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Thakur Dan Singh Bist (1906 – 10 September 1964〔) was an Indian billionaire philanthropist from Kumaon, Uttaranchal, India. He was referred to as the "Timber King of India",〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Full text of "Rediscovering india abode of gods vol 37" )〕 a "champion of the people" and "a prince among men".〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Dan Singh Bist Professor Rawat )〕 The people of Kumaon affectionately remember him as "Maldar" one who is generous with stuff. The famous architect Laurie Baker and his wife mention their close friend in a memoir 'the maldar who owned most of Pithoragarh. A close business associate of Corbett from whom he bought Grasmere estate in Nainital and Berinag tea estate. Skins of Corbett's killed tigers are housed at Thakur Dan Singh's residence the famed 'Bist Estate'. Corbett took jungle clues from employees who 'earned their living by floating sleepers down the Sarda river for Thakur Dan Singh Bist'. William McKay Aitken marvelled at the sights as he travelled through the estates of Chaukori and Berinag belonging to 'Dan Singh Maldaar' and extolled Berinag tea which was highly sought by London tea blenders'. His donation of DSB college, an unprecedented amount of half a million rupees of cash and about 1.5 million rupees worth of more than 12 acres of land〔 in the heart of Nainital, and buildings promoted admiration and attention from the newly independent Indian Government. 2 million rupees was a lot of money. This was at a time when the rupee was at parity with the pound. Timed to concur with the throwing open of the College, the movie ‘Maldar’ was released, and it was doing moderately well in the rest of India, but running full houses in the Himalayas. The movie was about a young man from a humble background who becomes a ‘Maldar’ – a person with a lot of stuff who hence distributes it, shares it. It was widely rumored that Dan Singh Bist had been a benefactor for the project as Jagmani pictures, a distributor, had borrowed 70,000 rupees a few years earlier from Dan Singh, see para 24.〔http://indiankanoon.org/doc/455222/〕 It was the coming of age of Thakur Dan Singh as the unrivalled timber king of India. At its height his empire, his massive timber depots with attendant offices and bungalows for managers and himself, extended all across the Himalayas from Lahore to Wazirabad in what later became Pakistan, Jammu to Pathankot, Kartanya Ghat and Kaurilya Ghat and C.B.Ganj Bareilly, Bihar and Tanakpur, Kathgodam and Pithoragarh and Haldwani to Goalpara and Garo Hills as well as Bardiya district and Kathmandu in Nepal. Vast properties purchased by him at each location led to his immersion in local folk lore as a folk hero, who rode on a horse, with hands always full to give. The sleepers for the entire British railway system were more or less supplied by him or if not him, his agents in Assam, G.S Bhandari and Jagadish Singh〔https://books.google.co.in/books?id=_-MRFbForK4C&pg=PA78&lpg=PA78&dq=mendipathar+timber&source=bl&ots=XwWigNnWtu&sig=VXA6JdJ5UG3Me_FXVkEYJP2Zaug&hl=en&sa=X&ei=8UowVdX2ItDe8AWZi4DQBg&ved=0CB0Q6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=mendipathar%20timber&f=false〕 who he used to meet at Gauripur, India at Roopsee airport, which is now defunct. There was no other timber contractor who could leverage his scale. At its height his company, D.S. Bist and Sons, employed over 5000 people and had tens of millions of rupees in business.〔 but was bidding for contracts in the Andamans and even Brazil when Thakur Dan Singh Bist met his untimely death after completing his last purchase of Beldanga Sugar Mill〔http://wikimapia.org/23560671/Beldanga-Sugar-Mill〕 in Murshidabad. He collapsed in his suite at the Grand Hotel (Kolkata) due to health and stress caused by the anti business pandora's box the newly Independent India opened. He had recently sold the plant he had set up at a discount, sensing no solution, as the Government had refused his machinery to leave Calcutta Port despite having first authorized Dan Singh Bist to take a hefty loan to procure the same. The Bist Industrial Corporation Ltd. which was formed by D. S. Bist and sons of Nainital in whose favour an industrial licence was granted in 1956 to set up a sugar factory of two thousand tonnes capacity a day at Kichha to meet the 'crying need' of the cultivators, of sugar-cane in district Nainital. But after Dan Singh Bist sold his shares in 1963, and subsequently died the next year, it did not run even for a day and was ultimately taken over by Government, by an ordinance issued on 12 September 1970 which was replaced by Bist Industrial Corporation Limited (Acquisition of Undertaking) Act, No. 7 of 1971〔606 W. L Kohli v. State AIL L. I said to be mala fide or ...〕 His empire began to collapse even as he lay in hospital in a comatose state, dying ultimately on the 10th of September, 1964. He had no son, and his was a patriarchal society. His daughters were children, or just married. The fate of Beldanga sugar mill is unknown, as Dan Singh Bist fell into a coma the day after procurement and his daughters were mostly minors. The mill at Kichha is now a governmental run mill after the take over. His prime real estate in Nainital, several architecturally profound and beautiful British cottages with lake views, of several acres each such as Primrose, Cambridge Hall, and Grasmere are alienated, and as well as several bungalows and timber depots scattered across his areas of operation. The Tea gardens of Chaukori and Berinag collapsed almost immediately or began steady descent into anarchy,〔"Berinaag - WikiUttarakhand"〕 in the absence of a central intelligence, and combined with socialistic policies and inaction of the Government, Berinag became a town with a population of 25,000 inhabitants and a living breathing municipality where the tea estate used to be, as documented by the Sub-divisional Magistrate of Tehsil at Berinag, in October, 2004 in a report to the Chief Secretary and District Magistrate. and Chaukori remained in a state of neglect. The dairy farm at Chaukori shut down. The 10,000 acre fruit producing and eucalyptus tree export power house 'Dhara Farms' near Moradabad was taken by the Government under new anti-landlord rules. The history of these farms, among the biggest in India, at the time, is interesting. One Raja Gajendra Shah of Moradabad, incurred massive debts to the state, and died in 1943. Unpaid debts allowed the State to acquire these massive lands and these were then bought by Dan Singh Bist for 235,000 rupees on the 30th of October, 1945. Reference is Paragraph 3 and 4 of a case in the Allahabad High Court Dan Singh Bisht vs Firm Janki Saran Kailash Chander on 30 April 1948 Equivalent citations: AIR 1948 All 396〔http://indiankanoon.org/doc/148360/〕 Its brand was so strong that even after Dan Singh died, from 1964 till the late 1980s, Berinag tea continued to be actively sought by people who loved and remembered its kippery taste, rich red colour and taste, and 'its unique light taste and colour'.〔Hindustan Times, September 17, 2014, "U'khand tea: Raj days' flavour goes brandless'〕 ==Early life and Business Activities== It was not always so prosperous. Thakur Dan Singh Bist was born in Pithoragarh district in Wadda〔http://wikimapia.org/480710/Wadda-Town〕 1906. His father had opened a small shop selling ghee in an insignificant town bordering Nepal. The river Kali is the boundary and the town is called Jhulaghat, literally rope bridge area. Thakur Dan Singh's father had immigrated from Western Nepal Baitadi district and Dan Singh retained his Nepalese citizenship until Indian Independence. At the very young age of 12, he left his studies to work as an apprentice with a British timber contractor in Burma, Maymyo then part of British India.〔As told by L.R. Sharma advocate in Pithoragarh. The oral history was typed up and the copy stored with Dr. R. S. Tolia, the first Chief Secretary of Uttranchal, who acted as witness.〕 It was here he learned the economics of the timber trade, and more importantly how to dress and talk like a 'sahib'. These skills would be leveraged to create a breath-taking monopoly. When he returned from Burma, his father had just taken the biggest gamble of his life. On 19 September 1919, his father Deb Singh Bist, a small time shopkeeper from Jhulaghat, took out a loan to buy 2000 acres of Chaukori estate from a British company. It was this daring that Dan Singh later sought to immortalise in the resolute bronze statue of Deb Singh Bist that stares out at young students in a bid to inspire them. Dan Singh not only managed to purchase the Berinag estate adjacent, from Captain James Corbett but found the secret ingredient that had enabled the Chinese to outcompete Indian teas in next door Lhasa.〔https://books.google.co.in/books?id=4kAOImX9PfwC&pg=PA201&lpg=PA201&dq=secret+berinag+tea+chinese&source=bl&ots=d9jbEtx6HX&sig=rPJIIRjQxVuRWNHvENQApUKHsuY&hl=en&sa=X&ei=DV4wVcb6N4_d8AWb7oGwDA&ved=0CCIQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=secret%20berinag%20tea%20chinese&f=false〕 His manager located a herb that the Chinese used to add which contributed to its rich colour and flavour as documented in Arun K Mittal's 'British Administration in Kumaon Himalayas: A Historical study 1815–1947. The secret ingredient not only rejuvenated the drinker but it catapulted Dan Singh like a shooting star. On 20 May 1924, at the age of 18 years, he purchased a brewery from the British Indian Corporation Limited and on those 50 acres began to build a home and office for him and his father at Bist Estate. Berinag tea was the number one brand in all three markets, Chinese, London and Indian markets. These details may be found in the Indian Government's page of the Tea Board of India, where Berinag has File number B-803/LC and Chaukori is C-804/LC both listed as owned by D S Bist and Sons, on page3 of Tea board document.〔http://www.teaboard.gov.in/pdf/directory/Registered_Tea_Estate.pdf〕 Dan Singh Bist even managed to get handsome quota money from the Tea Board Association, Calcutta, something both Corbett, as well as the previous owner Robert Bellairs' father from whom Corbett had bought Berinag,〔https://books.google.co.in/books?id=cNhSCnctuQ4C&pg=PA109&lpg=PA109&dq=corbett+belliars+berinag+tea&source=bl&ots=S0V3IAvmbd&sig=XAlZ279HBx9xrzfR0W0QD4tgxr0&hl=en&sa=X&ei=r2gwVfTIDZHo8AXOzYGwCw&ved=0CB0Q6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=corbett%20belliars%20berinag%20tea&f=false〕 had failed to do.〔Further details can be obtained at Tea Board, Calcutta. Chaukori registration number is 536 and Berinag's registration number is 440〕 Thakur Dan Singh Bist worked in the hardest of terrain, upstream rivers, and pioneered techniques of water way timber transportation and rope bridge use that are still discussed today .〔http://www.tribuneindia.com/2009/20090222/dplus.htm〕 This is the ecologically sensible way to transport as Dr. D.C. Phatak is quoted as stating on Feb. 21st 2009 in the Tribune 'Saving Himalayas, the rope way'. From Kisnai to Mendipathar he built a short-cut which is locally called the 'Bist Road' to ease transportation. Its a dirt track now. it was here, in the Garo Hills, that he encountered a matriarchal society where the women inherit the property which is distinctly at odds with his patriarchal 'Thakur' way of being. This gave him that perhaps at least one or more of his seven daughters would contain the seed that could salvage the empire. He knew the sharks were circling as he raced towards the end. He knew the question of succession was his Achilles' heel. This set him to work on the purchase of Smuggler's Rock Estate, to donate the land and building for the first girl's hostel at DSB college. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Dan Singh Bist」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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