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    Those were the Days: When a British colonel’s statue was thrown off its pedestal

    While celebrated by the imperial government as a martyr, Colonel James Neil earned notoriety among Indians as a brutal officer.

    Those were the Days: When a British colonel’s statue was thrown off its pedestal
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    Statue of Colonel James Neil

    Chennai

    In the aftermath of the Second World War, post-colonial regimes in Africa and Asia hauled down imperial iconography, in an effort to sweep away remnants of their colonial heritage. The removal of British imperial statues from India’s public spaces was more widespread after the tricolour was unfurled. But Madras perhaps was the first place in the empire to agitate and remove a British statue and that too, a decade before freedom dawned.

    On August 11, 1927, two men walked calmly on Mount Road in the morning. One carrying a bag of tools, the other an axe and they carried a ladder. Even the policeman directing traffic at Spencer’s junction mistook them for workmen. The duo walked to the middle of the road, placed the ladder on a 22-foot statue opposite Spencer’s and climbed up the pedestal. The two were not workmen but were Congress volunteers from Madurai, Mohammed Saliah and Subbarayulu. Once up the pedestal, they started shouting slogans. One took out a hammer and chisel from his tool bag and started hitting the statue. The other took swinging blows with an axe.

    Chips of metal and mortar were strewn around. People and police started crowding around the statue. After the two activists shouted anti-British slogans and could do no more harm to the bronze statue, they were brought down, arrested and sentenced to six months rigorous imprisonment.

    The statue was of James Neil of the Madras Fusiliers Regiment, who played a major role in putting down the 1857 Sepoy Mutiny. He was killed minutes before the Fusiliers won their greatest victory, but not before he disposed of quite a few Indians in cruel methods.

    While celebrated by the imperial government as a martyr, the colonel earned notoriety among Indians as a brutal officer and his sobriquet of ‘Butcher of Allahabad (or Lucknow)’. Luckily for Neil and his memory, one of the members of his Fusiliers happened to be the Governor of Madras, Harris. He formed a committee to erect a memorial which exhorted the public to contribute. Rs 18,953 was collected by November 1858, but not enough for an equestrian statue, (two statues had to be made, one in Ayr, Scotland) and so the design was changed to a position where he was seen standing with his sheathed sword.

    When the 10-foot bronze statue of Colonel James Neil was perched on a 12-foot pedestal near the Spencer building on Mount Road in 1861, everything that bordered it was insignificant in its imposing presence. On the pedestal was an inscription, “universally acknowledged as the first who stemmed the torrent of rebellion.”

    Neil was celebrated by the imperial government as a martyr but with the Indian independence movement gaining momentum, the statue, as an emblem of colonial oppression, became an affront.

    S. Satyamurti said that Neil was a “monster in human form whose statue disfigures one of the finest thoroughfares in Madras”. The Madras Mahajana Sabha and the Indian National Congress passed resolutions demanding its removal and started a series of demonstrations in Madras. Several agitators were arrested and sentenced to prison terms.

    With many of the leaders in gaol, K. Kamaraj was entrusted with the task of leading the Satyagraha. The Neil agitation led to the emergence of Kamaraj to the forefront. Before embarking on the protest, Kamaraj took the blessings of Mahatma Gandhi, who for his part gave his blessings with the condition that the protests must conform to the principles of Satyagraha and insisted that non-violence had to be upheld. “Instead of hammers, the use of clay balls may be more appropriate” he suggested.

    Kamaraj’s agitations were not worthwhile and Neil’s statue remained in the same place till 1937, when the newly elected Congress government (under the 1935 act) of his rival C. Rajagopalachari decided to do a balancing act between the ruling British and the agitating nationalists.

    “There are more ways than one of keeping a historic monument or memorial,” was Rajaji’s cryptic remark. He moved a resolution in the Madras Corporation demanding its removal and then on one night the deed was done. People crossing Mount Road were surprised at the empty space the next day. The statue was in Ripon Building for the transit before being moved to the Madras Museum.

    The statue can still be seen in the Anthropology section of the Madras museum, however, near a hand rickshaw model and generations of visitors have wondered on the nonexistent connection.

    — The writer is a historian and an author

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