Saturday, September 10, 2011

The very beginning

I want to begin from the beginning. The beginning of Westcott not as we know it, but of how it came to be.    
You must have often walked down the corridors of the first block , either during the tiffin or the lunch breaks or even during the quiet class hours, and passed by the portrait of Bishop Foss Westcott looking down at you. I know I have. Countless times. And I have always stopped and looked at his picture for a few moments before I walked on, stared at his kind, smiling, bluish-grey eyes.I've wondered about his story , about what kind of person he might have been and what aspirations might have led him to build the school.


Historically, the journey dates back to about one and a half centuries ago in 1844, when four german Lutheran Christian missionaries set off from Europe to the mountains of Tibet. They traveled across the sea and were en route in Calcutta (now Kolkata) when they met a few ‘adivasis’ from Chota Nagpur (then, a combined name for Bihar, Jharkhand and Orissa) and through a twist of fate decided to follow them to Ranchi instead. The story goes that it took them 15 days to cover the distance from Calcutta to Ranchi on a horse driven cart.


Later in 1868, these german missionaries were replaced by priests of the Church of England and a certain Rev.J. C. Whitley was made superintendent of the Church in Chota-nagpur area. Whitley worked until 1904 and then passed on his responsibilities to his nephew, Rev. Bishop Foss Westcott- the founder of our school. 

This is the period when our school was first built.With just 125 students enrolled in the first year of its inception, the schools also served as a make shift hospital in world war II.  In 1914 , when the German missionaries in Chota Nagpur stopped getting supplies from Germany and were in grave financial constraints, Bishop Westcott appealed to all the Missions in India and asked for help on their behalf. Due to his efforts, the missionaries got Rs 70 per month to cover their expenses. In 1919, Bishop Foss Wescott became the Bishop of Calcutta and Metropolitan of India and continued to work in India until his death in 1949 in Darjeeling. 

  While I was researching some of these information, I came across some interesting articles and notes written by him on when our school was being built .Can you imagine my thrill and excitement?
Hill schools in the Himalayas were not only filled, but had long waiting lists, and in many cases fees and railway fares were more than our people could meet. Except in Jamshedpur, where Rs. 75,000 are annually spent on education, there are few good schools on the plains, and in any case the climatic conditions are injurious to growing children. The Provincial Government was also alive to the need and offered a splendid site at Namkum, near Ranchi, and one-half the capital cost up to a limit of Rs. 175,000 if the S.P.G. would undertake to provide a similar sum to provide and manage two good boarding schools, one for girls and one for boys, with dormitory space for 125 pupils in each. This enterprise was undertaken in 1920, and, as a memorial of the great services of the Metropolitan in this diocese, the schools were called the 'Bishop Westcott Schools."
"The Girls' School, power-house, etc., has now been built, and two years ago the Community of St. Denys, Warminster, with splendid courage undertook to provide the teaching staff. Accordingly, under the management of Sister Barbara, as Principal of the School, the Bishop Westcott School for Girls was opened in March 1922, and the first part of the programme was finished. "
" The buildings of the Boys' School have been begun, but some £3000 required to complete the project has not yet been raised. It is impossible for the diocese to run into debt, so the undertaking must mark time until the money is found."

These notes left me with strange feeling, of connecting with Bishop Foss Westcott  in a way I never had before. It was almost as is he was speaking to me himself - and ofcourse, I was being quite fanciful in my imagination. 

But Westcott kind of does that to you, doesn't it?

PS: If you are interested in knowing more on the history of the Church of England where I drew most of my information from- you can visit this link.

8 comments:

  1. Udita: superb job..... would love to read more about the school.... also wanted to add that Mr. Westcott also founded another school in Darjeeling St. Paul's

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  2. Hey Udita : Really nostalgic... still stuck in that feeling, cannot say any thing else now... let me recollect myself in the present, will then post again...

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  3. @Shweta Jain: Thanks, girl. I didnt know about St Pauls, but guess what? Foss Westcott's uncle founded St Stephens in Delhi. What a connection!

    @Shweta Yadav: :) Get ready to be bombarded with nostalgia!

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  4. Udita: I'm so ecstatic I cant even breathe....... Amazing job udita plz continue with the enlightening informations...

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  5. thanx udita for sharing such beautiful memories of our school......didnt get a chance to go there after leavin it('98)....long time....wud luv to relive those moments.....thanx dear....eagerly n impatiently waitin for more........

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  6. You write beautifully... you should continue writing blogs about westcott ... ❤ hearts to you

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  7. Please keep publishing more such articles... Always a pleasure to read them

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  8. Loved your style of writing.... Here is another piece on Westcott that I wrote for the school.... http://tomarprateek.blogspot.in/2008/09/westcottians.html?m=1

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