3 MAR 1839-19 MAY 1904 JAMSHETJI NUSSERWANJI TATA
Jamsetji Tata
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Jamsetji Tata | |
|---|---|
![]()
Jamsetji Tata
| |
| Born | 3 March 1839 Navsari, Baroda, Bombay Presidency, British India |
| Died | 19 May 1904 (aged 65) Bad Nauheim, German Empire |
| Ethnicity | Parsi |
| Alma mater | Elphinstone College |
| Occupation | Founder of Tata Group |
| Net worth | £1 million (1904) [approx. £96,230,000 (2016)][1] |
| Religion | Zoroastrian |
| Spouse(s) | Hirabai Daboo |
| Children | Dorabji Tata Ratanji Tata |
| Parent(s) | Nusserwanji and Jeevanbai Tata |
Jamsetji Nusserwanji Tata (3 March 1839 – 19 May 1904) was an Indian pioneer industrialist, who founded the Tata Group, India's biggest conglomerate company. He was born to a Parsi Zoroastrian family in Navsari then part of the princely state of Baroda.
He founded what would later become the Tata Group of companies. Tata is regarded as the legendary "Father of Indian Industry".[2]
- "When you have to give the lead in action, in ideas – a lead which does not fit in with the very climate of opinion – that is true courage, physical or mental or spiritual, call it what you like, and it is this type of courage and vision that Jamsetji Tata showed. It is right that we should honour his memory and remember him as one of the big founders of modern India."— Jawaharlal Nehru[3]
Contents
[hide]Early life[edit]
Jamsedji Nusserwanji Tata was born to Nusserwanji and Jeevanbai Tata on 3 March 1839 in Navsari, a town in south Gujarat. His father, Nusserwanji, was the first businessman in a family of Parsi Zoroastrian priests. He broke the tradition to become the first member of the family to try his hand at business. He started an export trading firm in Mumbai.
Jamsedji Tata joined his father in Mumbai at the age of 14 and enrolled at the Elphinstone College completing his education as a 'Green Scholar' (equivalent of a graduate). He was married to Hirabai Daboo[4] while he was still a student.[5] He graduated from college in 1858 and joined his father's trading firm. It was a turbulent time to step into business as the Indian Rebellion of 1857 had just been suppressed by the British government.
Tata made many trips abroad, mainly to England, America, Europe, China, and Japan to establish branches for his father's business.
Business[edit]
Tata worked in his father's company until he was 29. He founded a trading company in 1868 with ₹21,000 capital (worth ₹21 million in 2015 prices). He bought a bankrupt oil mill at Chinchpokli in 1869 and converted it to a cotton mill, which he renamed Alexandra Mill. He sold the mill two years later for a profit. He set up another cotton mill at Nagpur in 1874, which he christened Empress Mill when Queen Victoria was proclaimed Empress of India on 1 January 1877.
He had four goals in life: setting up an iron and steel company, a world-class learning institution, a unique hotel and a hydro-electric plant. Only the hotel became a reality during his lifetime, with the inauguration of the Taj Mahal Hotel at Colaba waterfront in Mumbai on 3 December 1903[6] at the cost of ₹11 million (worth ₹11 billion in 2015 prices). At that time it was the only hotel in India to have electricity.[citation needed]
His successors' work led to the three remaining ideas being achieved:
- Tata Steel (formerly TISCO – Tata Iron and Steel Company Limited) is Asia's first and India's largest steel company. It became world's fifth largest steel company, after it acquired Corus Group producing 28 million tonnes of steel annually.[7]
- Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, the pre-eminent Indian institution for research and education in Science and Engineering.
- Tata Hydroelectric Power Supply Company, renamed Tata Power Company Limited, currently India's largest private electricity company with an installed generation capacity of over 8000MW.
Personal life[edit]
Tata married Hirabai Daboo. Their sons, Dorabji Tata and Ratanji Tata, succeeded Tata as the chairman of the Tata group.
Tata's sister Jerbai, through marriage to a Mumbai merchant, became mother of Shapurji Saklatvala, who Tata employed to successfully prospect for coal and iron ore in Bihar and Orissa. Saklatvala later settled in England, initially to manage Tata's Manchester office, and later became a Communist Member of the British Parliament.[8]
Death[edit]
While on a business trip in Germany in 1900, Tata became seriously ill. He died in Bad Nauheim[9] on 19 May 1904, and was buried in the Parsi burial ground in Brookwood Cemetery, Woking, England.
Legacy[edit]
Tata's iron and steel plant was set up at Sakchi village in Jharkhand. The village grew into a town and the railway station there was named Tatanagar. Now it is a bustling metropolis known as Jamshedpur in Jharkhand, named in honour of him.
The old village of Sakchi (now urbanised) still exists within the city of Jamshedpur, as its suburb.
He became the founding member of the Tata family.
Quotes[edit]
| This section is a candidate to be copied to Wikiquote using the Transwiki process. |
"Freedom without the strength to support it and, if need be, defend it, would be a cruel delusion. And the strength to defend freedom can itself only come from widespread industrialisation and the infusion of modern science and technology into the country's economic life."
"In a free enterprise the community is not just another stakeholder in the business but in fact the very existence of it."
"There is one kind of charity common enough among us... It is that patchwork philanthropy which clothes the ragged, feeds the poor, and heals the sick. I am far from decrying the noble spirit which seeks to help a poor or suffering fellow being... [However] what advances a nation or a community is not so much to prop up its weakest and most helpless members, but to lift up the best and the most gifted, so as to make them of the greatest service to the country."
"Be sure to lay wide streets planted with shady trees, every other of a quick-growing variety. Be sure that there is plenty of space for lawns and gardens. Reserve large areas for football, hockey and parks. Earmark areas for Hindu temples, Mohammedan mosques and Christian churches." — Tata in a letter to son Dorab about his vision for the township that would eventually become Jamshedpur.
"He was not a man who cared to bask in the public eye. He disliked public gatherings, he did not care for making speeches, his sturdy strength of character prevented from fawning on any man, however great, for he himself was great in his own way, greater than most people realised. He sought no honour and he claimed no privilege, but the advancement of India and her myriad peoples was with him an abiding passion." — The Times of India on Tata's death
"While many others worked on loosening the chains of slavery and hastening the march towards the dawn of freedom, Tata dreamed of and worked for life as it was to be fashioned after liberation. Most of the others worked for freedom from a bad life of servitude; Tata worked for freedom for fashioning a better life of economic independence." — Dr Zakir Hussain, the former president of India
"That he was a man of destiny is clear. It would seem, indeed, as if the hour of his birth, his life, his talents, his actions, the chain of events which he set in motion or influenced, and the services he rendered to his country and to his people, were all pre-destined as part of the greater destiny of India." — J. R. D. Tata
"No Indian of the present generation had done more for the commerce and industry of India." — Lord Curzon, the viceroy of India, following Tata's demise[3]
References[edit]
- ^ https://www.measuringworth.com/ukcompare/. Missing or empty
|title=(help) - ^ "webindia123-Indian personalities-Industrialists-Jamshedji Tata". webindia123.com.
- ^ a b About us | Heritage | Pioneers. Tata.com (10 August 2008). Retrieved on 28 July 2013.
- ^ "Family Tree of the Tatas". Retrieved 9 September 2006.
- ^ "Biography on TIFR website". Retrieved 9 September 2006.
- ^ "Taj Hotels website".
- ^ "Tata Steel website". Retrieved 9 September 2006.
- ^ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Volume 48. Oxford University Press. 2004. pp. 675–676.Article on Saklatvala by Mike Squires. In the article he is simply called J.N. Tata.
- ^ Jamsetji Tata’s guiding spirit- growth of Indian Steel industry by Tata legacy. Tatasteel100.com. Retrieved on 28 July 2013.
Further reading[edit]
- R. M. Lala (1 May 2006). For the Love of India: The Life and Times of Jamsetji Tata. Penguin Books India. ISBN 978-0-14-306206-6.
- Dinshaw Edulji Wacha (1915). The Life and Life Work of J. N. Tata: With a Portrait. Madras.
Search Results
Tata Steel Jamshedpur: Jamsetji Tata Story - YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xD4vS_1L5UQ
Jan 25, 2012 - Uploaded by tatasteeljamshedpur
A pioneer, a visionary, a seer - perhaps these adjectives are not enough to describe a man of such extraordinary ...Tata Steel Jamshedpur - A Heart Touching Video - YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GdVy0Wp6vtg
Feb 23, 2012 - Uploaded by Rahul Raj
An exciting story of Tata Steel Jamshedpur, founded by J.N Tata is one of the ... this video gave another life ...Remembering Jamsetji Tata - YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xfc6o3SiyqA
Mar 2, 2013 - Uploaded by Tata Motors
On March 3, 2013, the Tata Group celebrates the 174th birth anniversary of its Founder, Jamsetji Nusserwanji ...JRD Tata: A life extraordinaire - YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fuvZeE8RdG4
Jul 28, 2010 - Uploaded by NewsX
Take a look into the life and times of JRD Tata on his 106th birth anniversary.Remembering Jamsetji - Tata channel - Tata group
www.tata.com/video/VideoPreview/Remembering-Jamsetji
Life in pictures - Jamsetji Tata - YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ezLft5PDN5U
Mar 2, 2012 - Uploaded by ChemicalsTata
Jamsetji Tata: The Founder of the Tata group began with a textile mill in central India in the 1870s. His ...Jamsetji Tata - YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1wNoq7nGGgI
Oct 16, 2014 - Uploaded by Audiopedia
Jamsetji Nusserwanji Tata (Gujarati: જમ્શેત્જી નુંસ્સેર્વાનજી ટાટા; 3 March 1839 – 19 May 1904) was an Indian pioneer ...A Most Valuable gift to JRD Tata By A Street Painter !!! Must Watch ...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7HJK2XEe07I
Jun 14, 2013 - Uploaded by Aavtar Sync
A Most Valuable gift to JRD Tata By A Street Painter !!! Must Watch Click to Subscribe : http://www.youtube.com ...Sir JRD TATA - YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rkL2jMLsQdo
Jan 27, 2009 - Uploaded by Nikhil Chouhan
Golden words of Sir JRD TATA. ... If Sir Jihangir TATA continues his family business (opium trade) probably ...Changing the India Story--Ratan Tata and Sadhguru -- CNBC TV18 ...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PzGa3uD_sLg
Dec 31, 2014 - Uploaded by Isha Foundation
This edition of Business Saturday, which was telecast on CNBC TV 18 on 13th December, features Ratan Tata ...
Stay up to date on results for jamshedji tata.
Create alertSearch Results
Jamsetji Tata - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamsetji_Tata
Jamsetji Nusserwanji Tata (3 March 1839 – 19 May 1904) was an Indian pioneer industrialist, who founded the Tata Group, India's biggest conglomerate ...
Jamsetji Tata Biography- About family, children, education, age at ...
business.mapsofindia.com › Business-leaders
Jun 5, 2015 - Who is Jamsetji Tata- profile and brief biography with factsheet. Also get educational qualification, family background, age at which he died with ...Jamsetji Tata Nation Building Mission, Indian Steel Pioneer Biography
www.tatasteel100.com/people/
Moving from the familiar priesthood tradition, the pioneer Jamsetji Tata dare dreamt of setting the first steel plant in India along with development schemes.Jamsetji Tata Biography - Jamsetji Tata Childhood, Life, Profile, Timeline
www.iloveindia.com › Indian Entrepreneurs
The best entrepreneur and business tycoon that India has ever seen, Jamsetji Tata set the foundation of the Tata Group of companies. With this biography ...Jamshedji Nusserwanji Tata - India - Wikia
india.wikia.com/wiki/Jamshedji_Nusserwanji_Tata
Jamshedji Nusserwanji Tata was born on March 3, 1839 - and lived up to May 19The giant who touched tomorrow - Jamsetji Tata profile - Tata Chemicals
www.tatachemicals.com › media centre › articles
Jamsetji Tata was more than merely an entrepreneur who helped India take her place in the league of industrialised nations. He was a patriot and a humanist ...Jamshedji Tata - Founder of TATA Industries - Webindia123.com
www.webindia123.com/personal/industry/tata.htm
Jamshedji Tata is considered to be the path-finder of modern industrial builders. He is known as the grand father of Indian Industry for his acumen and ...Jamsetji Tata Biography - Childhood, Life Achievements & Timeline
www.thefamouspeople.com/profiles/jamsetji-tata-5509.php
Jamsetji Tata was an Indian entrepreneur who founded the Tata Group. This biography of Jamsetji Tata provides detailed information about his childhood, life,Tata Steel Jamshedpur: Jamsetji Tata Story - YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xD4vS_1L5UQ
Jan 25, 2012 - Uploaded by tatasteeljamshedpur
A pioneer, a visionary, a seer - perhaps these adjectives are not enough to describe a man of such extraordinary ...Jamsetji Nusserwanji Tata: Mumbai/Bombay pages
theory.tifr.res.in/bombay/persons/jamsetji-tata.html
Jamsetji Nusserwanji Tata was born into a clerical Parsi family in Nausari. His father, NusserwanjiTata, moved to Bombay and started trading. Jamsetji joined ...Searches related to jamshedji tata
Kharghar, Navi Mumbai, Maharashtra - From your Internet address - Use precise location

No comments:
Post a Comment