OOTY TOURS
Ooty
or Udagamandalam (the Tamil version of the original
name) rightly described as "Queen of Hill
Stations" by Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, now
sprawls over an area of 36 sq km with a number
of tall buildings cluttering its hill slopes.
It is situated at an altitude of 2,240 meters
above sea level. Ooty still woos people from all
over India as well as foreign countries right
through summer, and sometimes
in the winter months too. An added attraction
for the tourists to Udagamandalam is the mountain
train journey on a ratchet and pinion track which
commences from Kallar, near Mettupalayam and wends
its way through many hair-raising curves and fearful
tunnels and chugs along beside deep ravines full
of verdant vegetation, gurgling streams and tea
gardens.
The scenery, as it unfolds during
the trip, is breathtaking, awe-inspiring and fantastic.
One can notice a marvellous change in vegetation,
as one goes from Kallar to Coonoor. At Kallar
it is tropical and at Burliar-the next bus-stop
as one proceeds from Mettupalayam-it is sub-tropical.
Near Coonoor, it is humid with pines, blue gum
(Eucalyptus globulus) and cypress trees. As we
go from Ooty to Gudalur, the change in vegetation
is striking. What a splendid interaction between
climate and vegetation ! It is therefore very
appropriate that Mount Stuart called the whole
road leading to Ooty from Mettupalayam, "One
long botanical debauch."
This beautiful botanical paradise
was first brought to the public eye by John Sullivan,
Collector of Coimbatore district in 1819. But
prior to this in 1812, the first Englishmen who
were sent up the Nilgris by the Collector of Coimbatore,
were Mr. Keys, Assistant Revenue Surveyor, and
his Assistant, McMahon. They made their way via
Dananayakan Kottai to Aracad and the existing
village of Denad, and penetrated as far as Kallatti,
the lower level of North Ooty, but never set their
eyes on the beautiful valley in which Ooty lay.
After Keys' visit there was no further expedition
until 1818 when J.C.Whish and N.W.Kindersly (Asst.
and second Asst. to the Collector of Coimbatore
respectively) went up by the Dananayakan Kottai-Denad
route, crossed the plateau in a south-western
direction and descended by the Sundapatti pass
from Manjakombai to the Bhavani valley and then
went back to Coimbatore. The purpose of their
visit is not known.
In March 1819, John Sullivan obtained
Rs 1,100 (Rupees of those days not to be compared
with the present-day rupee) from the Board of
Revenue for laying a bridle path up the hill from
Sirumugai to Kotagiri and its neighboring village,
Dhimatti. The work was executed by McPherson in
a period of 2 years starting 1821. This was the
only route to the Nilgris from Coimbatore until
1832, when the first Coonoor ghat road was laid,
thanks to the then Governor, S.R. Lushington,
who got the work executed by Lehardy and Capt.
Murray. The present metalled ghat road from Kallar
to Coonoor, a distance of 25 km which has 14 hair-pin
bends and a gradient of one 18 ft, which facilitated
carriage traffic from Madras to Ooty, was mainly
constructed by Colonel G.V. Law in 1871. It is
gratifying to note that the cascade of the Coonoor
river near Wenlock bridge on the Coonoor-Mettupalayam
road named after Law, continues to bear the same
name.
The Coonoor-Mettupalayam road was
extended to Udagamandalam, covering a distance
of about 15 km. The Kotagiri-Mettupalayam road
(about 34 km long) which was 8 ft wide to begin
with, was widened to 17 ft in 1872-75 with a gradient
of one in 17 by the Dist. Engineer, Major Morant
R.E. and handed over to the District Board in
1881. During the period from 1819 to 1830, John
Sullivan's contribution was, apart from laying
the route to Ooty, that he built the first house
called Stone House in this place. This formed
the nucleus of Government offices. Further, at
his own expense, he conducted experiments on agricultural
and horticultural crops and in animal husbandry
to find the most suitable crops and breeds of
milch animals for future settlers.Next to the
magnificent task of laying the road to Ooty, the
British took up, around 1880, the stupendous task
of connecting Mettupalayam to Ooty by rail. A
Swiss engineer, M. Riggenback and Major Morant
of Kotagiri road fame prepared an estimate of
1,32,000 pounds (currency) for laying the rack
railway and floated a company called The Rigi
Railway & Co Ltd. Since capital was not forthcoming,
Mr. Richard Wolley of Coonoor came forward to
advance money on the condition that the contract
would be entrusted to Mr. Wolley by the Government
of Chennai.
The agreement between the 2 was
signed in 1886, and the company called The Nilgri
Railway & Company came into being with a capital
of Rs 25 lakhs. The work on the line was started
in August 1891 by Lord Wenlock, Governor or Madras,
but the company was liquidated in 1894. Later,
a new company was formed in 1894, and the work
was completed in 1899. The line was worked by
Madras Railway, to start with. Though the Nilgris
formed part of Coimbatore district, it was separated
into an independent district in 1868. For a period
of 13 years from 1830, it remained part of Malabar
district. This was to prevent tobacco smuggling
from Coimbatore. From John Sullivan's days to
this date, more than 170 years have rolled by.
Udagamandalam considered a sanatorium and hill
resort by the Europeans, has come to be like any
other district. The devastation was so much that
a ban on fresh construction was belatedly imposed
by the Government. |