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词条 Cowasji Jehangir Readymoney
释义

  1. Business career

  2. Public service and philanthropy

  3. See also

  4. References

  5. External links

{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2018}}{{Use Indian English|date=May 2018}}{{More citations needed|date=July 2007}}Sir Cowasji Jehangir Readymoney, CSI (1812–1878) was a Parsi community leader, philanthropist and industrialist of Bombay, India.[1]

Cowasji Jehangir Readymoney came from a wealthy Parsi family. His grandfather and two great-uncles had moved in the early 18th century from Navsari, near Surat, to Bombay and had become pioneers in the lucrative opium trade with China. The brothers earned the sobriquet "Readymoney," which they later adopted as a surname. Only Hirji Jewanji Readymoney left issue, two daughters, the elder of whom married a Banaji, and the younger a Dady Sett, both these illustrious families in their own right. The son of the former, Jehangir Hirji, married Mirbai, the daughter of the latter, and was designated the heir of his grandfather and his two granduncles. The younger of their two sons was Cowasji Jehangir.[2]

Business career

Cowasji Jehangir Readymoney's only formal education was at the (then) well-known school kept by Serjeant Sykes at one of Bombay's forts. At the age of 15, Readymoney entered the firm of Duncan, Gibb & Co. as "godown keeper," or warehouse clerk.

In 1837 Readymoney was promoted to the responsible and lucrative appointment of "guarantee broker" to two leading European firms in Bombay. By 1846 he was able to begin trading on his own account. In 1866 Readymoney was appointed a commissioner of income tax, his tactful management being largely responsible for the fact that this tax, then new to Bombay and unpopular, was levied with unexpected financial success.[2]

Public service and philanthropy

Readymoney was appointed Justice of the Peace for the town and island of Bombay and a member of the Board of Conservancy.[2]

He was invested as a Companion of The Most Exalted Order of the Star of India (C.S.I) in 1871; and in 1872 he was created a Knight Bachelor of the United Kingdom[2] in recognition of his donations to the Indian Institute in London and other charitable causes in Bombay amounting to approximately £200,000. Readymoney built colleges, hospitals, insane asylums; founded a refuge for people of "respectability" who found themselves destitute or friendless in Bombay; erected several drinking fountains of artistic merit; gave donations to the Catholic and the Presbyterian missions in India. Readymoney also financed the erection in 1869 of the Readymoney Drinking Fountain in Regent's Park, London, which was opened by the Princess of Teck, as a mark of gratitude from the Parsi community to the protection that British rule in India had given them.[3]

Readymoney had a particular association with University of Bombay and he financed the erection of several notable buildings there, including the Convocation Hall designed by Sir George Gilbert Scott.[4][5] Readymoney was also a member of the University's Faculty of Civil Engineering and its Senate. A statue of Readymoney, by Thomas Woolner, stands on the campus grounds. There is also a small bas-relief sculpture of him at the University of Edinburgh but Readymoney's connection to that establishment is unknown.

During his lifetime, Readymoney was known as the Peabody of Bombay. The reason for this epithet is unknown, but may be a reference to London's Peabody Trust, since Jehangir owned several large housing estates and is said to have identified himself with George Peabody.

After a long illness, Readymoney died in 1878. His nephew and adopted son and heir, Jehangir Cowasji Jehangir Readymoney, was created a Knight Bachelor (in 1895) and a Baronet (in 1908).[2]

See also

  • Jehangir Baronets

References

1. ^Sir Cowasjee Jehangir K.C.S.I. of Bombay. British Library.
2. ^{{EB1911 |wstitle=Readymoney, Sir Cowasji Jehangir |volume=22 |page=940 |first=Mancherjee Merwanjee |last=Bhownagree |inline=1}}
3. ^The Regent's Canal And The Trail To The British Raj, Parsis, And Sir Cowajee Jehanjir Readymoney by Ibn Warraq
4. ^{{cite news|title=A TALE OF TWO BUILDINGS|url=http://www.telegraphindia.com/1120805/jsp/opinion/story_15808694.jsp#.UXQCrux4pr4|accessdate=21 April 2013|newspaper=The Telegraph, Calcutta, India|date=5 August 2012}}
5. ^Around Oval Maidan {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130411032608/http://www.roughguides.com/destinations/asia/india/mumbai/kala-ghoda-around/around-oval-maidan/ |date=2013-04-11 }}

External links

{{commons category}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Readymoney, Cowasji}}

12 : 1812 births|1878 deaths|Businesspeople from Mumbai|Parsi people from Mumbai|Companions of the Order of the Star of India|Knights Bachelor|Founders of Indian schools and colleges|Indian philanthropists|Indian knights|19th-century Indian businesspeople|Parsi people|19th-century philanthropists

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