Difference between revisions of "Jamesetjee Nusserwanjee Tata"
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Jamesetjee Nusserwanjee Tata ( -1904) | |||
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''' 1904 Obituary <ref> [[1904 Iron and Steel Institute: Obituaries]] </ref> | ''' 1904 Obituary <ref> [[1904 Iron and Steel Institute: Obituaries]] </ref> | ||
JAMSETJEE NUSSERWANJEE TATA died on May 19, 1904, at Bad Nauheim. He was a well-known millionaire and philanthropist of Bombay, and he devoted a considerable portion of the large fortune which he had acquired to public objects intended for the benefit of the people of India and for the development of Indian industrial resources. He also spent large sums of money in endeavouring to improve the staple of Indian cotton, and also on the improvement of sericulture in Mysore, and offered the Government of India, on certain conditions, the enormous sum of £150,000 for the endowment of research. The conditions of the offer were such as, up to the present date, to prevent the Government from accepting it. It is, however, understood that the offer is still open, the amount of the endowment being left in the hands of trustees, who have power to negotiate with the Government of India for its application. | |||
He enjoyed a very high reputation among both his fellow-countrymen and Anglo-Indians for his liberality, and the assistance he was always ready to give to useful charities will be greatly missed. | |||
He was a member of the Society of Arts, and was elected a member of the Iron and Steel Institute in 1902. | |||
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Latest revision as of 17:17, 5 October 2015
Jamesetjee Nusserwanjee Tata ( -1904)
1904 Obituary [1]
JAMSETJEE NUSSERWANJEE TATA died on May 19, 1904, at Bad Nauheim. He was a well-known millionaire and philanthropist of Bombay, and he devoted a considerable portion of the large fortune which he had acquired to public objects intended for the benefit of the people of India and for the development of Indian industrial resources. He also spent large sums of money in endeavouring to improve the staple of Indian cotton, and also on the improvement of sericulture in Mysore, and offered the Government of India, on certain conditions, the enormous sum of £150,000 for the endowment of research. The conditions of the offer were such as, up to the present date, to prevent the Government from accepting it. It is, however, understood that the offer is still open, the amount of the endowment being left in the hands of trustees, who have power to negotiate with the Government of India for its application.
He enjoyed a very high reputation among both his fellow-countrymen and Anglo-Indians for his liberality, and the assistance he was always ready to give to useful charities will be greatly missed.
He was a member of the Society of Arts, and was elected a member of the Iron and Steel Institute in 1902.