, Sardar Khushwant Singh, HH Madhavrao Scindia, Sir Peter Ustinov, Mr Jaswant Singh and Mr LK Advani.
- Other traditions at Mayo include an annual horseback parade by the students and sporting fixtures between Old Boys and current students (including a polo match).
Facilities
- Mayo College has sports facilities for students and staff consisting of playing fields for football, hockey and a cricket ground with a view of the Aravali Hills and a beautiful old red sandstone pavilion. The squash players may choose between the modern glass-backed courts or the historic Fanshawe courts, open to the sky. Mayo College also has a 9 hole golf course which was built recently. It also has many basketball courts.
- Visitors to Mayo College can stay in the heart of the campus in the Oman Guest House located close to the Principal's residence.
Notable alumni
Alumni of Mayo College are known as Old-Mayoites and are sometimes referred to as Old Mayonians.
A number of students come to Mayo from overseas, including members of royal families from Oman and Nepal. The school has educated two Sultans of Oman and the Late Princess Shruti of Nepal.
Mayo College has educated members of many royal families including (but not limited to) Bikaner, Alwar, Jammu and Kashmir, Kishangarh, Jaipur, Udaipur, Jodhpur, Kotah, etc. HH Sawai Man Singh II of Jaipur, Hari Singh of Jammu and Kashmir, Rana Arvind Singh Mewar, Prince Shivraj Singh of Marwar-Jodhpur and Kirit Bikram Deb Burman: Erstwhile Maharaja of Tripura from the second oldest continuing ruling lineage after the Mikados of Japan.
Many Old Students from Mayo have served with distinction in the Armed forces and many others serve the country as Members of Parliament and senior Civil Servants. Jaswant Singh is one of the few Indian politicians to have been the Minister for Defence, Finance and External Affairs and K. Natwar Singh of the Indian Foreign Service served as India's Ambassador to Pakistan and as External Affairs Minister. Old Mayoites have also served as Indian Ambassadors to Morocco, Spain, Norway, Brazil, Libya, Switzerland and France.
Old Mayoites have also made their mark in commerce and industry. The Managing Director of Tata Motors, Ravi Kant, erstwhile Chairman of Shell Oil-India, Ajay Mehta, erstwhile Chairman Emeritus of Nestle-India, Narendra Singh of Sarila, former Chairman of Air India & Indian Airlines, Probir Sen, Chairman and MD of Axis Bank, P.J. Nayak, Member of the Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee, Sushil Wadhwani, the retired Chief General Manager & Executive Director of the Reserve Bank of India & erstwhile Managing Director of NABARD, Yashwant Thorat, as well as Rakesh Mohan, who served as Deputy Governor of the Reserve Bank of India, Swarnendu Kumar Biswas, Executive-Trainer & Coach, HR/Business Consultant - have all schooled at Mayo.
Respected journalists such as Vir Sanghvi, Siddharth Varadarajan, and Manvendra Singh, Writers Vikram Chandra (Red Earth & Pouring Rain, Sacred Games) and Indra Sinha (Shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize), Fashion Designer Raghuvendra Rathore, Celebrity Chef Jiggs Kalra, Actors Ajay Mehta, Bobby Deol, Tinnu Anand, Vivek Oberoi, Sagarika Ghatge, Filmmakers Samir Karnik, Goldie Behl, Heeraz Marfatia, etc. and theatre personality, Amir Raza Hussain attended Mayo.
The school has produced a number of sportsmen including Charu Sharma, Cricketer Arun Lal and Lokendra S. Ghanerao (who captained India at Polo) and Prateek Pratap Singh who represented Indian Equestreain Team in FEI International Children Jumping Competition Cat 'C' held at Gaya (Bihar) in 2007.
The J. T. M. Gibson Award for Excellence was created in 2007 to be given to old boys who have, consistent with Jack Gibson's ideals, made a difference to society. Honorees are 2009: Mr. Jyoti Krishan Dutt (1965 Batch), Justice Kamaljit Singh Garewal (1963 Batch), Prof. Siraj Hassan (1966 Batch); 2008: Mr. Vikram Mehta, Chairman Shell India (1968 Batch), Mr. Probir Sen, Retd. Managing Director Air India & Indian Airlines (1961 Batch); 2007: Mr. Jaswant Singh Jasol, Member of Parliament (1954 Batch), Mr.Ravi Kant, Managing Director Tata Motors (1961 Batch), Mr. Rakesh Mohan, Deputy Governor Reserve Bank of India, (1963 Batch), Lt. Gen (Retd.) Aditya Singh, PVSM, AVSM (1963 Batch).
See also
Notes
- ^ List of Principals of Mayo College Accessed November 11th 2007
- ^ Mayo College as India's Eton A speech by the Earl of Lytton in 1879
- ^ Bearers of the standards, Outlook C Fore Survey Outlook Magazine, 2001. Accessed November 11th 2007
- ^ Eton of The East; December 23, 2000; Indian Express Newspaper
- ^ List of principals on the Mayo College website
- ^ 'The Gibson Years'. The Mayo College Alumni website.
- ^ [1]
- ^ Detailed Stamp Release Information Postal Stamp Name: MAIN BLDG MAYO COLLEGE; Stamp Issue Date: 12/04/1986; Postage Stamp Denomination: 1.00; Postal Stamp Serial Number: 1189; Number of stamps printed : 15,00,000; Philatelic Stamp Description: The 100 P. multicolour stamp showing the main building of Mayo College, Ajmer, has been designed by India Security Press, Nashik Road. The First Day Cover shows the emblem of the Mayo College. The cancellation has been designed by Nenu Bagga.
- ^ Opportunities: The Mayo College, Ajmer; Jun 09, 2004; The Hindu Newspaper
References
- M.N. Kapur Biography
- Opportunities: "The Mayo College, Ajmer" from The Hindu, National Newspaper dated Jun 09, 2004
- Ajmer, The Official Website
- Biography of Vir Sanghvi from Hindustan Times Luxury Conference
- Biographical Sketch of Jaswant Singh, Parliament of India
- Biography of Vikram Chandra, award winning author
- Natwar Singh A brief biography
- Old Boys Society Report, 2004
- Article in Computers Today
- Government of India, Press Information Bureau
- Write up on The Late Princess Shruti of Nepal
- Article on Aamir Raza Hussain in The Times of India
- Less royalty, Same loyalty. Article on Mayo College in the Times of India
- Bio of Major Maroof Raza
- Less royalty, same loyalty; 4 Jul 2004; Times of India Newspaper
- Eton of The East-Article in Indian Express
External links
- Official website
- Mayo College Old Boys/alumni associations
- Remembering Jack Gibson (March 3, 1908 - October 23, 1994), An Indian Englishman. Doscos and Mayoites of the time remember Mr. J.T.M Gibson who taught and was a House Master at the Doon School and then became Mayo College Principal from 1954 - 1969
- IPSC school profile
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