Information about Jamsetji Jeejeebhoy

Sir Jamsetjee Jeejebhoy, 1st Baronet (variously spelled Qamsetji and Jeejeebhoy, Jejeebjoy, Qijibhai) (15 July 178314 April 1859) was an Indian merchant and philanthropist.

Early life and business career

Jeejebhoy was born in Mumbai in 1783, of poor but respectable parents who died shortly afterwards, leaving him an orphan. At the age of sixteen, having had little formal education, he made his first visit to Calcutta and then began his first trading voyage to China.

Jeejebhoy's second voyage to China was made in a ship of the East India Company's fleet. Under the command of Sir Nathaniel Dance, this ship drove off a French squadron under Rear-Admiral Charles-Alexandre Léon Durand Linois in the Battle of Pulo Aura.

On Jeejebhoy's fourth voyage to China, the Indiaman in which he sailed was forced to surrender to the French, by whom he was carried as a prisoner to the Cape of Good Hope, then a neutral Dutch possession. After much delay and great difficulty, Jeejebhoy made his way to Calcutta in a Danish ship. Undaunted, Jeejebhoy undertook another voyage to China which was more successful than any of his previous journeys.

By this time Jeejebhoy had fairly established his reputation as an enterprising merchant possessed of considerable wealth. He settled in Mumbai, where he directed his commercial operations on an extended scale. By 1836, Jeejebhoy's firm was large enough to employ his three sons and other relatives, and he had amassed what at that period of Indian mercantile history was regarded as fabulous wealth.

Jeejebhoy was known by the nickname "Mr. Bottlewaller". "Waller" meant "trader", and Jeejebhoy's business interests included the manufacture and sale of bottles. Jeejebhoy and his family would often sign letters and checks using the name "Bottlewaller", and were known by that name in business and society, but he did not choose this assumed surname when it came to the baronetcy.

Philanthropy

Enlarge picture
Old Photo Bombay Native Hospital, constructed at the joint expense of Jeejebhoy and the East India Company; it was later renamed "Sir J.J. Hospital".
An essentially self-made man, having experienced the miseries of poverty in early life, Jeejebhoy developed great sympathy for his poorer countrymen, and in his later life was occupied with alleviating human distress in all its forms. Parsi and Christian, Hindu and Mussulman, were alike the objects of his beneficence.Hospitals, schools, homes of charity and pension funds throughout India (particularly in Mumbai, Navsari, Surat, and Poona) were created or endowed by Jeejebhoy, and he financed the construction of many public works such as wells, reservoirs, bridges, and causeways. By the time of his death in 1859, he was estimated to have donated over £230,000 to charity. Some of Jeejebhoy's notable charitable works include:

Baronetcy

Jeejebhoy's services were first recognized by the British Empire in 1842 by the bestowal of a knighthood and in 1858 by the award of a baronetcy. These were the very first distinctions of their kind conferred by Queen Victoria upon a British subject in India.

On Jeejebhoy's death in 1859, his Baronetcy was inherited by his eldest son Cursetjee Jeejebhoy, who, by a special Act of the Viceroy's Council in pursuance of a provision in the letters-patent, took the name of Sir Jamsetjee Jeejebhoy as second baronet.

Jeejebhoy and the Parsi community

Since the time of their emigration from Persia, the Parsi community in India had never had a titular chief or head; its communal funds and affairs were managed by a public body, more or less democratic in its constitution, called the Parsi panchayat. Jeejeebhoy gradually came to be regarded as the chief of the Parsi community, thanks to his wealth and charitable works and the recognition afforded him by the British authorities due to his baronetcy.

Baronetage of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
New creation
Baronet
(of Bombay)
1857–1859
Succeeded by
Cursetjee Jejeebhoy

References

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Merchants function as professionals who deal with trade, dealing in commodities that they do not produce themselves, in order to produce profit.

Merchants can be of two types:
  1. A wholesale merchant operates in the chain between producer and retail merchant.

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philanthropist is someone who engages in philanthropy; that is, someone who donates his or her time, money, and/or reputation to charitable causes. The term may apply to any volunteer or to anyone who makes a donation, but the label is most often applied to those who donate large
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Mumbai (Marathi: मुंबई Mumbaī
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Kolkata   (Bengali: কলকাতা, IPA: ['kolkat̪a]
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This page contains Chinese text.
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China (Traditional Chinese:
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Honourable East India Company (HEIC), often colloquially referred to as "John Company", and "Company Bahadur" in India, was an early joint-stock company (the Dutch East India Company was the first to issue public stock).
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Sir Nathaniel Dance-Holland, 1st Baronet (8 May 1735 – 15 October 1811) was a notable English portrait painter and later a politician.

The third son of architect George Dance the Elder, Dance (he added the 'Holland' suffix later in life) studied art under Francis
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Charles-Alexandre Léon Durand, Comte de Linois (January 27 1761, Brest-December 2 1848, Versailles) was a French admiral during the time of Napoleon Bonaparte. He won a victory over the British at the Battle of Algeciras in 1801 and was reasonably successful in a campaign against
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The naval Battle of Pulo Aura took place on 15 February 1804, during the Napoleonic Wars between a British convoy of lightly armed merchant ships and forces of the First French Empire.
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East Indiaman was a ship operating under charter or license to the Honourable East India Company. The company itself did not generally own merchant ships, but held a monopoly granted to it by Queen Elizabeth I of England for all English trade between the Cape of Good Hope and Cape
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Cape of Good Hope (Afrikaans: Kaap die Goeie Hoop, Dutch: Kaap de Goede Hoop, Portuguese: Cabo da Boa Esperança) is a rocky headland on the Atlantic coast of South Africa.
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Coordinates: Navsari (Gujarati: નવસારી) is a city and a municipality in the Indian state of Gujarat. The Navsari administrative district is named after it.
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Coordinates:

Surat pronunciation  
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Coordinates: Pune (IPA: puːneɪ, Marathi: पुणे) is a city located in the western Indian state of Maharashtra.
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Mahim is a neighbourhood in Mumbai. It is also the name of a railway station in Mahim area, on the Mumbai suburban railway on the Western Railway (India) railway line.

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Mahim was one of the seven islands that originally made up Mumbai.
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Salsette (साष्टी) (Portuguese: Salsete, Marathi: Sashti (साष्टी)) is an island in Maharashtra state on India's west coast.
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Avabai, Lady Jeejeebhoy (born c.1793) was the wife of Sir Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy, 1st baronet. She is best known for having funded the construction of the Mahim causeway in Mumbai (Bombay), which serves today as an important link between the island city of Mumbai with its
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The Grant Medical College, Mumbai is a medical school affiliated to the Maharashtra University of Health Sciences, Nashik. It is one of the premier medical institutions in India and is one of the oldest institution teaching Western medicine in Asia.
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The Sir J. J. School of Art was founded in March 1857 with a donation offered by Sir Jamsetjee Jeejebhoy, after whom the school is named.

Located in Mumbai, India, it is a sister institution to the Sir J.J.
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Sir J. J. Institute of Applied Art is an Indian applied art institution based in Mumbai. It is a state government college that was created through its sister school, the Sir J. J. School of Art. The "J. J.
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Seth R.J.J. High School is one of the oldest schools in Navsari, India, it was founded in 1846, by Sir Jamsetjee Jeejebhoy, an Indian merchant, and philanthropist.

External links

  • Education Department, Gujarat State


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Parsi (Gujarati: પારસી Pārsī, IPA: [ˈpa(ɾ).
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baronet (traditional abbreviation Bart, modern abbreviation Bt) or the rare female equivalent, a baronetess (abbreviation Btss), is the holder of a hereditary title awarded by the British Crown known as a baronetcy.
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Victoria (Alexandrina Victoria; 24 May 1819 – 22 January 1901) was the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland from 20 June 1837, and the first Empress of India from 1 May 1876, until her death on 22 January 1901.
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Sir Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy, 2nd Baronet, CSI, (?-1877), was an Indian businessmen.

Born Cursetjee Jeejeebhoy, he was the eldest son of Sir Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy. Jejeebhoy inherited his father's title under a special Act of the Viceroy's Council in pursuance of a provision in
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