CORBETT NATIONAL
PARK
Corbett National Park
Located in the foothills of the Himalayas is the
majestic Corbett National Park. Home to a variety
of flora and fauna, Jim Corbett National Park
is famous for its wild population of Tigers, Leopards
and Elephants.
Corbett National Park
India had the proud distinction of being chosen
as the venue for the inauguration of Project Tiger
in India; earlier part of Uttar Pradesh now comes
under Uttaranchal, the newly found state. Jim
Corbett National Park India is home to a variety
of flora and fauna, Corbett park is famous for
its wild population of Tigers, Leopards and Elephants.
Corbett Tiger Reserve has a great variety of fauna
on account of habitat diversity. In the Jim Corbett
National Park are found 110 tree species, 50 mammals'
species, 580 bird species and 25 reptile species.
Jim Corbett National Park has a
strong historical background, which can be traced
from the early 1800 when its forest were private
property of the rulers of the Terhi Garhwal.
Around the 1820's this part of the
state was parted to the British Rulers in return
of the assistance provided during the Gurkha invasion.
The British exploited the timber potential of
Corbett National Park forest and mercilessly felled
the forests and plant 'TEAK' a precious hardwood,
to fulfill the supply for Railway sleepers.
About
Jim Corbett
Joseph Corbett, the grandfather
of Edward James (Jim) Corbett, was born in the
parish of St Peter's, Belfast in 1796. Before
his marriage to Harriet he had been a monk and
she a novice at a nearby convent. They both broke
their holy vows and 'eloped' to be married.
Joseph Corbett joined the army on
15 June 1814 and on the recruitment documents
he signed on for unlimited service as an infantry
private. On 26 July 1814 Joseph Corbett and Harriet
Corbett set sail from Ireland on the Royal George
bound for India. At that time Joseph Corbett gave
his profession as that of carver and gilder, a
trade, perhaps, which he had learned as a monk.
Joseph Corbett had with him their first child
Eliza who was one year old and they disembarked
in India on 7 February 1815.
In 1817 Joseph Corbett was posted
to the horse artillery and continued his service
with them until his death on 28 March 1830 when
Joseph Corbett was a sergeant. Joseph Corbett
was only 33 and was buried at Meerut. Joseph Corbett
military record gives his description: 5'4"
tall, a long face with sallow colouring, and hazel
eyes and black hair.Joseph Corbett and Harriet
had nine children. Eliza, who had been born in
Belfast on 18 May 1812; Mary born in 1814 and
later married to Patrick Dease on 7 July 1831;
John born in 1816; Joseph in 1818; Catherine in
1820; Christopher William in 1822; Richard Henry
in 1824; Harriet in 1826 and lastly Thomas Bartholomew
born in 1828. Details of only three of these children
have been found.
Mary's husband, Patrick Dease became
a consultant engineer to the Government of Bombay
and they had eight children. Thomas Bartholomew,
their youngest child, became a hero and sons were
named after him in the next two generations. He
was captured by mutineers at the siege of the
Red Fort in Delhi and was roped to a stake and
burned alive before the fort was relieved. His
brother, Christopher William, who also fought
at Delhi, saw his younger brother die also joined
the Army. There are memorial tablets at St James
church, Delhi to Thomas Bartholomew dated 11 and
17 May 1857: 'Sacred to the memory of the following
members of a family murdered during the massacre
of the Christians at Delhi between the 11th and
17th of May 1857. Thomas McNally, 2nd Clerk Commissariat
Office, Delhi. Thomas Bartholomew Corbett, Assistant
Apothecary and Sub-Medical Dept., Charlotte Corbett
and Harriet Corbett.'
Christopher William Corbett had
been born on 11 September 1822 at Meerut and was
Joseph Corbett and Harriet's sixth child. At that
time Joseph Corbett was a corporal in the horse
artillery. C.W.Corbett joined the army and saw
active service as a junior medical officer. C.W.Corbett's
rank was that of assistant apothecary (which had
been the same rank as that of his brother Thomas
Corbett) when C.W.Corbett was twenty and with
the 3rd Troop of the 1st Brigade of Horse Artillery.
C.W.Corbett saw action on the north west frontier
during the1st Afghan War (1839-42). Eventually
C.W.Corbett was promoted to apothecary lieutenant
and captain.
On 19 December 1845 C.W.Corbett
was posted to Dehra Dun and there C.W.Corbett
married eighteen year old Ann Morrow at Landour,
Mussoorie, a military cantonment. C.W.Corbett
was then posted to the Army of Sutlej for the
Sikh Wars. C.W.Corbett and Ann had three children
and she died in her early twenties. In 1849 C.W.Corbett
was in the Army of the Punjab as a hospital steward
to the Bengal Army. C.W.Corbett received several
medals for hisservice. Mary Jane Prussia, whom
C.W.Corbett was later to marry, had married Dr.
Charles James Doyle of Corbett National Park, Jim Corbett National Parkwhen she was 14 years
old in 1851, he being 21. C.W.Corbett & Mary
Jane had four children. These were Charles, George,
Evangeline (who died of smallpox as an infant),
and Eugene Mary. Charles and George became doctors,
Charles graduating from Aberdeen and practising
in Magdalene Street, Norwich in 1878. After the
Great War Charles Corbett emigrated to California
and later became an author. George Corbett was
appointed colonial surgeon in the West Indies.
Mary Jane and her children suffered
great privations during the Indian Mutiny (when
she was still only 20). The European community
of Corbett National Park, Jim Corbett National Park were sent to the fort for safety. Her
husband, Charles Doyle,was in command of the remnants
of the Etawah Light Horse and the 13th Troop of
Police Cavalry. In November 1858 rebels attacked
Etawah and Doyle's unit took part in defeating
them. On December 8 whilst fighting, having already
killed 2 mutineers by sword whilst on horseback,
Charles Doyle was dragged from his saddle and
killed. In the church at Etawah there is a plaque
in his honour. He was buried in the churchyard.
Now widowed Mary Jane Doyle and her children moved
to Mussoorie where she met Christopher William
Corbett. C.W.Corbett had left the army and joined
the post office as a postmaster at Mussooriein
1859. They were married on 13 October 1859. Between
them they had, by their previous marriages, 6
children.
In 1862 C.W.Corbett was appointed
postmaster of Nainital, the hill station which
was about 200 miles away in the mountains and
which later became the summer capital of the United
Provinces. Nainital was discovered by "The
Pilgrim" Mr Barron who had his yacht carried
up here in 1840.The Nainital Boat Club whose wooden
Clubhouse still graces the edge of the lake, became
the fashionable, focus of the community.
The Nainital lake - tal means lake
- lies at about 6,400 feet. Pockets of snow are
found in Cheena (or Naini, 8,568 ft), the peak
which dominates the lake, as late as March. Very
many people and birds move down from the hills
to the plains in the winter months.The Mutiny
had virtually left Nainital unaffected. Refugees
particularly from Rampur, Moradabad and Bareilly
flooded to the hill stations to escape the pillaging
dacoits were inflicting on the plains people,
other than that there was little upheaval. The
nearest the mutineers got to Nainital was 11 miles
away and 5,000 ft down the precipitous mountainside.
According to a military report the greatest hardship
was the shortage of beer! Had the violence reached
the Tal Brewery Company, a branch of the Bareilly
Beer Company, just two miles down the road from
Nainital? The brewery wasn't built until 1875
and it is more than likely that dacoits and mutineers
interrupted the supplies of beer coming from Bareilly.
A more serious consequence of the mutiny was to
send the price of land, houses and rents soaring
- many well-established residents of Nainital
made a killing.
The family travelled there across
hill routes and along the edge of plains on what
were pathways and bridle paths, the journey taking
a month. Along the way they encountered tigers
who had to be chased away from their camps. Mary
Jane and the younger children travelled in a doolie
dak, a sedan or a box-like contrivance like chair,
carried by four stalwart bearers and later, for
the last steep ascent, in dandy, which was a hammock
suspended from a pole which one had to cling on
to to prevent being thrown out. Neither method
of travel was comfortable. The others travelled
by foot or on ponies.
On arrival in Nainital the Corbetts'
rented a house near the treasury building on the
outskirtsof Malli Tal Bazaar where they stayed
until 1875 when they moved to a house they had
had built on Alma.
Nainital was extremely cold in winter
with deep snow and C.W.Corbett was granted 10
acres of land on the edge of the plain below,
just outside the village of Choti Haldwani at
a place called Kaladhungi, a small Bhabar town
15 miles away from Nainital. Here C.W.Corbett
built a substantial house which C.W.Corbett named
Arundel and they planted most of the land with
fruit trees and mango and the family moved there
in the cold weather.
C.W.Corbett and Mary Jane had eight
children. The first was named after the hero Thomas
Bartholomew, who, when he was old enough was employed
by the post office. Their second child was Harriet,
followed by Christopher Edward, John Quinton,
Edith, Maurice, Margaret Winifred known as Maggie,
Edward James (Jim) and lastly Archibald d'Arcy
in 1879. Eugene Mary, Mary Jane's daughter from
her marriage to Charles Doyle helped with the
delivery of Edward James (known as Jim) who was
born on 25 July 1875 (only 17 years after the
end of the mutiny) at Nainital. He was always
known as Jim Corbett.
C.W.Corbett and Mary always had
various members of the family living with them.
C.W.Corbett's elder sister, Mary, and her husband
Patrick Dease died leaving eight children, four
of whom,Patrick Paget, Robert, Stephen and Carly
Thomas, lived with the Corbetts. The first two
of these became eminent engineers, the third became
a doctor and the last the superintendent of the
post office.Harriet, Jim's sister, married Richad
Nestor from Kaladhungi and Nainital and they had
two children, Ray and Vivian, who were also brought
up in the Corbett household. C.Edward Corbett,
Jim's brother, married Helen Mary Nestor (Richard
Nestor's sister). John Quinton, Jim and sister
Maggie were very close and their mother called
them the 'Jam Sandwich'.
Mary Jane was Nainital's first estate
agent negociating property for rent, selling plots
and, as time passed, she and C.W.Corbett bought
land about the town on which they built houses.
These were sold from time to time to bring in
a little income.The family were members of the
church at Nainital which was called St John-in-the-Wilderness.
The children were raised with the help of 'ayahs'
and as they grew up learned the local tongue and
two Indian dialects as well as Hindi. Jim Corbett
became familiar with the local religion and Hinduism.
Early on his mother and Eugene Mary
acted as tutors to the children and the latest
books were always available for them to read.
A considerable amount of freedom appears to have
been given to the children and for Jim the surrounding
jungle must have proved a draw to him. C.W.Corbett
retired from the post office at Nainital in 1878
and was, by then, one of the city fathers. On
Thursday 16th September 1880 it started to rain,
by Saturday 19th 33 inches had fallen, Cheena
had turned to mud with the consistency of porridge
resulting in the great landslide. The Corbett
family watched horrified from their house on Alma
expecting to be carried away at any moment by
the mud torrent. It missed them by a hundred yards
and carried away part of the Victoria Hotel in
Nainital, burying several people. The side of
the hillside then became fluid and a landslip
took place carrying everything away including
the rest of the hotel and those trying to extricate
those buried in the earlier fall. 151 persons
were killed. The Corbett's house in the valley
was close to where this landslip took place.
On Easter Sunday 1881 C.W.Corbett
had sharp chest pains in his chest and died aged
58 on 21 April. C.W.Corbett was buried at St John-in-the-Wilderness.
Jim Corbett was six years old and his mother,Mary
Jane, was left with 9 children to raise. After
C.W.Corbett's death they sold their house and
moved across the valley, to a spot 1000 feet higher
on the safer Ayarpata. The Alma house was dismantled
and moved lock stock and barrel to the 1.7 acre
site on Ayarpata where Mary had bought a plot
in 1871. They named their new home Gurney House
(ref 113 De on the map of Nainital). There was
also enough room on this plot to build another
house to rent called Clifton (ref. 54 De). (Joseph
John Gurney (1788-1847) was an English philanthropist
and a Quaker banker of Norwich. He and his sister.
Mrs Elizabeth Fry, were closely involved in prison
reforms. Perhaps the house was named after him.)
The Corbett house (Gurney House)
still stands, and contains some of the Corbett
furniture, including their piano. There is a tall
pile of sheet music, and among the books several
prizes awarded to Maggie Corbett for her playing.
The library was evidently a good one: besides
theological and medical works, books on sport,
natural history, travel and photography, the nineteenth-century
poets and novelists are well represented, sometimes
by first editions. The Corbett children had a
cultured, comfortable home. For most of the years
they lived in Naini Tal Jim, Mary and the children
spent the winter months in their Kaladhungi house
Arundel, now the Corbett museum. Jim Corbett's
dogs have very special graves in the garden especially
his favourite spaniel called Robin.
Edward James (Jim) Corbett who had
been born 25 July 1875 at Nainital became famous
as a destroyer of man-eating tigers, naturalist
and as an author. Jim Corbett grew up to be a
tall, slim, attractive blue-eyed man with exceptional
eyesight, hearing and powers of observation, and
was known for his modesty, kindness and generosity,
and beloved by all. At an early age Jim Corbett
spent nights alone in the jungle becoming familiar
with the creatures of the jungle and their movements
and habits. Jim Corbett's mother and half-sister
Mary, who were religious and intelligent and imbued
with a spirit of service, courage and cheerfulness
which had a strong influence on family life. All
these qualities Jim inherited.
Jim Corbett went to the English
High School called Oak Openings at 7,500 ft on
Sherkadanda in Nainital. Oak Openings was part
owned and run by an ex-Indian-Army-Officer nicknamed
"Dead Eye Dick".He was a cruel and ruthless
man who would thrash the children in his care
for the slightest misdemeanour. Oak Openings was
Jim's first school. It is he who describes the
atrocious beatings given to children as young
as 6 or 7 both in lessons and during cadet corps
training when Jim Corbett himself was only 10
years old.The Philander Smith's Institute, part
of the American Mission Institute of Mussoorie,
took over the school in 1905. It was greatly increased
in size and renamed Philander Smith's College.
At Philander Smith College and St Joseph's College,
both at Nainital, Jim Corbett proved imself popular
and was to excel in games. However Jim Corbett
was not a great scholar.
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