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SIR M VISVESVARAYA

Sir Mokshagundam Visveswaraiah (KCIE, popularly known as Sir MV; 15 September 1860 – 14 April 1962) was a
notable Indian engineer, scholar, statesman and the Diwan of Mysore during 1912 to 1918. He was a recipient of the
Indian Republic's highest honour, the Bharat Ratna, in 1955. He was knighted as a Commander of the British Indian
Empire by King George V for his myriad contributions to the public good. Every year, 15 September is celebrated as
Engineer's Day in India in his memory. He is held in high regard pre-eminent engineer of India. He was the chief designer
of the flood protection system for the city of Hyderabad, as well as the chief engineer responsible for the construction of
the Krishna Raja Sagara dam in Mysore.

Early years

Visvesvaraya was born in 1860, in the Kingdom of Mysore, to a Telugu Brahmin family of Mokshagundam Srinivasa Sastry
and Venkatalakshmamma in present day Muddenahalli village, 40 miles from Bangalore, India. His father had migrated
from Kurnool. Visvesvaraya lost his father at the age of 15. He enrolled for primary school in Chikballapur, and attended
high school in Bangalore. He earned his Bachelor of Arts from Madras University in 1881 and later studied civil
engineering at the prestigious College of Engineering, Pune, popularly known as COEP.[1]

Career as an engineer

Upon graduating as an engineer, Visvesvaraya took up a job with the Public Works Department (PWD) of Mumbai and
was later invited to join the Indian Irrigation Commission. He implemented an extremely intricate system of irrigation in
the Deccan area. He also designed and patented a system of automatic weir water floodgates that were first installed in
1903 at the Khadakvasla Reservoir near Pune. These gates were employed to raise the flood supply level of storage in the
reservoir to the highest level likely to be attained by a flood without causing any damage to the dam. Based on the success
of these gates, the same system was installed at the Tigra Dam in Gwalior and the Krishnaraja Sagara (KRS) Dam in
Mandya/ Mysore,Karnataka. In 1906-07, Government of India sent him to Eden,(Africa) to study water supply and
drainage system and the project prepared by him was implemented in Eden successfully.

Career as an engineer

Upon graduating as an engineer, Visvesvaraya took up a job with the Public Works Department (PWD) of Mumbai and
was later invited to join the Indian Irrigation Commission. He implemented an extremely intricate system of irrigation in
the Deccan area. He also designed and patented a system of automatic weir water floodgates that were first installed in
1903 at the Khadakvasla Reservoir near Pune. These gates were employed to raise the flood supply level of storage in the
reservoir to the highest level likely to be attained by a flood without causing any damage to the dam. Based on the success
of these gates, the same system was installed at the Tigra Dam in Gwalior and the Krishnaraja Sagara (KRS) Dam in
Mandya/ Mysore,Karnataka. In 1906-07, Government of India sent him to Eden,(Africa) to study water supply and
drainage system and the project prepared by him was implemented in Eden successfully. Visvesvaraya achieved celebrity
status when he designed a flood protection system for the city of Hyderabad. He was instrumental in developing a system
to protect Visakhapatnam port from sea erosion.[2]

Visvesvaraya supervised the construction of the KRS Dam across the Cauvery River from concept to inauguration. This
dam created the biggest reservoir in Asia when it was built.[3] He was rightly called the "Father of modern Mysore state"
(now Karnataka): During his period of service with the Government of Mysore state, he was responsible for the founding
of, (under the Patronage of Mysore Government), the Mysore Soap Factory, the Parasitoide Laboratory, the Mysore Iron &
Steel Works (now known as Visvesvaraya Iron and Steel Limited) in Bhadravathi, the Sri Jayachamarajendra Polytechnic
Institute, the Bangalore Agricultural University, the State Bank of Mysore, The Century Club, Mysore Chambers of
Commerce and numerous other industrial ventures. He encouraged private investment in industry during his tenure as
Diwan of Mysore. He was instrumental in charting out the plan for road construction between Tirumala and Tirupati. He
was known for sincerity, time management and dedication to a cause

Diwan of Mysore

After opting for voluntary retirement in 1908, he took a foreign tour to study industrialised nations and after, for a short
period he worked for the Nizam of Hyderabad. He suggested flood relief measures for Hyderabad town, which was under
constant threat of floods by Moosi river. Later, during November 1909, Visvesvaraya was appointed as Chief Engineer of
Mysore State. Further, during the year, 1912, he was appointed as Diwan (First Minister) of the princely state of Mysore.
He was Diwan for 7 years.

With the support of Krishnaraja Wodeyar IV, Maharaja of Mysore, Visvesvaraya made an arguably unprecedented
contribution as Diwan to the all-round development of the state. Not only the achievements listed above, but many other
industries and public works owe their inception or active nurturing to him. He was instrumental in the founding of the
Government Engineering College at Bangalore in 1917, one of the first engineering institutes in India. This institution was
later named the University Visvesvaraya College of Engineering after its founder. It remains one of the very most reputed
institutes of engineering in Karnataka. He also commissioned several new railway lines in Mysore states.

Awards and honours

   The Bharat Ratna medal

Visvesvaraya was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Indian Empire (CIE) in 1911.[4] In 1915, while he was the
Diwan of Mysore, Visvesvaraya was knighted as a Knight Commander of the Order of the Indian Empire (KCIE) by the
British for his myriad contributions to the public good.[5] After India attained independence, he was given the nation's
highest honour, the Bharat Ratna, in 1955.[6]

He was honoured with honorary membership of the international Institution of Civil Engineers (based in London) and a
fellowship of the Indian Institute of Science (based in Bangalore). He was awarded several honorary doctoral degrees like
D.Sc., LL.D., D.Litt. from eight universities in India. He was president of the 1923 Session of the Indian Science Congress.
Sir M.V. was awarded honorary Membership of London Institution of Civil Engineers for an unbroken 50 years. [7] He was
the most popular person from Karnataka, in a newspaper survey conducted by Praja Vani

Memorial at Muddenahalli

   The Samadhi of Sir M.V. at Muddenahalli

The Visvesvaraya National Memorial Trust manages a memorial of Visvesvaraya in his birthplace of Muddenahalli. The
memorial exhibits his awards, titles and personal belongings of his, including his living room, spectacles, cups, his copy of
the Webster's dictionary, and a block with which his visiting cards were printed. Models of the Krishna Raja Sagar dam,
which Visvesvaraya designed and supervised the construction of, are also exhibited. The memorial is located adjacent to
his house, which was refurbished and regarded as a temple by the local

Recognition

Visvesvaraya has received recognition in various fields, most notably the education sector and the engineering sector.
Visvesvaraya Technological University, the University to which most engineering colleges in Karnataka are affiliated to,
has been named in his honour, as well as prominent colleges like University Visvesvaraya College of Engineering,
Bangalore, Sir M. Visvesvaraya Institute of Technology, Bangalore and Visvesvaraya National Institute of Technology,
Nagpur. College of Engineering, Pune, his alma mater, has erected a statue in his honor.[10] The Visvesvaraya Industrial
and Technological Museum, a museum in Bangalore is named in his honor. IIIT-Bangalore is being built at Muddenahalli,
the birthplace of Sir.MV as an honour to this great Engineer. The college is expected to be operational soon.

Recognition

Visvesvaraya has received recognition in various fields, most notably the education sector and the engineering sector.
Visvesvaraya Technological University, the University to which most engineering colleges in Karnataka are affiliated to,
has been named in his honour, as well as prominent colleges like University Visvesvaraya College of Engineering,
Bangalore, Sir M. Visvesvaraya Institute of Technology, Bangalore and Visvesvaraya National Institute of Technology,
Nagpur. College of Engineering, Pune, his alma mater, has erected a statue in his honor.[10] The Visvesvaraya Industrial
and Technological Museum, a museum in Bangalore is named in his honor. IIIT-Bangalore is being built at Muddenahalli,
the birthplace of Sir.MV as an honour to this great Engineer. The college is expected to be operational soon.
His Early Life and Beginnings

Sir MV was born in Muddenahalli, a village in Karnataka, on 15th September 1860. He completed his high school
education from Wesley Mission High School and his graduation from Central College – both in Bangalore. He was a very
bright student.

He went on to pursue a course in civil engineering in Pune, having received a scholarship for the same. While there, he
was awarded the James Berkley Gold Medal for outstanding performance.

He led a very simple life. He was a strict vegetarian and a teetotaler. He would go to sleep by 10 P.M. and wake up at 6 A.M.
His diet included a very light breakfast, two slices of bread or chappatis, vegetables without spices, rasam, curds,
Nanjangud bananas for lunch.

Engineering Feats and Achievements

Sir MV’s first job was as an Assistant Engineer at the Public Works Department under the government of the erstwhile
Bombay Presidency. He had a long and eventful career in the field of engineering, during which he also served as the Chief
Engineer of the erstwhile State of Mysore.

Sir MV was the driving force behind the construction of many major dams and water supply schemes across the country.
The famous Krishna Raja Sagar dam in Mysore is one of these.

The use of automatic sluice gates, an engineering innovation applied in many dams across the country, was Sir MV’s idea.
He became the Dewan of the State of Mysore in 1912 and during his tenure; he took immense interest in shaping new
developments in education and other fields.

He was instrumental in the formation of Mysore University as well as two other well-known educational institutions of
Bangalore – University Vishweshwaraiah College of Engineering and University of Agricultural Sciences.

He also played an integral role in setting up the Mysore Iron and Steel Works, Bhadravathi, and the Bank of Mysore (now
State Bank of Mysore). It is important to bear in mind, however, that these are just a few of his many achievements.

Job Positions Held By Sir MV

Some of the job positions he held were

    1.    Assistant Engineer, Bombay Government Service [in 1884]
    2.    Chief Engineer, Hyderabad State [he served only for 7 months starting April 15, 1909]
    3.    Chief Engineer in Mysore State [Nov 15, 1909]. He was also Secretary to the Railways.
    4.    President of Education and Industrial Development committees in Mysore State
    5.    Dewan of Mysore. [for six years starting 1912]
    6.    Chairman, Bhadravati Iron Works
    7.    Member of the Governing Council of the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore
    8.    Member of the Governing Council of Tata Iron and Steel Company [TISCO]
    9.    Member of Back Bay enquiry committee, London
    10.   Member of a committee constituted in 1917 to make recommendations regarding the future of Indian States.

Sir M.V. retired in 1908 and Sri Krishnarajendra Wodeyar, Maharaja of Mysore, was eager to secure the services of
Visvesvaraya to serve Mysore. He joined as Chief Engineer in Mysore because he wanted challenging opportunities. Sir
M.V. had earned a reputation for his honesty, integrity, ability and intelligence. He had introduced compulsory education
in the State which later was embodied as a fundamental right in the Constitution of independent India.

To name few of the many things he was responsible for:
1.  Architect of the Krishnarajasagara dam - or KRS or Brindavan gardens. One of the biggest dams in India which
        irrigates a hundred and twenty thousand acres of land.
    2. Bhadravati Iron and Steel Works - as its Chairman he rescued it from becoming extinct.
    3. Mysore Sandal Oil Factory and the Mysore soap factory
    4. Mysore University - Sir M.V.'s question was "If Australia and Canada could have universities of their own for less
        than a million population, cannot Mysore with a population of not less that 60 lakhs have a University of its
        own?"
    5. State Bank of Mysore (it was first named The Bank of Mysore)
    6. Public libraries in Mysore and Bangalore
    7. Encouraging girls to attend school.
    8. Mysore Chamber of Commerce
    9. Kannada Sahitya Parishad or the Kannada Literary Academy
    10. Sri Jayachamarajendra Occupational Institute, Bangalore - funded by the ENTIRE money [Rs 2 lacs] he earned
        from rescuing Bhadravati Iron Works

Sir M.V. was never interested in fame or publicity. But they came to him on their own. Every university in India sought
him out to confer honoris causa. The univs of Allahabad, Andhra, Bombay, Calcutta, Jadhavpur, Mysore, Patna and
Varanasi.

Some of the honours and laurels conferred on Sir M.V.,


1904 Honorary Membership of London Institution of Civil Engineers for an unbroken period of 50 years
1906 "Kaisar-i-Hind" in recognition of his services
1911 C.I.E. (Companion of the Indian Empire) at the Delhi Darbar
1915 K.C.I.E. (Knight Commander of the Order of the Indian Empire)
1921 D.Sc. - Calcutta University
1931 LLD - Bombay University
1937 D.Litt - Benaras Hindu University
1943 Elected as an Honorary Life Member of the Institution of Engineers (India)
1944 D.Sc. - Allahabad University
1948 Doctorate - LLD., Mysore University
1953 D.Litt - Andhra University
1953 Awarded the Honorary Fellowship of the Institute of Town Planners, India
1955 Conferred ' BHARATHA RATNA'(The gem of India), the highest dinstiction of the country
1958 'Durga Prasad Khaitan Memorial Gold Medal' by the Royal Asiatic Society Council of Bengal
1959 Fellowship of the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore


His Memorable Persona

There is no dearth of interesting anecdotes about Sir MV.

Some of these revolve around him being a stickler for punctuality and a strict disciplinarian; there are others that dwell
on his sense of honesty, integrity and professionalism. The fact that he was always impeccably dressed has also been well-
documented.

When Sir MV was offered the position of Dewan of Mysore State, it is said that he invited his relatives for dinner. He told
them that he would take up the offer on one condition: that they (the relatives) should not come and ask him to use his
position as Dewan to help them get their personal work done.

Bank Balance
"Indian Express" on March 24, 2005 (by Arindam Bhattacharjee) carried an article which how simple Sir MV was and how
diligently he maintained his accounts.

Sir MV maintained an account with Bank of Mysore, which is now State Bank of Mysore. Sir MV had Rs 990 on March 27,
1918, which increased to Rs 11,487 on March 3, 1919. His account had thrice attracted interests of Rs 14, Rs 66 and Rs
117 during this period. An entry in the passbook on Nov 18, 1918 reveals he got Rs 13,486 transferred to this current
account from a fixed deposit account.

Sir MV And Mahatma Gandhi

Sir M.V. belongs to that small band of eminent Indians whose ideas and achievements have been among the truly creative
and formative force of modern India. Sir M.V.'s slogan was Industrialize or Perish and Mahatama Gandhiji's view was
Industrialize and Perish.

In 1921 Gandhiji launched his non-cooperation movement which Sir M.V. did not agree with. Sir M.V. wrote to Gandhiji
urging him to be better dressed in view of the upcoming Round Table Conference. Sir M.V. used to be immaculately
dressed.

MV’s Final Years

Sir MV’s extraordinary feats resulted in the government of India bestowing him with the Bharat Ratna award in the year
1955.

The centenary of the birth of Sir M.V. was celebrated in Lal Bagh in Bangalore. Prime Minister Nehru flew down to
Bangalore by a special plane to honour the greatest son of India. Sri Jayachamaraja Wodiyar presided over the function.

Sir. M.V. died on April 12, 1962 at the age of 102 years, 6 months and 8 days. As per his wish, he was cremated in his birth
place, Muddanahalli.

The memorial at Muddenahalli is good but it is not taken care well. Not sure how he would react to the state of affairs in
Karnataka or India in general if he was alive today. Government hesitates to release Rs 3 lakh for Karnataka's icon [May 5,
2008 / Deccan Herald].

Sir Mokshagundam Visvesvaraya born on 15th September 1860 in Muddenahalli, Chikkaballapura District, Karnataka.
Sir M Vishweshwaraya father is Srinivasa Sastry and mother Venkachamma. Sir M Vishweshwaraya is an eminent Indian
engineer and statesman. Today 15th September we observer his Sir M Visvesvaraya birthday as Engineers Day in India..
Sir M Vishweshwaraya is a graduating as an civil engineer.

Visvesvaraya Joined PWD department of Bombay (now its known as Maharashtra state). Visvesvaraya was a genius, he
invented Block System the automatic doors which he devised to stop wasteful overflow of water. Sir Visvesvaraya builted
many dams in maharashtra state. He was designed and patented a system of automatic weir water floodgates which
were first installed in 1903 at the Khadakvasla reservoir, Pune. He worked as a chief engineer during construction of
Krishna Raja Sagara Dam on the Kaveri River in Mandya. He became the President of All India Manufacturers Association.
Sir Visvesvaraya was the maker of modern mysore. Sir
M. Visvesvaraya lead a very simple life. He was a strict vegetarian and a teetotaler. He was known for his honesty and
integrity. In 1912, Maharaja of Mysore appointed Visvesvaraya as his Dewan. Before accepting the position of Dewan of
Mysore, he invited all his relatives for dinner. He told them very clearly that he would accept the prestigious office on the
condition that none of them would approach him for favours. As Dewan of Mysore, he worked tirelessly for educational
and industrial development of the state. When he was the Dewan many new industries came up. The Sandal Oil Factory,
the Soap Factory, the Metals Factory, the Chrome Tanning Factory , were some of them. Of the many factories he started
the most important is the Bhadravati Iron and Steel Works.He was also knighted by the British for his myriad
contributions to the public good
After voluntary retirement in 1908, sir visweswaraya was appointed as a minister of the state of mysore. Also Sir
Visvesvaraya designed a flood protection system to protect hyderabad city from the flood. He is a recipient of the Indian
republic’s highest honour, the Bharat Ratna, in 1955. Sir visweswaraya died on 14th April 1962
Remember, your work may be only to sweep a railway crossing, but it is your duty to > keep it so clean that no other
crossing in the world is as clean as yours""

On the 15th of September 1861, more than a century ago a little boy was born in Muddenahalli in the Chikkaballapur
Taluk of Kolar District (Mysore State). His father Srinivasa Sastry and his mother Venkachamma named him Visvesvaraya.

Visvesvaraya's father, Srinivasa Sastry was a great Sanskrit scholar of those days. Both he and his wife were good and
pious folk who led a very simple life. They were not very well off but both his parents decided to educate the little boy.

Right from his childhood days, Visvesvaraya learnt from them a respect for the culture and the traditions of the land. His
father enrolled him in a school in their tiny Taluk itself and Visvesvaraya completed his early education there.

He was a good and a hardworking student and was keenly interested in pursuing his studies. So with his parents consent
and blessing he set out to Bangalore in order to go in for higher education when he was around fifteen years old. In
Bangalore, he joined the Central College.

But alas! His pocket was empty and he had no roof over his head. But this helpless state did not bog Visvesvaraya down.
Instead he started looking for a job that would sustain him and pay for his studies.

He found a family from Coorg, who was looking for a tutor for their children. Visvesvaraya, himself a student at that time,
became their tutor. He lived with them and earned a few rupees with which he completed his education. As a student he
earned every rupee by hard work.

Discipline was ever his watchword. All through his student days he worked hard and in a systematic way. He was an early
riser and started his work quite early.

Though he was poverty-stricken, he continued to study well and stood high in the B.A. Examination. When he was twenty,
he managed to get some help from the Government of Mysore and joined the Science College in Poona to study
Engineering. Three years later, by sheer determination and hard work he ranked first in the L.C.E. and the EC.E.
Examinations (these were like the B.E. Examination of today).

As soon as the results were out, the Government of Bombay offered him the post of an Assistant Engineer at Nasik.
Visvesvaraya was very happy and he worked hard and excelled in his post.

When he was 32 years old, some very difficult work fell to his lot. He was given the task of finding a way of supplying
water from the river Sindhu to a town called Sukkur. He prepared an ingenious plan, which amazed the other famous
engineers.

Also, he developed a new system called the Block System where he devised steel doors; these could stop the wasteful flow
of water in dams. Even British officers of those times were astonished by his brains and were full of praise for the
invention.

The Government appreciated Visvesvaraya's genius and work. He was promoted to higher places. From Bombay,
Visvesvaraya went to Hyderabad as Chief Engineer. Here he achieved something that was simply impossible at that time.

The river Moosa divided the city of Hyderabad into two. When rains lashed, the river was in floods and the waters of the
river poured into many houses, and men and cattle were carried away. Visvesvaraya planned dams to tame the Moosa and
also suggested that lovely parks should be laid out on the banks of the river.

His resourcefulness earned him the position of a Chief Engineer in Mysore State. But Visvesvaraya was not just interested
in buildings, roads and bridges. He saw that the people of India were then in a miserable condition. There were very few
schools and only six persons out of every hundred could read and write. Many people were just farmers who depended
completely on the rains for their food. He saw that ignorance, poverty and sickness plagued the people; and he wanted to
bring about change.
Visvesvaraya suggested that an Economic Conference be set up to find ways of removing ignorance, poverty and sickness.
As a result, very dry lands in parts the country began to smile with plenty.

Visvesvaraya continued to be the Chief Engineer of Mysore for three years. In 1912 when he was 51, the Maharaja of
Mysore chose Visvesvaraya as his Dewan or his chief minister.

Soon after Visvesvaraya became the Dewan, one of his relatives went to him. He asked Visvesvaraya, "Can you get me into
a higher post for a better pay with your recommendation to the Maharaja?"

Visvesvaraya who was so straightforward said a plain 'No'.

But, he was kindhearted and as long as the relative was alive, he paid him a hundred rupees every month from his pocket.

As the Dewan, he got a car from the Government for his use. He used the Government car for government work and for his
private work he used his own car. Those were days when people had to work by candlelight. He used, for official work, the
stationery and the candles supplied by the Government; for his private work he used stationery and candles, which he had
bought. He was such an honest man.

Once, one of hi§ friends was advised rest after some illness. He wanted to spend some days in Bangalore. The friend wrote
to him asking for a house for some days. He thought the Dewan would give him a Government Guest House, free of rent.
The Dewan did give him a Government House; but as long as the friend stayed there, Visvesvaraya himself paid the rent of
Rs. 250 a month.

He was always neatly dressed and ready for work by seven in the morning. He was known everywhere for his discipline
and tidiness. There was not a crease or a wrinkle anywhere on his clothes.

Visvesvaraya planned everything smoothly, methodically and without any hurry. Visitors who wished to see him had to
write first and he would fix an hour. He was very strict about the hour fixed and no one could come late.

Visvesvaraya always believed in the value of education. When he became the Dewan, there were about 4,500 schools in
Mysore State. In six Years about 6,500 new school were opened. He also stressed on education for women. He made the
Maharani's College in Mysore where the first hostel for girls was also opened. He also made arrangements for the
government to give scholarships to intelligent students to go to foreign countries for studies.

Visvesvaraya realized that industry was the backbone of a country. So he developed the existing industries. He also got
experts from other countries to help by teaching their skills. Thus many new industries came up during his chief minister
ship. He started the Sandal Oil Factory, the Soap Factory, the Metals Factory, the Chrome Tanning Factory and Bhadravati
Iron and Steel Works. He was also the key in the opening of the Bank of Mysore. He also brought in many hotels into
Mysore and played a major role in the laying of railway lines.

Visvesvaraya did in six years what many others could not have accomplished in sixty years. People asked each other "Is he
a magician?" many a time.

But for Visvesvaraya it was no magic. He always believed only in hard work. He once said, "The curse of our country is
laziness. At first sight every one seems to be working. But in fact, one-man works and the others watch him. As someone
said with contempt, 'it looks as if five men are working. But really only one- man works. One man will be doing nothing.
One man will be resting. Another man will be watching them. Yet another man will be helping these three."

Visvesvaraya was also a fearless patriot. In those days the Englishmen considered themselves the lords of the country.
The Maharaja of Mysore had the tradition of holding a Durbar during the Dasara festivities every year. On the day of the
Durbar, the Europeans were given comfortable chairs but Indians were required to sit on the floor. Visvesvaraya went to
the Durbar for the first time in 1910. The arrangements pained him.

The next year he did not attend the Durbar. When the officers of the palace made enquiries he frankly gave the reason.
The very next year all the Europeans and Indians were given chairs.
Following this a British officer wrote a letter to him. In his letter he said, "In the Maharaja's Durbar, I want a cushion to
rest my feet because the chair is too high."

Visvesvaraya promptly got the legs of the chair shortened and wrote back saying-"the height has been reduced."

In 1918 at the age of 57, he took voluntary retirement. He went to the palace in the Government car gave the letter and
returned in his own car.

After retirement he went abroad numerous times, for some work or the other. Wherever he went, he had a notebook and
a pencil in his hand. He made notes of any new information with which he could help the country.

After his retirement when the Bhadravati Factory was in trouble, he worked as the Chairman giving advice for
restoration. At that time, the Government had not decided the salary for him. It took them some years to do so but by then
the Government owed him more than a hundred thousand rupees. M

When they finally decided to pay him, Visvesvaraya said "I will not touch a single rupee. Start an institute where boys can
learn some profession." The government followed his wish and wanted to name it after Visvesvaraya.

But he said, "Name it after the Maharaja of Mysore." Thus the Sri Jayachamaraja Polytechnic Institute of Bangalore came
about.

In 1944, an association arranged a conference where Visvesvaraya was the Chairman. The Governor of Berar, an
Englishman, was to open the conference. In those days the Governors were very powerful, highly respected and obeyed.
The conference was to discuss a resolution that India should have a national government. The Governor said that the
resolution should not be discussed. "Otherwise," he said, "I will not come."

Visvesvaraya was unperturbed by the objection and said to his friends, "All right. Why wait for him? Let us go on with the
conference".

Such was his commitment towards the country that he did not care even if someone powerful hindered the growth.

Because of his genius, experience and mellow wisdom people wanted to hear him and quite often he was to make
speeches. Whenever he had to make a speech he would think about what he was going to say, write the speech, get it
typed and weigh every word and revise it. He would revise it four or five times and give it final shape.

Once he visited a Primary School in his native village, Muddenahalli. He gave the teacher ten rupees and asked him to
distribute sweets to the children. The teacher requested him saying, "Please say a few words to the children, sir,"

Visvesvaraya spoke for five minutes and went away. But later he was unhappy because he had spoken without
preparation. Some days later he prepared a speech and went to the school again; once again he distributed sweets to the
children. Then he made his speech.

He toiled on briskly though old age crept around him. When he was around 92 he went to Fatna where he was called to
study a plan for a bridge across the

Ganga. The sun was cruel and the heat was unbearable. There were parts of the site to which he could not go by car. The
Government had arranged to have him carried in a chair. But he refused to use the chair. He got off the car and started
walking briskly much to the amazement of the rest.

In 1955 when he was 94 years of age, Visvesvaraya was honored and made a 'Bharat Ratna' or the Gem of India. Even at
that age he was so particular about his dressing that people who went to see him were surprised for he was so neat and
tidy.

His memory even when he was almost a hundred years old remained pristine. Fifty years after he had tamed river Moosa,
at the age of 97, there was a discussion about the river with certain others where some references were made to some
intricate details. Visvesvaraya called a servant and, pointing to a bookshelf, said, "Bring the three or four books in the
middle of the third row." Then he opened one of them and pointed exactly to the detail under discussion on that page.

When he finally turned 100, people all over India showered their affection and respect on the Grand Old Man. The
Government of India also brought out a stamp in his honor.

Somebody once said to him, "You have done great service to the country. You are like Bhishmacharya." He replied, "You
make me remember what a small man I I am. What am I before Bhishmacharya?" He was so | modest. Even at the age of
100, he rose to receive a visitor; he got up again when the visitor was leaving

Visvesvaraya silently passed away on 14th of April j 1962. He was 101.

Visvesvaraya led the country to the path of progress, every one of his creations were considered mighty andI magnificent.
But far mightier and far more magnificent was the matchless Dreamer, Doer and leader who paved the way to modern
India.

Engineers Day, M. Visvesvarayya Birth Day — Presentation Transcript


         1. HAPPY ENGINEER’S DAY
         2. In Memory of Sir Mokshagundam Visvesvaraya September 15, 1860 - April
         3. Born : September 15, 1860 Place: Muddenahalli village (Kolar district of Karnataka). Father: Srinivasa Sastry
         Mother: Venkachamma. Life & journey of a Centenarian
         4. Life & journey of a Centenarian Education: Early Schooling in Chikkaballapur, 1881 : B.A. Examination from
         Central College Bangalore . 1883 : Civil Engineering from Science College in Poona. He ranked first in the L.C.E.
         and the F.C.E. Examinations ( equivalent to B.E. Examination of today ).
         5. His Responsibilities Some of the job positions he held were: • Assistant Engineer, Bombay Government Service
         [in 1884] • Chief Engineer, Hyderabad State [he served only for 7 months starting April 15, 1909] • Chief
         Engineer in Mysore State [Nov 15, 1909]. He was also Secretary to the Railways. • President of Education and
         Industrial Development committees in Mysore State • Dewan of Mysore. [for six years]
         6. Contd., • Chairman, Bhadravati Iron Works • Member of the Governing Council of the Indian Institute of
         Science, Bangalore • Member of the Governing Council of Tata Iron and Steel Company [TISCO] • Member of
         Back Bay enquiry committee, London • Member of a committee constituted in 1917 to make recommendations
         regarding the future of Indian States
         7. Man with Values He was a strict vegetarian, teetotaler and non-smoker, an admirer of the old Indian joint
         family system. In business and industry, he admired the European and American methods, but in domestic
         habits he was a perfect Mysore Brahmin A Minister in Mysore once fixed an interview with Sir MV but was
         unable to come. Next day when he called on him, Sir MV told him, “you have committed a double mistake- firstly,
         by not keeping up the engagement yesterday and secondly, by coming when you were not.
         8. Man with Values “ Slackness is the worst curse of the country.” At age of 90, a paper correspondent asked him
         how he felt and Sir M V remarked, “I find life interesting.” Once Sri C Rajagopalachari unexpectedly called on
         him. Sir MV was so smartly dressed, Rajaji said. “Even if I bring a photographer in the middle of the night, I can
         take your pictures. You will always be well groomed.”
         9. Man with Values In Sweden Sir MV feel ill, the doctor suggested him to take a few drops of Brandy with
         medicine. For which Sir M V replied “If this life cannot survive without those drops, let it go.” On his own account
         book was written, “If you buy what you do not need, you will need what you cannot buy.” Sir M V was one of
         those rare human beings who practiced in personal life what he preached in public.
         10. Major Achievements Bombay • Introduced the block system of irrigation • Designed a new system of
         systematic water weir flood gate • Established Deccan Club in Poona Bihar & Orissa • Selected site for a railway
         bridge on river of Ganga in Bihar • Hirakund enquiries • Water supply schemes through out the state Hyderabad
         • Schemes for flood protection & drainage for Hyderabad • Remodelling of Hyderabad city
         11. Major Achievements • Architect of the Krishnarajasagara dam – or KRS or Brindavan gardens. One of the
         biggest dams in India which irrigates a hundred and twenty thousand acres of land. • Bhadravati Iron and Steel
         Works - as its Chairman he rescued it from becoming extinct.
         12. Major Achievements • State Bank of Mysore (1913 it was first named The Bank of Mysore) • Founder of
         Mysore Sandal Oil Factory and the Mysore soap factory • Mysore Chamber of Commerce • Founder of Kannada
Literary •Mysore University- Sir M.V.'s question was "If Australia and Canada could have universities of
         their own for less than a million population, cannot Mysore with a population of not less that 60 lakhs
         13. Contd. Sir M. V.’s great dream was to see India prosper through industrialization. In 1920 he published a
         book, “Reconstructing India” & in 1934, “Planned Economy for India.” He coined the slogans, “Produce or
         perish”, and “Industrialize or perish.”
         14. AWARDS • 1906 : "Kaisar-i-Hind" in recognition of his services • 1911 : C.I.E. (Companion of the
         Indian Empire) at the Delhi Durbar • 1915 : K.C.I.E. (Knight Commander of the Order of the Indian Empire) •
         1921 : D.Sc. – Calcutta University • 1943 : Elected as an Honorary Life Member of the Institution of Engineers(I)
         • 1944 : D.Sc. – Allahabad • 1904 : Honorary Membership of London Institution of Civil Engineers for The Knight
         Commander Of The Indian Empire
         15. Contd., • 1948 : Doctorate - LLD., Mysore Uni. • 1953 : D.Litt – Andhra University • 1953 : Awarded the
         Honorary Fellowship of the Institute of Town Planners, India • 1955 : Conferred BHARATHARATNA‘ (The gem of
         India), the highest civilian award of the country • 1958 : 'Durga Prasad Khaitan Memorial Gold Medal‘ by the
         Royal Asiatic Society Council of Bengal
         16. • Memorial at Muddenahalli . • Sir M Visvesvaraya Institute Of Technology, Bangalore is named after Sir M.V.
         • University Visvesvaraya College of Engineering . • Visweswaraiah National Institute of Technology (V.N.I.T.),
         The college is among the elite 17 NationalInstitutes of Technologies• The Visveswarayya Technological
         University, Belgaum, to which nearly all engineering colleges in Memorials & Institutions in his honor
         17. Contd., • His alma mater, the College of Engineering, Pune (COEP) has erected a statue in his memory and
         honor on their campus in central Pune, immediately outside the historic COEP administration building. • The
         Visvesvaraya Industrial and Technological Museum , Bangalore, set up as part of his birth centenary
         celebrations. • Vishweshwaraya Iron and Steel Limited, a public sector undertaking, in the founding of which he
         was
         18. The End On 14-April-1962 at 6.15am at the age of 102 years,, Sir M V breathed his last,




MOKSHAGUNDAM VISVESVARAYA

By K. SAMPATHGIRI RAO

“Always performing works here, one should wish to live a hundred years. If you live thus as a man, works will not cling to
you–there is no other way.”

                                                                                                   –Isha Upanishad, verse 2

 Thus lived and worked Visvesvaraya, fulfilling the injunction of the Upanishadic seer to the very letter, and dropping like
a ripe fruit from the branch of Life on 14th April 1962. He had completed his one hundred years in September 1961. An
expert engineer with a flair for bold and original ideas, a great dreamer and withal a thoroughly practical man with an eye
to every minute detail, a tireless worker who had trained, himself with rare self-discipline to work with clock-like
regularity, a patriot of the highest order who longed that his country should take an honoured place alongside of
advanced Western nations, and that quickly, he had to his credit concrete achievements, in a measure unequalled by any
in modern India.

 Like many great men he was far ahead of his generation, and was ill-served by many in his own; and yet he never lost his
enthusiasms, nor ever felt frustrated. To the end of his days he communicated, to those who came into touch with him,
some of his own enthusiasm and high purposefulness, to work unceasingly for the rapid all-round development of India.

II

Visvesvaraya was born in Muddenahalli, a village at the foot of the Nandi Hills, the famous hill-station 40 miles to the
north of Bangalore, in an orthodox Brahmin family in humble circumstances. After finishing his primary education at
Chickballapur, he was taken for high school and college education to Bangalore. Too poor to pay for his school fees and
books, he earned while he learned, giving tuitions to other boys. He graduated from the Central College in 1880 and
proceeded to join the Engineering College at Poona, where he topped the list of successful candidates in the Final
Engineering Examination in 1884, thus securing a guaranteed appointment as Assistant Engineer in the Bombay
Presidency.

 By dint of intelligence, industry and earnestness, he secured rapid promotions and was earning Rs. 500, less than two
years after entering service. He worked on various assignments as Irrigation Engineer, designing water works and
drainage schemes for various towns in the then Bombay Presidency. He devised what is known as the Block System of
irrigation, to give water by rotation to minimize wastage of water and yield better results to cultivators–a system
commended by the Irrigation Commission set up by the Government of India in 1901-3. ‘The object is to distribute the
benefits of irrigation works over a larger number of villages and to concentrate the irrigation in each village within blocks
of specified units and in selected soils and situations.’ This system was successfully worked in the Nira Canal in the
Bombay Presidency. Later on he tried to introduce it also at Marikanive and the Cauvery Canal in Mysore.

He devised a system of automatic gates at Lake Fife, Khadakvarla, near Poona, to raise the storage water level of the lake
permanently by about 8 ft–without raising the dam–increasing , the storage of water by about 25 per cent. He took out a
patent but refused to ask for any royalty as the work was carried out under his own supervision as Government Engineer.
He was deputed to Aden to devise the water works and drainage of that town in 1906. Kolhapur needed a water supply
scheme and the Political Agent wrote to the Government of Bombay asking specifically for the services of a European
Engineer; but as Visvesvaraya was as good as any European engineer he was deputed; and it must be said to the credit of
the Political Agent that he paid a handsome compliment to Visvesvaraya for the fine job done by him at Kolhapur. He soon
rose to be Superintending Engineer, having superseded many in service on account of the special offices to which he was
appointed. His work drew unstinted praise from a Governor like Lord Sydenham, not particularly noted for his pro-Indian
sympathies, who spoke appreciatively of his “great abilities and unvarying industry.” He was only 47 and had put in 24
years in the service of the Bombay Government by 1908, but wished to retire as he felt that “in the staet of political felling
in the country” at the time, his chance of being appointed as Chief Engineer was rather remote. His European and Indian
friends feared that he might not be considered eligible for a pension. Lord Sydenham’s Government, however, took a
generous view and wrote to the Government of India that “the service rendered by Visvesvaraya has been exceptionally
meritorious and fully entitles him to the additional pension.”

 He was on leave preparatory to retirement and had planned to stay in Europe and America for two years, not to enjoy a
holiday, but to study the conditions in Western countries and make notes, as was his invariable practice. This was not his
first foreign tour, as he had already visited Japan in 1898 for three months, making notes of what he saw, and had even
compiled a small book without any idea of publishing it. What he had seen of Japan and of its rapid modernization had
evidently whetted his desire to see more of the modern world.

III

          He had, no doubt, by now formally retired from Government service, but it can be truly said that his most active
and fruitful career was just beginning, as proved by subsequent events. His life in the service of the Bombay Government,
of which he spent nearly 14 years in Poona, the educational and political centre of Maharashtra, specially fitted him for
undertaking nation-building activities in later years. Poona was one of the most vigorous centres of national feeling and
endeavour in the country. It was fortunate for Visvesvaraya that he came into intimate contact during this momentous
period with the great Mahadev Govind Ranade and his illustrious disciple Gopal Krishna Gokhale. It is interesting to note
that as early as 1893 he contributed an article to the journal of the Sarvajanik Sabha on “National Uplift”. He had also been
instrumental in starting the Deccan Club in Poona in 1891, where the elite of the city could meet for recreation, get to
know one another better, and discuss topical public questions informally. These precious years that he spent in Poona
must have deepened his patriotic fervour, and given direction to his later activities as a front-rank publicist and patriot-
statesman. While this favourable environment moulded his ideas and gave him a vision, his purity and strength of
character, were of his own making. Scorning the common pleasures of life, he had disciplined himself rigorously to live a
well-ordered life, and one of high moral endeavour. Todd’s Students’ Manual and the works of Samuel Smiles on Duty, Self-
Help and Thrift were books which were in great vogue in those days, and were earnestly recommended to the young for
their reverent study by well-meaning elders. These books seem to have been favourites with Visvesvaraya, who evidently
strove to reduce to practice the many ennobling and excellent precepts in these books. THE GERMINAL IDEAS IN THESE
BOOKS seem to have fallen on fertile soil and they bore abundant fruit.

         Visvesvaraya’s second foreign tour, referred to above, was interrupted by an urgent call from Hyderabad, which
was passed on to him when he was in Italy. There had been very heavy rains and unprecedented floods in the Musi river,
flowing through Hyderabad, which had caused considerable damage. His services were, therefore, requisitioned to
suggest remedial measures. Visvesvaraya replied, fixing his terms and agreeing to go to Hyderabad five months later. His
terms were those that would have normally been offered to a European engineer of similar status. The Hyderabad
Government were anxious to have his expert advice and agreed to his terms. By the stand he took in this matter,
Visvesvaraya raised the status of Indian engineers in general.

 Another interesting instance of how he jealously safeguarded the self-respect and status of Indians may be given here. It
was when he was Dewan of Mysore. During the Dasara celebrations, one day was set apart for a European Durbar in the
Palace. The European guests were provided with chairs, while the Indian officers and other guests had to squat on the
floor on the other side of the hall. Visvesvaraya resented this arrangement, and a custom, which had prevailed for many
years, was changed at his instance, and chairs were thereafter provided to all invitees, European or Indian.

 It is needless to add that Visvesvaraya completed the job assigned to him by the Hyderabad Government to everybody’s
satisfaction, and took further steps which contributed to transform Hyderabad into the beautiful city it is today.

IV

          About this time (April 1909) a call came to him from V. P. Madhava Rao, Dewan of Mysore, to join as Chief
Engineer of Mysore. But owing to his engagement at Hyderabad he had no intention of accepting the offer. But T. Ananda
Rao, the succeeding Dewan, wrote a letter in the course of which he said that Visvesvaraya would find ‘ample scope both
for his energy and talents’ and that His Highness the Maharaja of Mysore was aware ‘that he attached greater importance
to opportunities for rendering public service than to mere official emoluments.’ Visvesvaraya was still not keen on
accepting the offer and wanted time to consider the matter. He inquired asking if there was any prospect of the
Government encouraging industries and technical education in the State and utilizing his services in that connection. As
he got a favourable reply, Visvesvaraya joined as Chief Engineer of Mysore on 15th November 1909.

 Almost the first step he took was to insist on encouraging merit in making new appointments: without being influenced
by extraneous considerations. Committees were appointed, at his instance, to make a plan for technical education, and,
again, at his instance, the Economic Conference was established in June 1911. It functioned actively for many years, and
worked in three sections: Agriculture, Industries and Commerce, and Education. Public-spirited non-officials were
associated in the work of numerous committees. Visvesvaraya had a passion for statistics and insisted on targets being
clearly set in respect of various development activities and speedy efforts being made to reach them. He thus made the
officers and people plan-minded. This was, indeed, the beginning of planned efforts, ever made in India on any
considerable scale, and well may Visvesvaraya be hailed as the Father of Planned Economy.

 He was instrumental in taking over for the Mysore Government the administration of the railway lines from the Madras
and Southern Mahratta Railway, opening new lines between Mysore and Arsikere, Shimoga and Talguppa, and
constructing the light railway between Bangalore and Bangarapet, looping the Kolar District. He planned the Krishnaraja
Sagar Dam near Mysore–the largest reservoir ever built in India up to that time. These measures and his solicitude for the
welfare of the people soon won for him the unbounded confidence of the Maharaja and the love and respect of all citizens.
Today we are talking in terms of hundreds of crores, but those were days when even a 2½ crore hydel project like the
Krishnaraja Sagar (which was the original estimate) gave rise to misgivings; and it was only by his persistent efforts that
the scheme was put through.

 Before completing the work on the Krishnaraja Sagar Dam he had many hurdles to get over. The Madras Government
raised difficulties as they felt that the interests of cultivators in the Cauvery basin in the Madras Presidency would be
adversely affected. Visvesvaraya had to take up the matter with the Viceroy for arbitration and produce the relevant facts
and figures. The award was in his favour. He was a past master in carrying on such negotiations. He was patient, ever
courteous; he was sure of his facts and figures and the justice of his cause; and so he generally won through.

V

          His Highness the Maharaja called upon him to take up the Dewanship, in succession to T. Ananda Rao in
November 1912–a greatly coveted honour, as Mysore had already won a reputation far and wide for its rich resources
and its wise and benevolent ruler. But with characteristic self-abnegation he suggested to His Highness that “it would be
sufficient” if he were appointed a Member of the Council in charge of the Development Departments. He was not eager for
power or status. But as His Highness was insistent, he took over the Dewanship. He referred to this in a speech, delivered
soon after, in the following terms:

“It will, I hope, not be regarded as an affectation of modesty on my part if I say that all I have wanted is opportunity for
work, and that thoughts of personal advancement have not influenced my action in recent years.”

 The period of his Dewanship, which extended over six years, may be truly called the golden age of the (then) Mysore
State, a period of unprecedented all-round development. Visvesvaraya insisted on high standards of smartness and
regularity on the part of officers in the discharge of their duties, and sternly discountenanced slackness or shoddiness
wherever he noticed it. Officers had to be at their places when the offices opened, and, by making surprise visits himself,
he ensured that the age-old habits of irregularity yielded to new ways of efficiency. Heads of Departments had also to
make themselves available at fixed hours to visitors. He saw to it, in addition, that officers were smartly dressed, in
Western style preferably, except for the Mysore turban; and there are stories still current, of the ludicrous instances of
old-world officials, innocent of modern fashions, painfully adapting themselves to these sartorial stipulations.
Visvesvaraya always set the example himself by his own immaculate dress, in which he was always to be seen by visitors,
whether in his office or at home.

His inspections and tours were thoroughly businesslike, devoid of any pomp and circumstance. He was a good listener,
and was invariably courteous to all ranks of people, official or non-official.

 Visvesvaraya was a hard taskmaster but claimed to be a democrat, in that he was always anxious to secure public co-
operation in respect of the development programmes that he initiated. The State pulsated with a new life, and the
stirrings of it were noticeable in the remotest corners of the State.

         Replying to addresses presented by various organizations in Bangalore soon after he assumed Dewanship, he
said:

          “In all the addresses you have been pleased to read to me, you state what in your opinion His Highness’s
Government should do, or what I should do. But there is not a word said of what you yourselves are going to do, not even
one word of co-operation on your part….I attach great importance to the co-operation of the leaders of the public each in
his Legitimate sphere of activity.”

          That villages should develop the spirit of self-help was a favourite theme with him. During his regime he was
able to get villagers to give their personal labour, shram-dan, in the repair of minor tanks, construction of village roads,
putting up school buildings, etc.

          He promoted conferences and committee meetings at all levels–State, District and Taluk; and whenever he had
occasion to speak he was never tired of placing before his listeners relevant statistics, providing comparisons between
India and advanced countries like England, U. S. A., Canada, etc. One noticeable characteristic of his speeches, however,
was that they were entirely devoid of reference to the past glories of India or to her great heritage–of “historics”, as it has
been mischievously termed!–the usual stock-in-trade of patriotic speakers. He was concerned with the present and the
future, and he was impatient with the apathy and lethargy of our people, and would like to hustle them along so that they
might live fuller lives as intelligent citizens of the modern world.

          A brief resume of what he achieved during the period of his Dewanship may be set down here: In respect of
education, which claimed top priority in his plans, he introduced legislation for compulsory education by stages, took
steps for expansion of girls’ education, provided liberal grants for the institution of scholarships for backward-class
students; opened an agricultural school providing practical courses; opened a mechanical engineering and a commercial
school: established the Chamarajendra Technical Institute at Mysore, District Industrial Schools, and the College of
Engineering at Bangalore; and provided foreign scholarships for students to study abroad. It was due to his persistent
efforts that the Mysore university, the first ever in an Indian State, was founded in 1916.

          In respect of industries, he was instrumental in initiating the following: Sericulture Development; Sandalwood
Oil Manufacture; the Soap Factory; the Metal Factory; the Chrome Tanning Factory; The Central Industrial Workshop, and
District Workshops; Subsidies for Small and Cottage Industries; Hotels and Guest Houses including those on the Nandi
Hills; Printing Presses; Loans for starting private Workshops; The Mysore Iron and Wood Distillation Works; Railways
Extension; and the growth of Hydro-electric Power.




         He started investigations for the establishment of a port at Bhatkal. He initiated measures to de-officialize local
board administration, and attended to town planning and to the provision of better water supply and underground
drainage for several towns. He introduced village improvement schemes, and the Malnad Improvement scheme, in
particular. The following are other institutions he helped to establish: The Bank of Mysore; The Mysbre Chamber of
Commerce; The Karnataka Sahitya Parishat; The Civil and Social Progress Association; Public Libraries in Bangalore and
Mysore; The Century Club and a Ladies’ Club at Bangalore; and The Cosmopolitan Club of Mysore.

          He revived the Competitive Examination for the Mysore Civil Service, which had been in abeyance for some
years, and confined it to Mysoreans and those domiciled in Mysore for five years. He was also instrumental in getting a
new treaty signed, defining the relations between Mysore and the British Government, superseding the old Instrument of
Transfer, which raised the status of Mysore. He also introduced reforms in the working of the Representative Assembly,
providing for a second session to consider the budget; gave its members the privilege of putting interpellations, and
electing four (instead of two) members to the Legislative Council. The Legislative Council was enlarged, so that it had a
non-official majority. He initiated measures to separate the Judicial and Executive powers –a matter that had been
pressed for decades by Indian leaders; activized the work of the Economic Conference, and introduced activized the work
of the Economic Conference, and introduced ‘efficiency audit’ with a view to preservation of discipline and efficiency in
Government Departments.

         Even a bare recital of these measures gives one an idea of the stupendous magnitude of his achievements and
their many-sided character–a truly astonishing record for any administrator of a State here or elsewhere. And it is also to
be remembered that the First World War was on, for over four years out of the six, during which he was Dewan. He was
obliged to carry on under the cramping conditions–particularly in respect of industrial development–of the exigencies of
the war, for the prosecution of which, Mysore, like other Indian States, made considerable contribution in men, money
and materials.

Efficiency, precision and public spirit were his watchwords and he attempted to infuse these virtues into the officials and
non-officials with whom he came into contact. A letter issuing from his office, for instance, was often retyped over and
over again, so that there was not the slightest flaw in it. He spared neither himself nor others and, in spite of a frail and
even puny body, gave evidence of extraordinary alertness and physical energy. His regular diet habits and his daily walks
kept him thoroughly fit and active. He was punctual to the minute in keeping his engagements. He set a high standard of
moral rectitude which had a chastening effect on the administration, so that one rarely heard of corruption. He abhorred
nepotism and jobbery of any kind in making appointments or bestowing other Government favours, and was so
scrupulous that for private work he would not touch Government stationery or use Government conveyance, making a
distinction between public duties and private work with a meticulousness that was almost fanatical. All this might sound
fantastic to the pampered officials of the modern day, provided by a generous Government with vans and jeeps, and
unaccustomed to the drawing of su.ch nice distinctions.

 Visvesvaraya laid down his office by the end of 1918. His Highness the Maharaja appointed a committee headed by Sir
Leslie Miller, the Chief Judge, to consider the question of adopting in Mysore measures similar to those advocated by non-
brahmin leaders in Maddras. “My idea was”, writes Visvesvaraya in his Memoirs, “that by spreading education rapidly and
adopting precision methods in production and industry, the State and its entire population would progress faster. There
was never any complaint that I favoured any particular community in making appointments….I felt opposed to the
establishment of the Miller Committee…..After prolonged discussion and exchange of views for a considerable time, I
obtained His Highness’s consent to retire from service. Some time was required to arrange and place all the new schemes
in operation and other contemplated developments in a safe condition before I actually laid down office. So it was agreed
some eight months beforehand that I should retire at a convenient date at the end of the year. This arrangement was kept
a closely guarded secret.”

VI
Thus ended the career of Visvesvaraya’s services to the country as a Government official in his 58th year. For over forty
years thereafter he continued to serve the country as a public-spirited citizen of India in various capacities, but chiefly as
an adviser on matters of industry and engineering.

          Though he severed his official connection with Mysore, he continued to take active interest in its development.
His relations with the Maharaja continued to be most cordial, and he was invited to be the chairman of the Board of
Management of the Bhadravati Iron and Steel Works, and he served in that capacity from 1923 to 1929. He did not draw
the honorarium due to him during this period amounting to about 2 lakhs. He made over this amount for the founding of
the Jayachamarajendra Occupational Institute, politely turning down even the suggestion that his own name should be
given to it. The Institute has come to fill a great need in the scheme of technical education and has become a model for
polytechnics subsequently started in all parts of the country. He also served as chairman of the Cauvery Canal Committee
to align and construct the high level canal system from Krishnaraja Sagar; and as chairman of the committee for the new
water supply scheme to Bangalore. He attempted to start an Automobile industry in the State, but without success. He was
more successful, however, in getting the Hindustan Aircraft factory started at Bangalore in 1940. In 1949–when he was
nearing ninety–he actively pushed forward a scheme for Rural Industrialization, with arrangements to finance it through
a Financial Corporation. This good work, however, has not been followed up, the National Extension Services and Block
Development schemes having meanwhile come on the scene. It must be said in this connection that Visvesvaraya’s
scheme, carefully thought out and complete in every detail, deserves to be given a trial not only in Mysore State but all
over the country. It may be calculated to solve the problem of unemployment to a considerable extent, more effectively
perhaps than the present sporadic and unco-ordinated efforts made in the field of rural industrialization under the aegis
of the Community Development projects, the Khadi Gramodyog Board and other similar bodies set up by the Government.

 Outside Mysore he participated in, or presided over, the following committees after his retirement as Dewan of Mysore:
Bombay Technical and Industrial Committee (1921-’22): New Capital (New Delhi) Enquiry Committee, (1922); Indian
Economic Enquiry Committee (1925); Backbay Inquiry Committee (1926); Bangalore Political Disturbances Enquiry
Committee (1929), in the report of which he made an unanswerable plea for the setting up of Responsible Government in
Mysore; the Sukkur Barrage Works Committee (1929 ); Bombay University Committee for promoting Chemical Industries
(1930); Irrigation Inquiry Committee, Bombay ( 1938); and Flood Control Measures in Orissa (at the request of Gandhiji)
(1939).

 He was also elected as chairman of the committee of the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, in 1938 and thereafter
successively for seven years till he voluntarily relinquished that office. Ever since its inception in 1941 he was the
President of the All-India Manufacturers’ Organization till 1954.

 He also presided over the All-Parties Conference in 1922 convened in Bombay, to suggest a way out of the situation
created by the non-co-operation movement led by Gandhiji, and to explore the possibilities of convening a Round Table
Conference. He was the President of the South Indian States’ Peoples’ Conference at Trivandrum in 1929 and gave an
important lead in the matter of assigning a proper status to the citizens and the rulers of the Indian States in the
contemplated Federal Constitution of India. Though he could not agree to the methods of direct action and mass political
agitation launched by Gandhiji, he was by no means a reactionary and was well in advance of the then ‘moderate’ opinion
in the country.

In 1919 he went on a study tour round the world in company with several industrialists and merchants. He stayed in
London for a year to supervise the publication of Reconstrncting India, which came out in 1920. While in London he was
offered a seat on the Council of the Secretary of State for India by Mr. Montagu, but he politely declined the offer.

 He again toured in foreign countries in 1935 to study the automobile industry and in 1946 (when he was 85) as a leader
of the delegation of the All-India Manufacturers’ Organization, visiting numerous factories. A report, of nearly 300 pages,
of this tour, was published, containing numerous suggestions of practical value for the rapid development of Indian
industries.

By this time Visvesvaraya had popularized the slogan ‘Industrialize or Perish’.

VII
Besides numerous pamphlets and brochures or reports of which he was the author, Visvesvaraya wrote and
published three substantial books: Reconstructing India (already mentioned), Planned Economy for India (1934) and
Memoris of My Working Life (1951). The first two books are packed with facts and figures and set down his views on the
reconstruction of India as an economically prosperous and industrially developed nation. The third book is a plain and
unvarnished account of his public career as a Government official in Bombay and, later in Mysore, and of his varied
activities subsequently. The book is characteristic of him. It opens with his 24th year, with not a word in it about his
private life and its joys and sorrows by way of introduction or even incidentally. Nor does it contain any sidelights on the
men and events that influenced him in the course of his public life. It is, true, there is mention of great personalities like,
Ranade, Gokhale, Tilak, Sri Krishnaraja Wadiyar and others; but we are not, permitted even a glimpse into his
relationships with these great men. The narrative is severely objective and factual. He has obviously said much less than
he felt about any person or any event. This reticence, and the style of strictly objective expression, seemed to have become
his second nature, the result of prolonged self-discipline. In the course of his long public life he did come into contact with
all kinds of people–people who must have greatly hurt him or sorely tried his patience. But his Memoirs contain not a
word of comment or condemnation of any person. No doubt, occasionally, it contains quotations from appreciative and
flattering references to himself from numerous high officials, but these seem to be set down not out of vanity but to serve
as an example to his fellow countrymen so that they might profit by his experience. In 1960–in his 100th year–he
published A Brief Memoir of My Complete Working Life. It is not priced and seems to have been intended for private
circulation. It sets down categorically the events of his long career, the dates on which he delivered University
Convocation Addresses in four Indian Universities, the dates of his six foreign travels and their purpose, the dates on
which titles and honours, degrees (honoris causa) from eight Indian Universities, were conferred on him; and the list of
his publications. It is a kind of logbook rendering an account of his life and prepared in his characteristically methodical
way.

         As evidence of his mental alertness at that advanced age, a short paragraph containing a pointed observation
may be quoted from, the book. After tracing the history of the Bank of Mysore and how it helped the businessmen of
Mysore, he writes:

 “The Bank has similarly been of great help to the Krishnarajendra Mills in Mysore and the important coffee industry of
the Malnad. It is a matter for extreme regret that there should now be a proposal to destroy its identity and make it a
subsidiary of the State Bank of India. It is likely to prove a great disservice to Mysoreans.”

Visvesvaraya had the habit of maintaining scrapbooks in which newspaper cuttings, and extracts from books or
magazines he read, were systematically compiled. Some of the scrapbooks contained compilations relating to public
questions and some to general and literary matters. The latter he published in 1957 in book form giving it the title
Sayings–Wise and Witty. The extracts bear evidence of the range of his literary taste and his sense of humour–a trait not
usually attributed to him.

VIII

          Visvesvaraya’s Herculean efforts to modernize Mysore during the nine years he was associated with its
administration as Chief Engineer and Dewan have been already referred to. It is true that he succeeded in a large measure
in creating a new life, or its outward signs, during his regime. But it must not be forgotten that he had his severe critics
who condemned his ‘wasteful expenditure’ and ambitious plans. He was even charged with doing things for show though
in sober truth he husbanded the resources of the State most carefully and was ever watchful to effect the utmost economy
in the expenditure on Public Works. Showiness was utterly foreign to his nature. No Dewan was so unassuming and mild
as he was. Again, there were the irreverent scoffers even among the officials of the State who looked upon his schemes as
a huge joke, and his plans as so many fads. There were, again, others among them who knew the things that would please
him and tried to make an impression on him by external habiliments or the reeling off of statistics cooked up for the
occasion in reply to his invariable queries. Visvesvaraya, in spite of his supreme intelligence, was not always a shrewd
judge of men and was easily taken in; and when he discovered that he had been imposed upon, very likely he must have
felt sorrow rather than anger. People who moved closely with him have testified that they have never seen him lose his
temper–an extraordinary thing to say about any human being! What would cause indignation in others simply found
expression, in his case, in some drily humorous remark, which often quenched his hearers.

His impersonal, passionless and intensely intellectual attitude was both his strength and his weakness. One felt awed in
his presence, but not drawn to get into closer communion with him, unless, of course, one belonged to his intimate circle.
Yet he was extremely considerate, and gave frequent evidence of a tender heart that felt for others. Of his many deeds of
charity, of monthly pensions to dependents, poor relations and needy students, the world could know little; he gave and
helped so quietly. His reticence and intellectual vigour and moral elevation left him on a lonely eminence. He could not
evoke widespread and deep emotional response from the masses: he was not made to be a mass leader. But the people
admired and adored him; and his portraits could be seen on the walls of village homes in the Mysore State long before the
portraits of other national leaders which became popular in later years.

 Gandhi and Visvesvaraya had many things in common: purposefulness in life; unfailing courtesy; personal austerity; a
passionate regard for tidiness and punctuality; a capacity for untiring work. But the differences in their outlook on life,
and approach to national problems, presented a striking contrast. Gandhi personified in an unmistakable way the people
of India and particularly the poor; Visvesvaraya appeared to be outlandish. Gandhi was not enamoured of machinery and
the complex industrial organization of the West and bent all his energies to the revival of the Charkha and cottage
industries; Visvesvaraya, though he was aware of the importance of village industries, was an ardent admirer of the
technological advances made in Western countries and was never tired of holding up their example for our emulation.
Gandhiji’ spoke of Ramarajya, of the Gita and of God; Visvesvaraya did not refer to the past but was fully engrossed with
the present and the future, and his approach was thoroughly secular. Gandhi always harped on Satya and Ahimsa;
Visvesvaraya was always speaking of precision and efficiency.

 Each was unique in his own way: both of them achieved mighty things in their lifetime. Both of them were impatient to
lift the masses of India out of the poverty and degradation into which they had sunk, and make them strong and self-
reliant. The seeming antithesis between them (and, indeed, Gandhiji seemed to be the antithesis of almost every other
Indian leader, in a way, being in a class by himself) was due to the difference of emphasis on factors that each sincerely
believed would help build up the manhood of India and a fuller life for the Indian people. Both of them dedicated all their
life to the great task of national regeneration, each in his own sphere, and according to his own aptitude and light.

India had need of both of them during her period of emergence as a free nation, and will profit by their inspiring message
and shining example for a long long time to come.

it was midnight. A train was pacing to its destination with a howl in the silence of the night. A man was sleeping with his
head on the side window of the train. Suddenly he woke up from his sleep. He jumped from his seat and pulled the chain
hanging just over his head. The chain was nothing but the danger chain. The train moved for some more distance and
stopped suddenly. The employees and other passengers in the train rushed to the compartment to know what had
happened. Someone even suspected that the man did it in his sleeping mood. So they were angry towards this man. All
surrounded the man and asked the reason behind chain pulling.

“There is a crack in the rail after some more meters from here!!! If train goes over it mishaps may occur.” The man said
quietly.

“What nonsense you are saying. In this dark night how did you see the crack which is far in front ? Are you mocking us ?”
That was the response of the people.

“No. I have no need to mock you all and stop the train to disturb all. You just check it and then talk to me ” The man
replied very gently.

The railway persons got down to rail. With the help of a torch they checked the railway track. To their surprise they saw a
big crack in the rail a few meters away from the stopped train! If train passed over the crack definitely some mishap was
obvious in that dark village night.

All persons again gathered around the man who predicted it correctly. He told that he heard the sound from the track
while sleeping and it changed at some place . The vibrating sound changed too heavily that the man recognized that it was
due to the crack in the railway line. Do you know who was that man who saved many lives from death? It was none other
than the best engineer that India ever gave birth to, Mokshagundam Visvesvaraya or M.Visvesvaraya.

Visvesvaraya born in Muddenahalli village of Karnataka on September 15th , 1861. His father was a Sanskrit Pandit
named Srinivasa Sastri. The ancestors of Visvesvaraya were from the Mokshagundam village of Andrapradesh. Hence
Visvesvaraya added Mokshagundam before his name and thus became Mokshagundam Visvesvaraya.

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Sir m v

  • 1. SIR M VISVESVARAYA Sir Mokshagundam Visveswaraiah (KCIE, popularly known as Sir MV; 15 September 1860 – 14 April 1962) was a notable Indian engineer, scholar, statesman and the Diwan of Mysore during 1912 to 1918. He was a recipient of the Indian Republic's highest honour, the Bharat Ratna, in 1955. He was knighted as a Commander of the British Indian Empire by King George V for his myriad contributions to the public good. Every year, 15 September is celebrated as Engineer's Day in India in his memory. He is held in high regard pre-eminent engineer of India. He was the chief designer of the flood protection system for the city of Hyderabad, as well as the chief engineer responsible for the construction of the Krishna Raja Sagara dam in Mysore. Early years Visvesvaraya was born in 1860, in the Kingdom of Mysore, to a Telugu Brahmin family of Mokshagundam Srinivasa Sastry and Venkatalakshmamma in present day Muddenahalli village, 40 miles from Bangalore, India. His father had migrated from Kurnool. Visvesvaraya lost his father at the age of 15. He enrolled for primary school in Chikballapur, and attended high school in Bangalore. He earned his Bachelor of Arts from Madras University in 1881 and later studied civil engineering at the prestigious College of Engineering, Pune, popularly known as COEP.[1] Career as an engineer Upon graduating as an engineer, Visvesvaraya took up a job with the Public Works Department (PWD) of Mumbai and was later invited to join the Indian Irrigation Commission. He implemented an extremely intricate system of irrigation in the Deccan area. He also designed and patented a system of automatic weir water floodgates that were first installed in 1903 at the Khadakvasla Reservoir near Pune. These gates were employed to raise the flood supply level of storage in the reservoir to the highest level likely to be attained by a flood without causing any damage to the dam. Based on the success of these gates, the same system was installed at the Tigra Dam in Gwalior and the Krishnaraja Sagara (KRS) Dam in Mandya/ Mysore,Karnataka. In 1906-07, Government of India sent him to Eden,(Africa) to study water supply and drainage system and the project prepared by him was implemented in Eden successfully. Career as an engineer Upon graduating as an engineer, Visvesvaraya took up a job with the Public Works Department (PWD) of Mumbai and was later invited to join the Indian Irrigation Commission. He implemented an extremely intricate system of irrigation in the Deccan area. He also designed and patented a system of automatic weir water floodgates that were first installed in 1903 at the Khadakvasla Reservoir near Pune. These gates were employed to raise the flood supply level of storage in the reservoir to the highest level likely to be attained by a flood without causing any damage to the dam. Based on the success of these gates, the same system was installed at the Tigra Dam in Gwalior and the Krishnaraja Sagara (KRS) Dam in Mandya/ Mysore,Karnataka. In 1906-07, Government of India sent him to Eden,(Africa) to study water supply and drainage system and the project prepared by him was implemented in Eden successfully. Visvesvaraya achieved celebrity status when he designed a flood protection system for the city of Hyderabad. He was instrumental in developing a system to protect Visakhapatnam port from sea erosion.[2] Visvesvaraya supervised the construction of the KRS Dam across the Cauvery River from concept to inauguration. This dam created the biggest reservoir in Asia when it was built.[3] He was rightly called the "Father of modern Mysore state" (now Karnataka): During his period of service with the Government of Mysore state, he was responsible for the founding of, (under the Patronage of Mysore Government), the Mysore Soap Factory, the Parasitoide Laboratory, the Mysore Iron & Steel Works (now known as Visvesvaraya Iron and Steel Limited) in Bhadravathi, the Sri Jayachamarajendra Polytechnic Institute, the Bangalore Agricultural University, the State Bank of Mysore, The Century Club, Mysore Chambers of Commerce and numerous other industrial ventures. He encouraged private investment in industry during his tenure as Diwan of Mysore. He was instrumental in charting out the plan for road construction between Tirumala and Tirupati. He was known for sincerity, time management and dedication to a cause Diwan of Mysore After opting for voluntary retirement in 1908, he took a foreign tour to study industrialised nations and after, for a short period he worked for the Nizam of Hyderabad. He suggested flood relief measures for Hyderabad town, which was under
  • 2. constant threat of floods by Moosi river. Later, during November 1909, Visvesvaraya was appointed as Chief Engineer of Mysore State. Further, during the year, 1912, he was appointed as Diwan (First Minister) of the princely state of Mysore. He was Diwan for 7 years. With the support of Krishnaraja Wodeyar IV, Maharaja of Mysore, Visvesvaraya made an arguably unprecedented contribution as Diwan to the all-round development of the state. Not only the achievements listed above, but many other industries and public works owe their inception or active nurturing to him. He was instrumental in the founding of the Government Engineering College at Bangalore in 1917, one of the first engineering institutes in India. This institution was later named the University Visvesvaraya College of Engineering after its founder. It remains one of the very most reputed institutes of engineering in Karnataka. He also commissioned several new railway lines in Mysore states. Awards and honours The Bharat Ratna medal Visvesvaraya was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Indian Empire (CIE) in 1911.[4] In 1915, while he was the Diwan of Mysore, Visvesvaraya was knighted as a Knight Commander of the Order of the Indian Empire (KCIE) by the British for his myriad contributions to the public good.[5] After India attained independence, he was given the nation's highest honour, the Bharat Ratna, in 1955.[6] He was honoured with honorary membership of the international Institution of Civil Engineers (based in London) and a fellowship of the Indian Institute of Science (based in Bangalore). He was awarded several honorary doctoral degrees like D.Sc., LL.D., D.Litt. from eight universities in India. He was president of the 1923 Session of the Indian Science Congress. Sir M.V. was awarded honorary Membership of London Institution of Civil Engineers for an unbroken 50 years. [7] He was the most popular person from Karnataka, in a newspaper survey conducted by Praja Vani Memorial at Muddenahalli The Samadhi of Sir M.V. at Muddenahalli The Visvesvaraya National Memorial Trust manages a memorial of Visvesvaraya in his birthplace of Muddenahalli. The memorial exhibits his awards, titles and personal belongings of his, including his living room, spectacles, cups, his copy of the Webster's dictionary, and a block with which his visiting cards were printed. Models of the Krishna Raja Sagar dam, which Visvesvaraya designed and supervised the construction of, are also exhibited. The memorial is located adjacent to his house, which was refurbished and regarded as a temple by the local Recognition Visvesvaraya has received recognition in various fields, most notably the education sector and the engineering sector. Visvesvaraya Technological University, the University to which most engineering colleges in Karnataka are affiliated to, has been named in his honour, as well as prominent colleges like University Visvesvaraya College of Engineering, Bangalore, Sir M. Visvesvaraya Institute of Technology, Bangalore and Visvesvaraya National Institute of Technology, Nagpur. College of Engineering, Pune, his alma mater, has erected a statue in his honor.[10] The Visvesvaraya Industrial and Technological Museum, a museum in Bangalore is named in his honor. IIIT-Bangalore is being built at Muddenahalli, the birthplace of Sir.MV as an honour to this great Engineer. The college is expected to be operational soon. Recognition Visvesvaraya has received recognition in various fields, most notably the education sector and the engineering sector. Visvesvaraya Technological University, the University to which most engineering colleges in Karnataka are affiliated to, has been named in his honour, as well as prominent colleges like University Visvesvaraya College of Engineering, Bangalore, Sir M. Visvesvaraya Institute of Technology, Bangalore and Visvesvaraya National Institute of Technology, Nagpur. College of Engineering, Pune, his alma mater, has erected a statue in his honor.[10] The Visvesvaraya Industrial and Technological Museum, a museum in Bangalore is named in his honor. IIIT-Bangalore is being built at Muddenahalli, the birthplace of Sir.MV as an honour to this great Engineer. The college is expected to be operational soon.
  • 3. His Early Life and Beginnings Sir MV was born in Muddenahalli, a village in Karnataka, on 15th September 1860. He completed his high school education from Wesley Mission High School and his graduation from Central College – both in Bangalore. He was a very bright student. He went on to pursue a course in civil engineering in Pune, having received a scholarship for the same. While there, he was awarded the James Berkley Gold Medal for outstanding performance. He led a very simple life. He was a strict vegetarian and a teetotaler. He would go to sleep by 10 P.M. and wake up at 6 A.M. His diet included a very light breakfast, two slices of bread or chappatis, vegetables without spices, rasam, curds, Nanjangud bananas for lunch. Engineering Feats and Achievements Sir MV’s first job was as an Assistant Engineer at the Public Works Department under the government of the erstwhile Bombay Presidency. He had a long and eventful career in the field of engineering, during which he also served as the Chief Engineer of the erstwhile State of Mysore. Sir MV was the driving force behind the construction of many major dams and water supply schemes across the country. The famous Krishna Raja Sagar dam in Mysore is one of these. The use of automatic sluice gates, an engineering innovation applied in many dams across the country, was Sir MV’s idea. He became the Dewan of the State of Mysore in 1912 and during his tenure; he took immense interest in shaping new developments in education and other fields. He was instrumental in the formation of Mysore University as well as two other well-known educational institutions of Bangalore – University Vishweshwaraiah College of Engineering and University of Agricultural Sciences. He also played an integral role in setting up the Mysore Iron and Steel Works, Bhadravathi, and the Bank of Mysore (now State Bank of Mysore). It is important to bear in mind, however, that these are just a few of his many achievements. Job Positions Held By Sir MV Some of the job positions he held were 1. Assistant Engineer, Bombay Government Service [in 1884] 2. Chief Engineer, Hyderabad State [he served only for 7 months starting April 15, 1909] 3. Chief Engineer in Mysore State [Nov 15, 1909]. He was also Secretary to the Railways. 4. President of Education and Industrial Development committees in Mysore State 5. Dewan of Mysore. [for six years starting 1912] 6. Chairman, Bhadravati Iron Works 7. Member of the Governing Council of the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore 8. Member of the Governing Council of Tata Iron and Steel Company [TISCO] 9. Member of Back Bay enquiry committee, London 10. Member of a committee constituted in 1917 to make recommendations regarding the future of Indian States. Sir M.V. retired in 1908 and Sri Krishnarajendra Wodeyar, Maharaja of Mysore, was eager to secure the services of Visvesvaraya to serve Mysore. He joined as Chief Engineer in Mysore because he wanted challenging opportunities. Sir M.V. had earned a reputation for his honesty, integrity, ability and intelligence. He had introduced compulsory education in the State which later was embodied as a fundamental right in the Constitution of independent India. To name few of the many things he was responsible for:
  • 4. 1. Architect of the Krishnarajasagara dam - or KRS or Brindavan gardens. One of the biggest dams in India which irrigates a hundred and twenty thousand acres of land. 2. Bhadravati Iron and Steel Works - as its Chairman he rescued it from becoming extinct. 3. Mysore Sandal Oil Factory and the Mysore soap factory 4. Mysore University - Sir M.V.'s question was "If Australia and Canada could have universities of their own for less than a million population, cannot Mysore with a population of not less that 60 lakhs have a University of its own?" 5. State Bank of Mysore (it was first named The Bank of Mysore) 6. Public libraries in Mysore and Bangalore 7. Encouraging girls to attend school. 8. Mysore Chamber of Commerce 9. Kannada Sahitya Parishad or the Kannada Literary Academy 10. Sri Jayachamarajendra Occupational Institute, Bangalore - funded by the ENTIRE money [Rs 2 lacs] he earned from rescuing Bhadravati Iron Works Sir M.V. was never interested in fame or publicity. But they came to him on their own. Every university in India sought him out to confer honoris causa. The univs of Allahabad, Andhra, Bombay, Calcutta, Jadhavpur, Mysore, Patna and Varanasi. Some of the honours and laurels conferred on Sir M.V., 1904 Honorary Membership of London Institution of Civil Engineers for an unbroken period of 50 years 1906 "Kaisar-i-Hind" in recognition of his services 1911 C.I.E. (Companion of the Indian Empire) at the Delhi Darbar 1915 K.C.I.E. (Knight Commander of the Order of the Indian Empire) 1921 D.Sc. - Calcutta University 1931 LLD - Bombay University 1937 D.Litt - Benaras Hindu University 1943 Elected as an Honorary Life Member of the Institution of Engineers (India) 1944 D.Sc. - Allahabad University 1948 Doctorate - LLD., Mysore University 1953 D.Litt - Andhra University 1953 Awarded the Honorary Fellowship of the Institute of Town Planners, India 1955 Conferred ' BHARATHA RATNA'(The gem of India), the highest dinstiction of the country 1958 'Durga Prasad Khaitan Memorial Gold Medal' by the Royal Asiatic Society Council of Bengal 1959 Fellowship of the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore His Memorable Persona There is no dearth of interesting anecdotes about Sir MV. Some of these revolve around him being a stickler for punctuality and a strict disciplinarian; there are others that dwell on his sense of honesty, integrity and professionalism. The fact that he was always impeccably dressed has also been well- documented. When Sir MV was offered the position of Dewan of Mysore State, it is said that he invited his relatives for dinner. He told them that he would take up the offer on one condition: that they (the relatives) should not come and ask him to use his position as Dewan to help them get their personal work done. Bank Balance
  • 5. "Indian Express" on March 24, 2005 (by Arindam Bhattacharjee) carried an article which how simple Sir MV was and how diligently he maintained his accounts. Sir MV maintained an account with Bank of Mysore, which is now State Bank of Mysore. Sir MV had Rs 990 on March 27, 1918, which increased to Rs 11,487 on March 3, 1919. His account had thrice attracted interests of Rs 14, Rs 66 and Rs 117 during this period. An entry in the passbook on Nov 18, 1918 reveals he got Rs 13,486 transferred to this current account from a fixed deposit account. Sir MV And Mahatma Gandhi Sir M.V. belongs to that small band of eminent Indians whose ideas and achievements have been among the truly creative and formative force of modern India. Sir M.V.'s slogan was Industrialize or Perish and Mahatama Gandhiji's view was Industrialize and Perish. In 1921 Gandhiji launched his non-cooperation movement which Sir M.V. did not agree with. Sir M.V. wrote to Gandhiji urging him to be better dressed in view of the upcoming Round Table Conference. Sir M.V. used to be immaculately dressed. MV’s Final Years Sir MV’s extraordinary feats resulted in the government of India bestowing him with the Bharat Ratna award in the year 1955. The centenary of the birth of Sir M.V. was celebrated in Lal Bagh in Bangalore. Prime Minister Nehru flew down to Bangalore by a special plane to honour the greatest son of India. Sri Jayachamaraja Wodiyar presided over the function. Sir. M.V. died on April 12, 1962 at the age of 102 years, 6 months and 8 days. As per his wish, he was cremated in his birth place, Muddanahalli. The memorial at Muddenahalli is good but it is not taken care well. Not sure how he would react to the state of affairs in Karnataka or India in general if he was alive today. Government hesitates to release Rs 3 lakh for Karnataka's icon [May 5, 2008 / Deccan Herald]. Sir Mokshagundam Visvesvaraya born on 15th September 1860 in Muddenahalli, Chikkaballapura District, Karnataka. Sir M Vishweshwaraya father is Srinivasa Sastry and mother Venkachamma. Sir M Vishweshwaraya is an eminent Indian engineer and statesman. Today 15th September we observer his Sir M Visvesvaraya birthday as Engineers Day in India.. Sir M Vishweshwaraya is a graduating as an civil engineer. Visvesvaraya Joined PWD department of Bombay (now its known as Maharashtra state). Visvesvaraya was a genius, he invented Block System the automatic doors which he devised to stop wasteful overflow of water. Sir Visvesvaraya builted many dams in maharashtra state. He was designed and patented a system of automatic weir water floodgates which were first installed in 1903 at the Khadakvasla reservoir, Pune. He worked as a chief engineer during construction of Krishna Raja Sagara Dam on the Kaveri River in Mandya. He became the President of All India Manufacturers Association. Sir Visvesvaraya was the maker of modern mysore. Sir M. Visvesvaraya lead a very simple life. He was a strict vegetarian and a teetotaler. He was known for his honesty and integrity. In 1912, Maharaja of Mysore appointed Visvesvaraya as his Dewan. Before accepting the position of Dewan of Mysore, he invited all his relatives for dinner. He told them very clearly that he would accept the prestigious office on the condition that none of them would approach him for favours. As Dewan of Mysore, he worked tirelessly for educational and industrial development of the state. When he was the Dewan many new industries came up. The Sandal Oil Factory, the Soap Factory, the Metals Factory, the Chrome Tanning Factory , were some of them. Of the many factories he started the most important is the Bhadravati Iron and Steel Works.He was also knighted by the British for his myriad contributions to the public good After voluntary retirement in 1908, sir visweswaraya was appointed as a minister of the state of mysore. Also Sir Visvesvaraya designed a flood protection system to protect hyderabad city from the flood. He is a recipient of the Indian republic’s highest honour, the Bharat Ratna, in 1955. Sir visweswaraya died on 14th April 1962
  • 6. Remember, your work may be only to sweep a railway crossing, but it is your duty to > keep it so clean that no other crossing in the world is as clean as yours"" On the 15th of September 1861, more than a century ago a little boy was born in Muddenahalli in the Chikkaballapur Taluk of Kolar District (Mysore State). His father Srinivasa Sastry and his mother Venkachamma named him Visvesvaraya. Visvesvaraya's father, Srinivasa Sastry was a great Sanskrit scholar of those days. Both he and his wife were good and pious folk who led a very simple life. They were not very well off but both his parents decided to educate the little boy. Right from his childhood days, Visvesvaraya learnt from them a respect for the culture and the traditions of the land. His father enrolled him in a school in their tiny Taluk itself and Visvesvaraya completed his early education there. He was a good and a hardworking student and was keenly interested in pursuing his studies. So with his parents consent and blessing he set out to Bangalore in order to go in for higher education when he was around fifteen years old. In Bangalore, he joined the Central College. But alas! His pocket was empty and he had no roof over his head. But this helpless state did not bog Visvesvaraya down. Instead he started looking for a job that would sustain him and pay for his studies. He found a family from Coorg, who was looking for a tutor for their children. Visvesvaraya, himself a student at that time, became their tutor. He lived with them and earned a few rupees with which he completed his education. As a student he earned every rupee by hard work. Discipline was ever his watchword. All through his student days he worked hard and in a systematic way. He was an early riser and started his work quite early. Though he was poverty-stricken, he continued to study well and stood high in the B.A. Examination. When he was twenty, he managed to get some help from the Government of Mysore and joined the Science College in Poona to study Engineering. Three years later, by sheer determination and hard work he ranked first in the L.C.E. and the EC.E. Examinations (these were like the B.E. Examination of today). As soon as the results were out, the Government of Bombay offered him the post of an Assistant Engineer at Nasik. Visvesvaraya was very happy and he worked hard and excelled in his post. When he was 32 years old, some very difficult work fell to his lot. He was given the task of finding a way of supplying water from the river Sindhu to a town called Sukkur. He prepared an ingenious plan, which amazed the other famous engineers. Also, he developed a new system called the Block System where he devised steel doors; these could stop the wasteful flow of water in dams. Even British officers of those times were astonished by his brains and were full of praise for the invention. The Government appreciated Visvesvaraya's genius and work. He was promoted to higher places. From Bombay, Visvesvaraya went to Hyderabad as Chief Engineer. Here he achieved something that was simply impossible at that time. The river Moosa divided the city of Hyderabad into two. When rains lashed, the river was in floods and the waters of the river poured into many houses, and men and cattle were carried away. Visvesvaraya planned dams to tame the Moosa and also suggested that lovely parks should be laid out on the banks of the river. His resourcefulness earned him the position of a Chief Engineer in Mysore State. But Visvesvaraya was not just interested in buildings, roads and bridges. He saw that the people of India were then in a miserable condition. There were very few schools and only six persons out of every hundred could read and write. Many people were just farmers who depended completely on the rains for their food. He saw that ignorance, poverty and sickness plagued the people; and he wanted to bring about change.
  • 7. Visvesvaraya suggested that an Economic Conference be set up to find ways of removing ignorance, poverty and sickness. As a result, very dry lands in parts the country began to smile with plenty. Visvesvaraya continued to be the Chief Engineer of Mysore for three years. In 1912 when he was 51, the Maharaja of Mysore chose Visvesvaraya as his Dewan or his chief minister. Soon after Visvesvaraya became the Dewan, one of his relatives went to him. He asked Visvesvaraya, "Can you get me into a higher post for a better pay with your recommendation to the Maharaja?" Visvesvaraya who was so straightforward said a plain 'No'. But, he was kindhearted and as long as the relative was alive, he paid him a hundred rupees every month from his pocket. As the Dewan, he got a car from the Government for his use. He used the Government car for government work and for his private work he used his own car. Those were days when people had to work by candlelight. He used, for official work, the stationery and the candles supplied by the Government; for his private work he used stationery and candles, which he had bought. He was such an honest man. Once, one of hi§ friends was advised rest after some illness. He wanted to spend some days in Bangalore. The friend wrote to him asking for a house for some days. He thought the Dewan would give him a Government Guest House, free of rent. The Dewan did give him a Government House; but as long as the friend stayed there, Visvesvaraya himself paid the rent of Rs. 250 a month. He was always neatly dressed and ready for work by seven in the morning. He was known everywhere for his discipline and tidiness. There was not a crease or a wrinkle anywhere on his clothes. Visvesvaraya planned everything smoothly, methodically and without any hurry. Visitors who wished to see him had to write first and he would fix an hour. He was very strict about the hour fixed and no one could come late. Visvesvaraya always believed in the value of education. When he became the Dewan, there were about 4,500 schools in Mysore State. In six Years about 6,500 new school were opened. He also stressed on education for women. He made the Maharani's College in Mysore where the first hostel for girls was also opened. He also made arrangements for the government to give scholarships to intelligent students to go to foreign countries for studies. Visvesvaraya realized that industry was the backbone of a country. So he developed the existing industries. He also got experts from other countries to help by teaching their skills. Thus many new industries came up during his chief minister ship. He started the Sandal Oil Factory, the Soap Factory, the Metals Factory, the Chrome Tanning Factory and Bhadravati Iron and Steel Works. He was also the key in the opening of the Bank of Mysore. He also brought in many hotels into Mysore and played a major role in the laying of railway lines. Visvesvaraya did in six years what many others could not have accomplished in sixty years. People asked each other "Is he a magician?" many a time. But for Visvesvaraya it was no magic. He always believed only in hard work. He once said, "The curse of our country is laziness. At first sight every one seems to be working. But in fact, one-man works and the others watch him. As someone said with contempt, 'it looks as if five men are working. But really only one- man works. One man will be doing nothing. One man will be resting. Another man will be watching them. Yet another man will be helping these three." Visvesvaraya was also a fearless patriot. In those days the Englishmen considered themselves the lords of the country. The Maharaja of Mysore had the tradition of holding a Durbar during the Dasara festivities every year. On the day of the Durbar, the Europeans were given comfortable chairs but Indians were required to sit on the floor. Visvesvaraya went to the Durbar for the first time in 1910. The arrangements pained him. The next year he did not attend the Durbar. When the officers of the palace made enquiries he frankly gave the reason. The very next year all the Europeans and Indians were given chairs.
  • 8. Following this a British officer wrote a letter to him. In his letter he said, "In the Maharaja's Durbar, I want a cushion to rest my feet because the chair is too high." Visvesvaraya promptly got the legs of the chair shortened and wrote back saying-"the height has been reduced." In 1918 at the age of 57, he took voluntary retirement. He went to the palace in the Government car gave the letter and returned in his own car. After retirement he went abroad numerous times, for some work or the other. Wherever he went, he had a notebook and a pencil in his hand. He made notes of any new information with which he could help the country. After his retirement when the Bhadravati Factory was in trouble, he worked as the Chairman giving advice for restoration. At that time, the Government had not decided the salary for him. It took them some years to do so but by then the Government owed him more than a hundred thousand rupees. M When they finally decided to pay him, Visvesvaraya said "I will not touch a single rupee. Start an institute where boys can learn some profession." The government followed his wish and wanted to name it after Visvesvaraya. But he said, "Name it after the Maharaja of Mysore." Thus the Sri Jayachamaraja Polytechnic Institute of Bangalore came about. In 1944, an association arranged a conference where Visvesvaraya was the Chairman. The Governor of Berar, an Englishman, was to open the conference. In those days the Governors were very powerful, highly respected and obeyed. The conference was to discuss a resolution that India should have a national government. The Governor said that the resolution should not be discussed. "Otherwise," he said, "I will not come." Visvesvaraya was unperturbed by the objection and said to his friends, "All right. Why wait for him? Let us go on with the conference". Such was his commitment towards the country that he did not care even if someone powerful hindered the growth. Because of his genius, experience and mellow wisdom people wanted to hear him and quite often he was to make speeches. Whenever he had to make a speech he would think about what he was going to say, write the speech, get it typed and weigh every word and revise it. He would revise it four or five times and give it final shape. Once he visited a Primary School in his native village, Muddenahalli. He gave the teacher ten rupees and asked him to distribute sweets to the children. The teacher requested him saying, "Please say a few words to the children, sir," Visvesvaraya spoke for five minutes and went away. But later he was unhappy because he had spoken without preparation. Some days later he prepared a speech and went to the school again; once again he distributed sweets to the children. Then he made his speech. He toiled on briskly though old age crept around him. When he was around 92 he went to Fatna where he was called to study a plan for a bridge across the Ganga. The sun was cruel and the heat was unbearable. There were parts of the site to which he could not go by car. The Government had arranged to have him carried in a chair. But he refused to use the chair. He got off the car and started walking briskly much to the amazement of the rest. In 1955 when he was 94 years of age, Visvesvaraya was honored and made a 'Bharat Ratna' or the Gem of India. Even at that age he was so particular about his dressing that people who went to see him were surprised for he was so neat and tidy. His memory even when he was almost a hundred years old remained pristine. Fifty years after he had tamed river Moosa, at the age of 97, there was a discussion about the river with certain others where some references were made to some
  • 9. intricate details. Visvesvaraya called a servant and, pointing to a bookshelf, said, "Bring the three or four books in the middle of the third row." Then he opened one of them and pointed exactly to the detail under discussion on that page. When he finally turned 100, people all over India showered their affection and respect on the Grand Old Man. The Government of India also brought out a stamp in his honor. Somebody once said to him, "You have done great service to the country. You are like Bhishmacharya." He replied, "You make me remember what a small man I I am. What am I before Bhishmacharya?" He was so | modest. Even at the age of 100, he rose to receive a visitor; he got up again when the visitor was leaving Visvesvaraya silently passed away on 14th of April j 1962. He was 101. Visvesvaraya led the country to the path of progress, every one of his creations were considered mighty andI magnificent. But far mightier and far more magnificent was the matchless Dreamer, Doer and leader who paved the way to modern India. Engineers Day, M. Visvesvarayya Birth Day — Presentation Transcript 1. HAPPY ENGINEER’S DAY 2. In Memory of Sir Mokshagundam Visvesvaraya September 15, 1860 - April 3. Born : September 15, 1860 Place: Muddenahalli village (Kolar district of Karnataka). Father: Srinivasa Sastry Mother: Venkachamma. Life & journey of a Centenarian 4. Life & journey of a Centenarian Education: Early Schooling in Chikkaballapur, 1881 : B.A. Examination from Central College Bangalore . 1883 : Civil Engineering from Science College in Poona. He ranked first in the L.C.E. and the F.C.E. Examinations ( equivalent to B.E. Examination of today ). 5. His Responsibilities Some of the job positions he held were: • Assistant Engineer, Bombay Government Service [in 1884] • Chief Engineer, Hyderabad State [he served only for 7 months starting April 15, 1909] • Chief Engineer in Mysore State [Nov 15, 1909]. He was also Secretary to the Railways. • President of Education and Industrial Development committees in Mysore State • Dewan of Mysore. [for six years] 6. Contd., • Chairman, Bhadravati Iron Works • Member of the Governing Council of the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore • Member of the Governing Council of Tata Iron and Steel Company [TISCO] • Member of Back Bay enquiry committee, London • Member of a committee constituted in 1917 to make recommendations regarding the future of Indian States 7. Man with Values He was a strict vegetarian, teetotaler and non-smoker, an admirer of the old Indian joint family system. In business and industry, he admired the European and American methods, but in domestic habits he was a perfect Mysore Brahmin A Minister in Mysore once fixed an interview with Sir MV but was unable to come. Next day when he called on him, Sir MV told him, “you have committed a double mistake- firstly, by not keeping up the engagement yesterday and secondly, by coming when you were not. 8. Man with Values “ Slackness is the worst curse of the country.” At age of 90, a paper correspondent asked him how he felt and Sir M V remarked, “I find life interesting.” Once Sri C Rajagopalachari unexpectedly called on him. Sir MV was so smartly dressed, Rajaji said. “Even if I bring a photographer in the middle of the night, I can take your pictures. You will always be well groomed.” 9. Man with Values In Sweden Sir MV feel ill, the doctor suggested him to take a few drops of Brandy with medicine. For which Sir M V replied “If this life cannot survive without those drops, let it go.” On his own account book was written, “If you buy what you do not need, you will need what you cannot buy.” Sir M V was one of those rare human beings who practiced in personal life what he preached in public. 10. Major Achievements Bombay • Introduced the block system of irrigation • Designed a new system of systematic water weir flood gate • Established Deccan Club in Poona Bihar & Orissa • Selected site for a railway bridge on river of Ganga in Bihar • Hirakund enquiries • Water supply schemes through out the state Hyderabad • Schemes for flood protection & drainage for Hyderabad • Remodelling of Hyderabad city 11. Major Achievements • Architect of the Krishnarajasagara dam – or KRS or Brindavan gardens. One of the biggest dams in India which irrigates a hundred and twenty thousand acres of land. • Bhadravati Iron and Steel Works - as its Chairman he rescued it from becoming extinct. 12. Major Achievements • State Bank of Mysore (1913 it was first named The Bank of Mysore) • Founder of Mysore Sandal Oil Factory and the Mysore soap factory • Mysore Chamber of Commerce • Founder of Kannada
  • 10. Literary •Mysore University- Sir M.V.'s question was "If Australia and Canada could have universities of their own for less than a million population, cannot Mysore with a population of not less that 60 lakhs 13. Contd. Sir M. V.’s great dream was to see India prosper through industrialization. In 1920 he published a book, “Reconstructing India” & in 1934, “Planned Economy for India.” He coined the slogans, “Produce or perish”, and “Industrialize or perish.” 14. AWARDS • 1906 : "Kaisar-i-Hind" in recognition of his services • 1911 : C.I.E. (Companion of the Indian Empire) at the Delhi Durbar • 1915 : K.C.I.E. (Knight Commander of the Order of the Indian Empire) • 1921 : D.Sc. – Calcutta University • 1943 : Elected as an Honorary Life Member of the Institution of Engineers(I) • 1944 : D.Sc. – Allahabad • 1904 : Honorary Membership of London Institution of Civil Engineers for The Knight Commander Of The Indian Empire 15. Contd., • 1948 : Doctorate - LLD., Mysore Uni. • 1953 : D.Litt – Andhra University • 1953 : Awarded the Honorary Fellowship of the Institute of Town Planners, India • 1955 : Conferred BHARATHARATNA‘ (The gem of India), the highest civilian award of the country • 1958 : 'Durga Prasad Khaitan Memorial Gold Medal‘ by the Royal Asiatic Society Council of Bengal 16. • Memorial at Muddenahalli . • Sir M Visvesvaraya Institute Of Technology, Bangalore is named after Sir M.V. • University Visvesvaraya College of Engineering . • Visweswaraiah National Institute of Technology (V.N.I.T.), The college is among the elite 17 NationalInstitutes of Technologies• The Visveswarayya Technological University, Belgaum, to which nearly all engineering colleges in Memorials & Institutions in his honor 17. Contd., • His alma mater, the College of Engineering, Pune (COEP) has erected a statue in his memory and honor on their campus in central Pune, immediately outside the historic COEP administration building. • The Visvesvaraya Industrial and Technological Museum , Bangalore, set up as part of his birth centenary celebrations. • Vishweshwaraya Iron and Steel Limited, a public sector undertaking, in the founding of which he was 18. The End On 14-April-1962 at 6.15am at the age of 102 years,, Sir M V breathed his last, MOKSHAGUNDAM VISVESVARAYA By K. SAMPATHGIRI RAO “Always performing works here, one should wish to live a hundred years. If you live thus as a man, works will not cling to you–there is no other way.” –Isha Upanishad, verse 2 Thus lived and worked Visvesvaraya, fulfilling the injunction of the Upanishadic seer to the very letter, and dropping like a ripe fruit from the branch of Life on 14th April 1962. He had completed his one hundred years in September 1961. An expert engineer with a flair for bold and original ideas, a great dreamer and withal a thoroughly practical man with an eye to every minute detail, a tireless worker who had trained, himself with rare self-discipline to work with clock-like regularity, a patriot of the highest order who longed that his country should take an honoured place alongside of advanced Western nations, and that quickly, he had to his credit concrete achievements, in a measure unequalled by any in modern India. Like many great men he was far ahead of his generation, and was ill-served by many in his own; and yet he never lost his enthusiasms, nor ever felt frustrated. To the end of his days he communicated, to those who came into touch with him, some of his own enthusiasm and high purposefulness, to work unceasingly for the rapid all-round development of India. II Visvesvaraya was born in Muddenahalli, a village at the foot of the Nandi Hills, the famous hill-station 40 miles to the north of Bangalore, in an orthodox Brahmin family in humble circumstances. After finishing his primary education at Chickballapur, he was taken for high school and college education to Bangalore. Too poor to pay for his school fees and books, he earned while he learned, giving tuitions to other boys. He graduated from the Central College in 1880 and proceeded to join the Engineering College at Poona, where he topped the list of successful candidates in the Final
  • 11. Engineering Examination in 1884, thus securing a guaranteed appointment as Assistant Engineer in the Bombay Presidency. By dint of intelligence, industry and earnestness, he secured rapid promotions and was earning Rs. 500, less than two years after entering service. He worked on various assignments as Irrigation Engineer, designing water works and drainage schemes for various towns in the then Bombay Presidency. He devised what is known as the Block System of irrigation, to give water by rotation to minimize wastage of water and yield better results to cultivators–a system commended by the Irrigation Commission set up by the Government of India in 1901-3. ‘The object is to distribute the benefits of irrigation works over a larger number of villages and to concentrate the irrigation in each village within blocks of specified units and in selected soils and situations.’ This system was successfully worked in the Nira Canal in the Bombay Presidency. Later on he tried to introduce it also at Marikanive and the Cauvery Canal in Mysore. He devised a system of automatic gates at Lake Fife, Khadakvarla, near Poona, to raise the storage water level of the lake permanently by about 8 ft–without raising the dam–increasing , the storage of water by about 25 per cent. He took out a patent but refused to ask for any royalty as the work was carried out under his own supervision as Government Engineer. He was deputed to Aden to devise the water works and drainage of that town in 1906. Kolhapur needed a water supply scheme and the Political Agent wrote to the Government of Bombay asking specifically for the services of a European Engineer; but as Visvesvaraya was as good as any European engineer he was deputed; and it must be said to the credit of the Political Agent that he paid a handsome compliment to Visvesvaraya for the fine job done by him at Kolhapur. He soon rose to be Superintending Engineer, having superseded many in service on account of the special offices to which he was appointed. His work drew unstinted praise from a Governor like Lord Sydenham, not particularly noted for his pro-Indian sympathies, who spoke appreciatively of his “great abilities and unvarying industry.” He was only 47 and had put in 24 years in the service of the Bombay Government by 1908, but wished to retire as he felt that “in the staet of political felling in the country” at the time, his chance of being appointed as Chief Engineer was rather remote. His European and Indian friends feared that he might not be considered eligible for a pension. Lord Sydenham’s Government, however, took a generous view and wrote to the Government of India that “the service rendered by Visvesvaraya has been exceptionally meritorious and fully entitles him to the additional pension.” He was on leave preparatory to retirement and had planned to stay in Europe and America for two years, not to enjoy a holiday, but to study the conditions in Western countries and make notes, as was his invariable practice. This was not his first foreign tour, as he had already visited Japan in 1898 for three months, making notes of what he saw, and had even compiled a small book without any idea of publishing it. What he had seen of Japan and of its rapid modernization had evidently whetted his desire to see more of the modern world. III He had, no doubt, by now formally retired from Government service, but it can be truly said that his most active and fruitful career was just beginning, as proved by subsequent events. His life in the service of the Bombay Government, of which he spent nearly 14 years in Poona, the educational and political centre of Maharashtra, specially fitted him for undertaking nation-building activities in later years. Poona was one of the most vigorous centres of national feeling and endeavour in the country. It was fortunate for Visvesvaraya that he came into intimate contact during this momentous period with the great Mahadev Govind Ranade and his illustrious disciple Gopal Krishna Gokhale. It is interesting to note that as early as 1893 he contributed an article to the journal of the Sarvajanik Sabha on “National Uplift”. He had also been instrumental in starting the Deccan Club in Poona in 1891, where the elite of the city could meet for recreation, get to know one another better, and discuss topical public questions informally. These precious years that he spent in Poona must have deepened his patriotic fervour, and given direction to his later activities as a front-rank publicist and patriot- statesman. While this favourable environment moulded his ideas and gave him a vision, his purity and strength of character, were of his own making. Scorning the common pleasures of life, he had disciplined himself rigorously to live a well-ordered life, and one of high moral endeavour. Todd’s Students’ Manual and the works of Samuel Smiles on Duty, Self- Help and Thrift were books which were in great vogue in those days, and were earnestly recommended to the young for their reverent study by well-meaning elders. These books seem to have been favourites with Visvesvaraya, who evidently strove to reduce to practice the many ennobling and excellent precepts in these books. THE GERMINAL IDEAS IN THESE BOOKS seem to have fallen on fertile soil and they bore abundant fruit. Visvesvaraya’s second foreign tour, referred to above, was interrupted by an urgent call from Hyderabad, which was passed on to him when he was in Italy. There had been very heavy rains and unprecedented floods in the Musi river, flowing through Hyderabad, which had caused considerable damage. His services were, therefore, requisitioned to
  • 12. suggest remedial measures. Visvesvaraya replied, fixing his terms and agreeing to go to Hyderabad five months later. His terms were those that would have normally been offered to a European engineer of similar status. The Hyderabad Government were anxious to have his expert advice and agreed to his terms. By the stand he took in this matter, Visvesvaraya raised the status of Indian engineers in general. Another interesting instance of how he jealously safeguarded the self-respect and status of Indians may be given here. It was when he was Dewan of Mysore. During the Dasara celebrations, one day was set apart for a European Durbar in the Palace. The European guests were provided with chairs, while the Indian officers and other guests had to squat on the floor on the other side of the hall. Visvesvaraya resented this arrangement, and a custom, which had prevailed for many years, was changed at his instance, and chairs were thereafter provided to all invitees, European or Indian. It is needless to add that Visvesvaraya completed the job assigned to him by the Hyderabad Government to everybody’s satisfaction, and took further steps which contributed to transform Hyderabad into the beautiful city it is today. IV About this time (April 1909) a call came to him from V. P. Madhava Rao, Dewan of Mysore, to join as Chief Engineer of Mysore. But owing to his engagement at Hyderabad he had no intention of accepting the offer. But T. Ananda Rao, the succeeding Dewan, wrote a letter in the course of which he said that Visvesvaraya would find ‘ample scope both for his energy and talents’ and that His Highness the Maharaja of Mysore was aware ‘that he attached greater importance to opportunities for rendering public service than to mere official emoluments.’ Visvesvaraya was still not keen on accepting the offer and wanted time to consider the matter. He inquired asking if there was any prospect of the Government encouraging industries and technical education in the State and utilizing his services in that connection. As he got a favourable reply, Visvesvaraya joined as Chief Engineer of Mysore on 15th November 1909. Almost the first step he took was to insist on encouraging merit in making new appointments: without being influenced by extraneous considerations. Committees were appointed, at his instance, to make a plan for technical education, and, again, at his instance, the Economic Conference was established in June 1911. It functioned actively for many years, and worked in three sections: Agriculture, Industries and Commerce, and Education. Public-spirited non-officials were associated in the work of numerous committees. Visvesvaraya had a passion for statistics and insisted on targets being clearly set in respect of various development activities and speedy efforts being made to reach them. He thus made the officers and people plan-minded. This was, indeed, the beginning of planned efforts, ever made in India on any considerable scale, and well may Visvesvaraya be hailed as the Father of Planned Economy. He was instrumental in taking over for the Mysore Government the administration of the railway lines from the Madras and Southern Mahratta Railway, opening new lines between Mysore and Arsikere, Shimoga and Talguppa, and constructing the light railway between Bangalore and Bangarapet, looping the Kolar District. He planned the Krishnaraja Sagar Dam near Mysore–the largest reservoir ever built in India up to that time. These measures and his solicitude for the welfare of the people soon won for him the unbounded confidence of the Maharaja and the love and respect of all citizens. Today we are talking in terms of hundreds of crores, but those were days when even a 2½ crore hydel project like the Krishnaraja Sagar (which was the original estimate) gave rise to misgivings; and it was only by his persistent efforts that the scheme was put through. Before completing the work on the Krishnaraja Sagar Dam he had many hurdles to get over. The Madras Government raised difficulties as they felt that the interests of cultivators in the Cauvery basin in the Madras Presidency would be adversely affected. Visvesvaraya had to take up the matter with the Viceroy for arbitration and produce the relevant facts and figures. The award was in his favour. He was a past master in carrying on such negotiations. He was patient, ever courteous; he was sure of his facts and figures and the justice of his cause; and so he generally won through. V His Highness the Maharaja called upon him to take up the Dewanship, in succession to T. Ananda Rao in November 1912–a greatly coveted honour, as Mysore had already won a reputation far and wide for its rich resources and its wise and benevolent ruler. But with characteristic self-abnegation he suggested to His Highness that “it would be sufficient” if he were appointed a Member of the Council in charge of the Development Departments. He was not eager for
  • 13. power or status. But as His Highness was insistent, he took over the Dewanship. He referred to this in a speech, delivered soon after, in the following terms: “It will, I hope, not be regarded as an affectation of modesty on my part if I say that all I have wanted is opportunity for work, and that thoughts of personal advancement have not influenced my action in recent years.” The period of his Dewanship, which extended over six years, may be truly called the golden age of the (then) Mysore State, a period of unprecedented all-round development. Visvesvaraya insisted on high standards of smartness and regularity on the part of officers in the discharge of their duties, and sternly discountenanced slackness or shoddiness wherever he noticed it. Officers had to be at their places when the offices opened, and, by making surprise visits himself, he ensured that the age-old habits of irregularity yielded to new ways of efficiency. Heads of Departments had also to make themselves available at fixed hours to visitors. He saw to it, in addition, that officers were smartly dressed, in Western style preferably, except for the Mysore turban; and there are stories still current, of the ludicrous instances of old-world officials, innocent of modern fashions, painfully adapting themselves to these sartorial stipulations. Visvesvaraya always set the example himself by his own immaculate dress, in which he was always to be seen by visitors, whether in his office or at home. His inspections and tours were thoroughly businesslike, devoid of any pomp and circumstance. He was a good listener, and was invariably courteous to all ranks of people, official or non-official. Visvesvaraya was a hard taskmaster but claimed to be a democrat, in that he was always anxious to secure public co- operation in respect of the development programmes that he initiated. The State pulsated with a new life, and the stirrings of it were noticeable in the remotest corners of the State. Replying to addresses presented by various organizations in Bangalore soon after he assumed Dewanship, he said: “In all the addresses you have been pleased to read to me, you state what in your opinion His Highness’s Government should do, or what I should do. But there is not a word said of what you yourselves are going to do, not even one word of co-operation on your part….I attach great importance to the co-operation of the leaders of the public each in his Legitimate sphere of activity.” That villages should develop the spirit of self-help was a favourite theme with him. During his regime he was able to get villagers to give their personal labour, shram-dan, in the repair of minor tanks, construction of village roads, putting up school buildings, etc. He promoted conferences and committee meetings at all levels–State, District and Taluk; and whenever he had occasion to speak he was never tired of placing before his listeners relevant statistics, providing comparisons between India and advanced countries like England, U. S. A., Canada, etc. One noticeable characteristic of his speeches, however, was that they were entirely devoid of reference to the past glories of India or to her great heritage–of “historics”, as it has been mischievously termed!–the usual stock-in-trade of patriotic speakers. He was concerned with the present and the future, and he was impatient with the apathy and lethargy of our people, and would like to hustle them along so that they might live fuller lives as intelligent citizens of the modern world. A brief resume of what he achieved during the period of his Dewanship may be set down here: In respect of education, which claimed top priority in his plans, he introduced legislation for compulsory education by stages, took steps for expansion of girls’ education, provided liberal grants for the institution of scholarships for backward-class students; opened an agricultural school providing practical courses; opened a mechanical engineering and a commercial school: established the Chamarajendra Technical Institute at Mysore, District Industrial Schools, and the College of Engineering at Bangalore; and provided foreign scholarships for students to study abroad. It was due to his persistent efforts that the Mysore university, the first ever in an Indian State, was founded in 1916. In respect of industries, he was instrumental in initiating the following: Sericulture Development; Sandalwood Oil Manufacture; the Soap Factory; the Metal Factory; the Chrome Tanning Factory; The Central Industrial Workshop, and District Workshops; Subsidies for Small and Cottage Industries; Hotels and Guest Houses including those on the Nandi
  • 14. Hills; Printing Presses; Loans for starting private Workshops; The Mysore Iron and Wood Distillation Works; Railways Extension; and the growth of Hydro-electric Power. He started investigations for the establishment of a port at Bhatkal. He initiated measures to de-officialize local board administration, and attended to town planning and to the provision of better water supply and underground drainage for several towns. He introduced village improvement schemes, and the Malnad Improvement scheme, in particular. The following are other institutions he helped to establish: The Bank of Mysore; The Mysbre Chamber of Commerce; The Karnataka Sahitya Parishat; The Civil and Social Progress Association; Public Libraries in Bangalore and Mysore; The Century Club and a Ladies’ Club at Bangalore; and The Cosmopolitan Club of Mysore. He revived the Competitive Examination for the Mysore Civil Service, which had been in abeyance for some years, and confined it to Mysoreans and those domiciled in Mysore for five years. He was also instrumental in getting a new treaty signed, defining the relations between Mysore and the British Government, superseding the old Instrument of Transfer, which raised the status of Mysore. He also introduced reforms in the working of the Representative Assembly, providing for a second session to consider the budget; gave its members the privilege of putting interpellations, and electing four (instead of two) members to the Legislative Council. The Legislative Council was enlarged, so that it had a non-official majority. He initiated measures to separate the Judicial and Executive powers –a matter that had been pressed for decades by Indian leaders; activized the work of the Economic Conference, and introduced activized the work of the Economic Conference, and introduced ‘efficiency audit’ with a view to preservation of discipline and efficiency in Government Departments. Even a bare recital of these measures gives one an idea of the stupendous magnitude of his achievements and their many-sided character–a truly astonishing record for any administrator of a State here or elsewhere. And it is also to be remembered that the First World War was on, for over four years out of the six, during which he was Dewan. He was obliged to carry on under the cramping conditions–particularly in respect of industrial development–of the exigencies of the war, for the prosecution of which, Mysore, like other Indian States, made considerable contribution in men, money and materials. Efficiency, precision and public spirit were his watchwords and he attempted to infuse these virtues into the officials and non-officials with whom he came into contact. A letter issuing from his office, for instance, was often retyped over and over again, so that there was not the slightest flaw in it. He spared neither himself nor others and, in spite of a frail and even puny body, gave evidence of extraordinary alertness and physical energy. His regular diet habits and his daily walks kept him thoroughly fit and active. He was punctual to the minute in keeping his engagements. He set a high standard of moral rectitude which had a chastening effect on the administration, so that one rarely heard of corruption. He abhorred nepotism and jobbery of any kind in making appointments or bestowing other Government favours, and was so scrupulous that for private work he would not touch Government stationery or use Government conveyance, making a distinction between public duties and private work with a meticulousness that was almost fanatical. All this might sound fantastic to the pampered officials of the modern day, provided by a generous Government with vans and jeeps, and unaccustomed to the drawing of su.ch nice distinctions. Visvesvaraya laid down his office by the end of 1918. His Highness the Maharaja appointed a committee headed by Sir Leslie Miller, the Chief Judge, to consider the question of adopting in Mysore measures similar to those advocated by non- brahmin leaders in Maddras. “My idea was”, writes Visvesvaraya in his Memoirs, “that by spreading education rapidly and adopting precision methods in production and industry, the State and its entire population would progress faster. There was never any complaint that I favoured any particular community in making appointments….I felt opposed to the establishment of the Miller Committee…..After prolonged discussion and exchange of views for a considerable time, I obtained His Highness’s consent to retire from service. Some time was required to arrange and place all the new schemes in operation and other contemplated developments in a safe condition before I actually laid down office. So it was agreed some eight months beforehand that I should retire at a convenient date at the end of the year. This arrangement was kept a closely guarded secret.” VI
  • 15. Thus ended the career of Visvesvaraya’s services to the country as a Government official in his 58th year. For over forty years thereafter he continued to serve the country as a public-spirited citizen of India in various capacities, but chiefly as an adviser on matters of industry and engineering. Though he severed his official connection with Mysore, he continued to take active interest in its development. His relations with the Maharaja continued to be most cordial, and he was invited to be the chairman of the Board of Management of the Bhadravati Iron and Steel Works, and he served in that capacity from 1923 to 1929. He did not draw the honorarium due to him during this period amounting to about 2 lakhs. He made over this amount for the founding of the Jayachamarajendra Occupational Institute, politely turning down even the suggestion that his own name should be given to it. The Institute has come to fill a great need in the scheme of technical education and has become a model for polytechnics subsequently started in all parts of the country. He also served as chairman of the Cauvery Canal Committee to align and construct the high level canal system from Krishnaraja Sagar; and as chairman of the committee for the new water supply scheme to Bangalore. He attempted to start an Automobile industry in the State, but without success. He was more successful, however, in getting the Hindustan Aircraft factory started at Bangalore in 1940. In 1949–when he was nearing ninety–he actively pushed forward a scheme for Rural Industrialization, with arrangements to finance it through a Financial Corporation. This good work, however, has not been followed up, the National Extension Services and Block Development schemes having meanwhile come on the scene. It must be said in this connection that Visvesvaraya’s scheme, carefully thought out and complete in every detail, deserves to be given a trial not only in Mysore State but all over the country. It may be calculated to solve the problem of unemployment to a considerable extent, more effectively perhaps than the present sporadic and unco-ordinated efforts made in the field of rural industrialization under the aegis of the Community Development projects, the Khadi Gramodyog Board and other similar bodies set up by the Government. Outside Mysore he participated in, or presided over, the following committees after his retirement as Dewan of Mysore: Bombay Technical and Industrial Committee (1921-’22): New Capital (New Delhi) Enquiry Committee, (1922); Indian Economic Enquiry Committee (1925); Backbay Inquiry Committee (1926); Bangalore Political Disturbances Enquiry Committee (1929), in the report of which he made an unanswerable plea for the setting up of Responsible Government in Mysore; the Sukkur Barrage Works Committee (1929 ); Bombay University Committee for promoting Chemical Industries (1930); Irrigation Inquiry Committee, Bombay ( 1938); and Flood Control Measures in Orissa (at the request of Gandhiji) (1939). He was also elected as chairman of the committee of the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, in 1938 and thereafter successively for seven years till he voluntarily relinquished that office. Ever since its inception in 1941 he was the President of the All-India Manufacturers’ Organization till 1954. He also presided over the All-Parties Conference in 1922 convened in Bombay, to suggest a way out of the situation created by the non-co-operation movement led by Gandhiji, and to explore the possibilities of convening a Round Table Conference. He was the President of the South Indian States’ Peoples’ Conference at Trivandrum in 1929 and gave an important lead in the matter of assigning a proper status to the citizens and the rulers of the Indian States in the contemplated Federal Constitution of India. Though he could not agree to the methods of direct action and mass political agitation launched by Gandhiji, he was by no means a reactionary and was well in advance of the then ‘moderate’ opinion in the country. In 1919 he went on a study tour round the world in company with several industrialists and merchants. He stayed in London for a year to supervise the publication of Reconstrncting India, which came out in 1920. While in London he was offered a seat on the Council of the Secretary of State for India by Mr. Montagu, but he politely declined the offer. He again toured in foreign countries in 1935 to study the automobile industry and in 1946 (when he was 85) as a leader of the delegation of the All-India Manufacturers’ Organization, visiting numerous factories. A report, of nearly 300 pages, of this tour, was published, containing numerous suggestions of practical value for the rapid development of Indian industries. By this time Visvesvaraya had popularized the slogan ‘Industrialize or Perish’. VII
  • 16. Besides numerous pamphlets and brochures or reports of which he was the author, Visvesvaraya wrote and published three substantial books: Reconstructing India (already mentioned), Planned Economy for India (1934) and Memoris of My Working Life (1951). The first two books are packed with facts and figures and set down his views on the reconstruction of India as an economically prosperous and industrially developed nation. The third book is a plain and unvarnished account of his public career as a Government official in Bombay and, later in Mysore, and of his varied activities subsequently. The book is characteristic of him. It opens with his 24th year, with not a word in it about his private life and its joys and sorrows by way of introduction or even incidentally. Nor does it contain any sidelights on the men and events that influenced him in the course of his public life. It is, true, there is mention of great personalities like, Ranade, Gokhale, Tilak, Sri Krishnaraja Wadiyar and others; but we are not, permitted even a glimpse into his relationships with these great men. The narrative is severely objective and factual. He has obviously said much less than he felt about any person or any event. This reticence, and the style of strictly objective expression, seemed to have become his second nature, the result of prolonged self-discipline. In the course of his long public life he did come into contact with all kinds of people–people who must have greatly hurt him or sorely tried his patience. But his Memoirs contain not a word of comment or condemnation of any person. No doubt, occasionally, it contains quotations from appreciative and flattering references to himself from numerous high officials, but these seem to be set down not out of vanity but to serve as an example to his fellow countrymen so that they might profit by his experience. In 1960–in his 100th year–he published A Brief Memoir of My Complete Working Life. It is not priced and seems to have been intended for private circulation. It sets down categorically the events of his long career, the dates on which he delivered University Convocation Addresses in four Indian Universities, the dates of his six foreign travels and their purpose, the dates on which titles and honours, degrees (honoris causa) from eight Indian Universities, were conferred on him; and the list of his publications. It is a kind of logbook rendering an account of his life and prepared in his characteristically methodical way. As evidence of his mental alertness at that advanced age, a short paragraph containing a pointed observation may be quoted from, the book. After tracing the history of the Bank of Mysore and how it helped the businessmen of Mysore, he writes: “The Bank has similarly been of great help to the Krishnarajendra Mills in Mysore and the important coffee industry of the Malnad. It is a matter for extreme regret that there should now be a proposal to destroy its identity and make it a subsidiary of the State Bank of India. It is likely to prove a great disservice to Mysoreans.” Visvesvaraya had the habit of maintaining scrapbooks in which newspaper cuttings, and extracts from books or magazines he read, were systematically compiled. Some of the scrapbooks contained compilations relating to public questions and some to general and literary matters. The latter he published in 1957 in book form giving it the title Sayings–Wise and Witty. The extracts bear evidence of the range of his literary taste and his sense of humour–a trait not usually attributed to him. VIII Visvesvaraya’s Herculean efforts to modernize Mysore during the nine years he was associated with its administration as Chief Engineer and Dewan have been already referred to. It is true that he succeeded in a large measure in creating a new life, or its outward signs, during his regime. But it must not be forgotten that he had his severe critics who condemned his ‘wasteful expenditure’ and ambitious plans. He was even charged with doing things for show though in sober truth he husbanded the resources of the State most carefully and was ever watchful to effect the utmost economy in the expenditure on Public Works. Showiness was utterly foreign to his nature. No Dewan was so unassuming and mild as he was. Again, there were the irreverent scoffers even among the officials of the State who looked upon his schemes as a huge joke, and his plans as so many fads. There were, again, others among them who knew the things that would please him and tried to make an impression on him by external habiliments or the reeling off of statistics cooked up for the occasion in reply to his invariable queries. Visvesvaraya, in spite of his supreme intelligence, was not always a shrewd judge of men and was easily taken in; and when he discovered that he had been imposed upon, very likely he must have felt sorrow rather than anger. People who moved closely with him have testified that they have never seen him lose his temper–an extraordinary thing to say about any human being! What would cause indignation in others simply found expression, in his case, in some drily humorous remark, which often quenched his hearers. His impersonal, passionless and intensely intellectual attitude was both his strength and his weakness. One felt awed in his presence, but not drawn to get into closer communion with him, unless, of course, one belonged to his intimate circle. Yet he was extremely considerate, and gave frequent evidence of a tender heart that felt for others. Of his many deeds of
  • 17. charity, of monthly pensions to dependents, poor relations and needy students, the world could know little; he gave and helped so quietly. His reticence and intellectual vigour and moral elevation left him on a lonely eminence. He could not evoke widespread and deep emotional response from the masses: he was not made to be a mass leader. But the people admired and adored him; and his portraits could be seen on the walls of village homes in the Mysore State long before the portraits of other national leaders which became popular in later years. Gandhi and Visvesvaraya had many things in common: purposefulness in life; unfailing courtesy; personal austerity; a passionate regard for tidiness and punctuality; a capacity for untiring work. But the differences in their outlook on life, and approach to national problems, presented a striking contrast. Gandhi personified in an unmistakable way the people of India and particularly the poor; Visvesvaraya appeared to be outlandish. Gandhi was not enamoured of machinery and the complex industrial organization of the West and bent all his energies to the revival of the Charkha and cottage industries; Visvesvaraya, though he was aware of the importance of village industries, was an ardent admirer of the technological advances made in Western countries and was never tired of holding up their example for our emulation. Gandhiji’ spoke of Ramarajya, of the Gita and of God; Visvesvaraya did not refer to the past but was fully engrossed with the present and the future, and his approach was thoroughly secular. Gandhi always harped on Satya and Ahimsa; Visvesvaraya was always speaking of precision and efficiency. Each was unique in his own way: both of them achieved mighty things in their lifetime. Both of them were impatient to lift the masses of India out of the poverty and degradation into which they had sunk, and make them strong and self- reliant. The seeming antithesis between them (and, indeed, Gandhiji seemed to be the antithesis of almost every other Indian leader, in a way, being in a class by himself) was due to the difference of emphasis on factors that each sincerely believed would help build up the manhood of India and a fuller life for the Indian people. Both of them dedicated all their life to the great task of national regeneration, each in his own sphere, and according to his own aptitude and light. India had need of both of them during her period of emergence as a free nation, and will profit by their inspiring message and shining example for a long long time to come. it was midnight. A train was pacing to its destination with a howl in the silence of the night. A man was sleeping with his head on the side window of the train. Suddenly he woke up from his sleep. He jumped from his seat and pulled the chain hanging just over his head. The chain was nothing but the danger chain. The train moved for some more distance and stopped suddenly. The employees and other passengers in the train rushed to the compartment to know what had happened. Someone even suspected that the man did it in his sleeping mood. So they were angry towards this man. All surrounded the man and asked the reason behind chain pulling. “There is a crack in the rail after some more meters from here!!! If train goes over it mishaps may occur.” The man said quietly. “What nonsense you are saying. In this dark night how did you see the crack which is far in front ? Are you mocking us ?” That was the response of the people. “No. I have no need to mock you all and stop the train to disturb all. You just check it and then talk to me ” The man replied very gently. The railway persons got down to rail. With the help of a torch they checked the railway track. To their surprise they saw a big crack in the rail a few meters away from the stopped train! If train passed over the crack definitely some mishap was obvious in that dark village night. All persons again gathered around the man who predicted it correctly. He told that he heard the sound from the track while sleeping and it changed at some place . The vibrating sound changed too heavily that the man recognized that it was due to the crack in the railway line. Do you know who was that man who saved many lives from death? It was none other than the best engineer that India ever gave birth to, Mokshagundam Visvesvaraya or M.Visvesvaraya. Visvesvaraya born in Muddenahalli village of Karnataka on September 15th , 1861. His father was a Sanskrit Pandit named Srinivasa Sastri. The ancestors of Visvesvaraya were from the Mokshagundam village of Andrapradesh. Hence Visvesvaraya added Mokshagundam before his name and thus became Mokshagundam Visvesvaraya.