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Bethune
College, the first college to play a historic role in the cause of
women's education in Bengal , started as the Hindu Female School and
blossomed into the Bethune School on 7 May 1849. Its founding father,
John Elliot Drinkwater Bethune, himself a graduate from Trinity College,
Cambridge and the Fourth Wrangler, had arrived in India in April 1848 as the
Law Member of the Governor General's Council. He also held the post of the
President of the Council of Education. In his pioneering zeal to promote
women's education, he received the support of some enlightened Indians like
Pandit Madan Mohan Tarkalankar , Ram Gopal Ghosh, Raja Dakshina Ranjan
Mukherjee. Pandit Iswar Chandra Vidyasagar, “The Traditional Moderniser” was
the Secretary of the Managing Committee of the Institution and also one of
its chief patrons.
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The Bethune School
started functioning with twenty-one girls on its roll on a piece of
land donated by Raja Dakshina Ranjan Mukherjee at Mirzapur in
Calcutta. Bethune died on 12 August 1851 and Lord Dalhousie, the then
governor general of India, carried his work forward. The school now
shifted to a new building on the West of Cornwallis Square, where its
foundation stone was laid on 6 November 1850. The progress of this
school received a fillip with its amalgamation with the Banga Mahila
Vidyalaya, another leading women's school of Calcutta. The reorganised
Bethune School sent up for the first time Miss Kadambini Bose to the
Entrance Examination of 1879. Miss Bose was successful, and was placed
in the Second division. Kadambini Bose's intense desire to prosecute
higher studies prompted the Government to explore the alternative of
setting up a Women's College vis-a-vis the option of continuing
graduate classes at Bethune School, the only Government institution
for women in Calcutta. |
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Pandit Iswar Chandra
Vidyasagar |
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Previous Principals of Bethune College |
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Sm.
Chandramukhi Basu
(1888-1901) |
Sm.
Kumudini Das nee Khastagir
(1902-1913) |
Sm.
Surabala Ghosh
(1915-1916) |
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Miss. A.
L. Janau
(1916-1918) |
G. M. Wright
(1918-1928) |
Smt.
Rajkumari Das
(1928-1934) |
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Smt.
Tatini Das
(1934-1950) |
Mrs.
Mrinalini Emmerson
(1950-1968) |
Smt.
Nalini Das
(1968-1974) |
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Dr. Dipti
Tripathy
(1974-1988) |
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The
college started functioning in 1879 with one enrolment, Kadambini Bose.
In 1883 she found a fellow student in Chandramukhi Basu, a native Christian
girl from Dehradun. In 1883 both Kadambini and Chandramukhi qualified in the
degree examinations of the University of Calcutta. By 1887-88 the
College Department of Bethune School underwent a radical change, as its
students roll now comprised eleven girls, one of them being in the MA class.
In February 1888, Bethune College received affiliation to the University of
Calcutta up to the BA standard; Chandramukhi Basu who had already completed
her MA with Honours in English, became its first Principal.
In the first fifty glorious years of the college, the number of students
rose steadily and the college had its share of excellence in the University
examinations and extra-curricular activities. By 1914-15, the studentship
rose to 72, the highest ever admitted since the commencement of the college.
By the turn of the next decade (1925-26) it had reached 151. Within the next
ten years this number rose to 260. Political disturbances triggered by the
Civil Disobedience Movement, the August Movement and more importantly, the
Great War, had temporarily dampened the spirit of this College. But by 1949
its rolls had once again started swelling. Coupled with the rise in the
number of students was a steady augmentation in the subjects taught at the
College.
Illustrious teachers like Kamini Sen, the notable poet Krishna Chandra
Bhattacharya, famous philosophers like Chintaharan Chakraborty and Gopinath
Bhattacharya, and the famous scholar and academician Sushobhan Chandra
Sarkar served this College at different times. From the very inception,
Bethune College made a mark in producing notable students.
Between 1890 and 1931, Bethune College supplied twenty-two recipients of the
Padmavati Gold Medal awarded by the University to the female candidate
topping the BA examination. Sm Sarala Ghosal, later Sarala Debi Chaudhurani,
was the first to receive this medal. In 1938 Quazi Akhtar Banu, later Akhtar
Imam topped the BA examinations in Philosophy and won the Gangamani Debi
Gold Medal. In 1940, a comparative analysis of the results of the different
colleges in Calcutta put Bethune College second only to Presidency College,
which enjoyed a unique place of distinction. Several Muslim students of
Bethune College, starting with Faziltunnessa in 1925 achieved remarkable
success. Faziltunnessa Zoha later on became the Head of the Department of
Mathematics and also the Vice-Principal of the College. Names like Akhtar
Imam, (later Professor of Philosophy and Provost Rokeya Hall, Dhaka
University) and Samsunahar Mahmud (later the Inspectress of Schools) shone
out among the alumnae of this College.
Among the alumnae of this College were some of the outstanding women who
stood out in their respective fields and pioneered the cause of education
and liberation of women. To mention a few, Sm Kamini Roy, Sm. Sarala Devi
Chaudhurani, Sm Sita Devi, Santa Devi, Sm Lila Roy, and Dr Dipti Tripathi -
all contributed to the repertory of Bengali literature and culture. The
journey that Chameli Basu had started as the first science graduate of this
college reached its fulfillment when Dr. Asima Chatterjee, also an alumna of
this college, registered a breakthrough in scientific attainments. Sm. Bina
Bhowmik, Sm Pritilata Waddedar and Sm Kalpana Joshi, Ila Mitra, Pramila
Gupta and Kamala Dasgupta contributed their mite to the cause of India's
struggle for independence. In the performing arts too, alumnae of this
College had achieved excellence. Sm Sobha Sen (Actor), Sm Purabi Mukherjee
(Singer), Debarati Shome (Singer), Sm Manjusree Chaki (Danseuse), Bratati
Bandyapadhyay (Elocutionist) are a few such individuals that do the College
proud. Products of the institution distinguishing themselves in different
spheres of societal activity include names like Sm Manjulika Das, Sm
Meenakshi Sinha and Sm Aparna Ray .
Affiliated to the University of Calcutta, Bethune College in its 128th year
has 16 departments and a faculty strength of 69. The college with a glorious
past can now boast of preserving its rare documents and valuable records in
the newly constituted Archives. In addition to this, the college has a
Central Library housing recent titles and publications alongwith a rare
books section.
Alumnae
Among the alumnae of
this College were some of the outstanding women who stood out in their
respective fields and pioneered the cause of education and liberation
of women. To mention a few, Sm Kamini Roy, Sm. Sarala Devi
Chaudhurani, Sm Sita Devi, Santa Devi, Sm Lila Roy, and Dr Dipti
Tripathi - all contributed to the repertory of Bengali literature
and culture.
Mention may also
be made of Sm. Lila Nag - a distinguished alumna of this College, who
incidentally was also the first female student of the Dhaka University
in 1921.The journey that Chameli Basu had started as the
first science graduate of this college reached its fulfillment when
Dr. Asima Chatterjee, also an alumna of this college, registered a
breakthrough in scientific attainments.
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