Murree
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 (alternative spelling Murri) is a hill station in Punjab founded by the British in 1851.
There were cantonments nearby at Gharial (Gharrial) (four miles away) and Kuldannah[1], (Kuldana)
Nearby
Barian (Wikipedia) is situated in the Murree Hills, about 13 km north west of Murree, in the area known as the Galis (Gallis, Galies, Gallies, Gullies, Galiyat) where a number of small hill towns, many of which have Gali in their name, are situated along the crest of the ridge on the road that runs north from Murree to Abbottabad.[2] Galiyat is the plural of Gali which literally means an alley but in this case it probably alludes to a valley between mountains.[3] Barian Gali or Burean Gully[4] is probably the same place as Barian. In 1901 this area became part of Hazara District , North West Frontier Province
Tret is situated 40 kilometers from Rawalpindi on the main road to Muree.
Military history
Cantonments
"The British began to establish summer camps for the troops in the Galliat area and by the 1880 Baragali, Kalabagh, and Khairagali were occupied by various artillery units. Gora Dhaka, Khanspur and Changlagali housed infantry units. Nathiagali and Dungagali were reserved for civil servants. Thandiani served as a hill station for the civil servants in Abbottabad. These summer camps (cantonments) had a mixture of permanent and semi-permanent buildings and were supplied by small bazaars to cater for the needs of the troops"[5]
In 1907:
"Murree is only a sanitarium. The mountain batteries go from Rawalpindi to the Hazara Galis. Clifden, Sunny Bank and Kuldannah form one cantonment. Clifden is, in summer, filled with a large number of women and children from Rawalpindi and Peshawar. A British Infantry Regiment is located at Kuldannah, and another in a temporary camp at Gharial, which also receives detachments from the summer garrison of Rawalpindi. Barian, on the borders of this district and Hazara, usually has a British Infantry Regiment from Peshawar or Nowshera".[6]
The Army summer camp known as Barian Camp appears to have developed into a more permanent cantonment . "Barian was a lovely one-battalion cantonment at six thousand feet".[7] In 1920 there was a RAF Hill Depot established at Lower Barian.[8]
Bara Gali (Wikipedia), about 40km from Murree, also was a small cantonment.
Khaira Gali was a small cantonment on the road between Abbottabad and Murree, occupied in the summer months by one of the British mountain batteries which were stationed at Rawalpindi in the winter. (Spelling variants : Khaira/Khair/Khyra Gali/Galli}[9]
There was a Rest Camp at Tret.
Postcards and photographs of the cantonments
Postcards may not be permanent links, particularly those from ebay. If not, try Googling "old postcard" with the title of the postcard. Most are from stamps-auction.com.
- Postcard: View Kuldana, Murree Hills
- Postcard: Gharrial Barracks, Murree Hills
- Postcard: Gharrial Barracks in Winter (Snow) Murree Hills ebay
- Postcard: Charat Hill, Murree
- Postcard: General View of Military Line: Barian Camp (c 1910?)
- Postcard: Bazar Barian Camp, 7 Miles from Sunny Bank, Murree Hills ebay
- Postcard: Khan’s Pur, Murree Hill
- Postcard: Khan's Pur Murree.
- Postcard: Khans pur: Military Camp
- Postcard: Rest Camp (Tret) Murree Hills.
- Postcard: Upper Topa Murree 1910 imagesofasia.com
- Postcard: The Soldiers' Home Upper Topa, Murree Hill
- Postcard: Khair Gali Murree Hill
- Postcard: Khair Gali - (Murree)
- Postcard: Khaira Galli Murree Hills
- Postcard: Kalabagh, Murree Hills
- Postcard: Kala Bagh Second Side, Murree Hill.
- Postcard: Kala Bagh Third Side Murree Hill
- Postcard: Kala Bagh (Murree)
- Postcard: Kalabagh, Murree Hills
Photographs
- 2009 Photograph of Old British Raj military HQ at Barian Cantonment. Now a military training school. flickr.com
- Photograph: 2nd Battalion Band, The Queens Own Royal West Kent Regiment, Cherat, North West Frontier, 1913 from Janet & Richard Mason’s The Queens Own Royal West Kent Regiment
- Photograph: 5th Battalion, The Queens Own Royal West Kent Regiment, Barian Camp, Muree (First World War period) from Janet & Richard Mason’s The Queens Own Royal West Kent Regiment
- Photographs of Barian: Barian: 1, Barian:2, Barian:3,Barian:4 from Photograph album of Private Henry Knight, who served in "A" Company of the 1/5th Royal West Kent Regiment in India during the Great War, from Janet & Richard Mason’s The Queens Own Royal West Kent Regiment
Also see
Sites of Interest
The following are sites in and around the town.
- The ruins of Murree Brewery in Ghora Gali
Educational Institutes
- Convent of Jesus and Mary (originally boarding, now a day school)
- St Thomas College, Murree, for boys, was opened in 1882[10], probably by the Capuchin Fathers, and was subsequently taken over by the (Roman Catholic) Mill Hill Missionaries [11]. 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
Volunteer Regiments
G Company, 1st Punjab Volunteer Rifles, had its headquarters at Murree, and was composed of cadets belonging to the Lawrence Military Asylum at Ghora Gali, near Murree.
H Company, 1st Punjab Volunteer Rifles contained civilian residents from Rawalpindi and Murree, and had its headquarter at Murree. In 1907 G and H Companies were "in strength 121 men, exclusive of officers"[6].
External Links
- Murree Wikipedia
- "Memories of Murree" by Walter Reeve (born 1934) whose father was in the Indian Army and later Pakistan Army. Details of a visit to Murree in 1936 from the author’s father’s memoirs, and the author’s memory of visits in 1948 and 1949. Part 1, Part 2, Part 3 Scroll down. jang.com.pk 6, 13 and 20 November 2005, now archived websites. See References below for the author’s memories of an English schoolboy growing up in Peshawar around the time of partition.
- Churches and Chapels in Murree Youtube.
- Photograph: St. Deny's Church – Murree flickr.com
- Muree and Gallies www.geocities.ws/jamshedt
- Dr Ali Jan’s The old English Cemeteries in Murree, Pakistan
- For some memorial inscriptions from Murree, see Indian Cemeteries including
- Monument to those who died 1st Bn 6th Royal Regiment at Murree and Camp Kotlee during the Cholera Epidemic of 1872 Cliffden Road Cemetery, Murree
- British Soldiers' Cemetery, Lower Topa, Murree Hills – Pakistan Video on YouTube
- Video on YouTube: Visit to a 200 Years Old British Christian Cemetery in Murree by MurreeHills1849 Part 1, Part 2
- MurreeHills.co.nr includes
- Fifty Members of the Murree Club 1865 pages 46,47 from From Kashmir to Kabul: the photographs of John Burke and William Baker, 1860-1900 by Omar Khan 2002 Limited View Google Books. Also refer Photographer for more details of this book.
- "A rock epic". An article by Ali Jan about a 1909 regimental rock carving by the Northumberland Fusiliers, at Murree from The News on Sunday 19 July 2009 (jang.com.pk)
- Prince of Wales's Own West Yorkshire Regiment, Kuldana, Murree 1907- 1910 by Dr Ali Jan. Details of rock carvings.
- Three views of regimental badge rock-carvings at Cherat (Charat) Hill. Cherat, like the Khyber Pass had a tradition of regimental carvings on the rocky faces of the hillsides.[12]
- Photograph of Murree Mountain (7,600 feet) taken from Lower Topa by IshtiaQ Ahmed flickr.com
- Images of Murree from "History of Pakistan"'s collection flickr.com
- The Murree Brewery murreebrewery.com
- Photograph of tonga journey returning from school in Murree, October 1905 from Ask the photo expert Blog 25 Sep 2012 findmypast.co.uk
Historical books online
- "Murree Town" Imperial Gazetteer of India, Volume 18, page 42.
- Map of Murree showing the cantonments, between pages 244 and 245, A Handbook for Travellers in India, Burma, and Ceylon published by John Murray, London Eighth Edition 1911 Archive.org.
- "Abstract of Medico-Topographical Report of Murree, Punjab" by Assistant-Surgeon J Reade, 2nd Battalion Rifle Brigade, page 321 Army Medical Department: Report for the Year 1862
- Punjab District Gazetteers, Volume XXVIIIA, Rawalpindi District 1907, published 1909, is available to read online on the Digital Library of India website. Table of Contents commences computer page 8.
Further Reading
- Shaukat, Lala Rukh, "Mystique of Murree" Lahore: Ferozsons (Pvt) Ltd 2006 ISBN 969 0 01986 4
References
- ↑ From Kashmir to Kabul, page 59 by Omar Khan, refer External links
- ↑ "Murree and the Galis" by Hassan Humayun
- ↑ About Galiyat, The Pakistani Alps flickr.com
- ↑ Google Books snippet view: page 129, Historical images of Pakistan by F. S. Aijazuddin
- ↑ abbottabadonline.com
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Page 228, computer page 251 Punjab District Gazetteers, Volume XXVIIIA, Rawalpindi District 1907, published 1909, available to read online on the Digital Library of India website.
- ↑ Google Books snipper search result: Unlikely beginnings: a soldier's life by Aboobaker Osman Mitha - 2003
- ↑ Snippet Google Books Military history of British India, 1607-1947 by Harbans Singh Bhatia, page 29 and Snippet Google Books The flying elephants: a history of No. 27 Squadron, Royal Flying Corps, Royal Air Force, 1915-69, page 96
- ↑ Khaira Gali Imperial Gazetteer of India, Volume 15, page 207
- ↑ The magic mountains: hill stations and the British raj by Dane Keith Kennedy page 138 Google Books
- ↑ 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
- ↑ Peshawar Remembered by Walter Reeve (born 1934).