Murree: Difference between revisions

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There were cantonments nearby at Gharial (four miles away) and Kuldannah<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=qKzMQTgtNaIC&pg=PA59 ''From Kashmir to Kabul''], page 59 by Omar Khan, refer External links</ref>, (alternative spelling Kuldana)
There were cantonments nearby at Gharial (four miles away) and Kuldannah<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=qKzMQTgtNaIC&pg=PA59 ''From Kashmir to Kabul''], page 59 by Omar Khan, refer External links</ref>, (alternative spelling Kuldana)


==History==
==Military history==
[[Insurrection at Murree]] 1857  
[[Insurrection at Murree]] 1857  



Revision as of 13:04, 8 February 2012

Murree
Presidency: Bengal
Coordinates: 33.906905°N 73.395367°E
Altitude: 2,291.2 m (7,517 ft)
Present Day Details
Place Name: Murree
State/Province: Punjab
Country: Pakistan
Transport links

Murree is a hill station in Punjab founded by the British in 1851.

There were cantonments nearby at Gharial (four miles away) and Kuldannah[1], (alternative spelling Kuldana)

Military history

Insurrection at Murree 1857

Sites of Interest

The following are sites in and around the town.

Educational Institutes

  • Convent of Jesus and Mary (originally boarding, now a day school)
  • St Thomas College, Murree, for boys, was opened in 1882[2], probably by the Capuchin Fathers, and was subsequently taken over by the (Roman Catholic) Mill Hill Missionaries [3]. However, it had probably closed by the 1930’s as there is no mention of this school in the entry for Murree in the Imperial Gazetteer of India, published 1909-1931
  • St Denys School

External Links

pre 1920, 1920, 1931

Historical books online

Further Reading

  • Shaukat, Lala Rukh, "Mystique of Murree" Lahore: Ferozsons (Pvt) Ltd 2006 ISBN 969 0 01986 4

References

  1. From Kashmir to Kabul, page 59 by Omar Khan, refer External links
  2. The magic mountains: hill stations and the British raj by Dane Keith Kennedy page 138 Google Books
  3. A Google Books search snippet from Into deserts: a history of the Catholic Diocese of Lahore, 1886-1986 by John Rooney c 1986 says: The Rome agreement provided that the Mill Hill Missionaries were to take over responsibility for the debts of St. Thomas College, Murree. Capuchin sources assess these at Rs.l. 00. Mill Hill sources say the debt amounted to Rs.25000.00. ... This book is available at Harvard University Library and UCLA Library
  4. Peshawar Remembered by Walter Reeve (born 1934).