Home UpChennai - Madras 2: British Public Buildings

The city presents a disappointing appearance, and possesses not a single handsome street.... The site is so low that it is difficult to realize that behind the first line of buildings lies one of the largest cities in Asia. That's from the massive Manual of the Administration of the Madras Presidency compiled by a civil servant named Charles Donald Maclean and published by the government of Madras in 1885.

Can you imagine a government today, wherever located, speaking so disparagingly of its own capital?

Even in Maclean's day, however, there were plenty of buildings with pretensions to grandeur—and a couple that achieved it. Thank Lord Napier of Magdala and his architect, Robert Fellowes Chisholm (1840-1915). Together they blended local and Western ideas into an Indo-Saracenic style far from the classicism of Calcutta or the Gothic of Bombay.

Fort St. George, founded in 1639, was a true and necessary fortress. Here, the east side, facing the sea.

Behind the walls there is still a military and government community.

Inside is also the secretariat. These pictures come from the 1990s, when photography was still allowed.

Close by, there's this rather mysterious canopy. Once, however, it held a statue of Cornwallis.

He's been moved to a nearby museum, where he remains larger than life both in tonnage and arrogance. He served as governor-general and commander in chief for the East India Company from 1786 to 1794; he returned in 1805 but died the same year of fever.

A more recent and not quite so celestial ruler: Lord Willingdon, a governor of Madras and later viceroy of India.

Outside the fort, and on an island in the murky Cooum River, there's a statue of one of the real giants of imperial administration. Thomas Munro (1761-1827) instituted direct property tax collection on cultivators in much of South India—and in the process released them from something akin to slavery. His revenue system was a break with the system of tax farmers or zamindarsintroduced to North India by Cornwallis. Like Cornwallis, Munro died while on tour.

Different angle, for the inscription. The sculptor was Francis Chantrey (1781-1841), one of the most eminent British sculptors of the 19th century.

Stacked awkwardly, the Old Government House still houses government offices.

The adjoining Rajaji Hall, formerly the Banqueting Hall, opened in 1802 to commemorate Clive's victory at Seringapatnam (1799), where Tipu Sultan was killed. The color is presumably a recent selection, made perhaps after consulting Martha Stewart. The wrap-around arcade is a later addition, too, and it nearly succeeds in shrouding the Parthenon look-a-like behind it.

Well away from the fort, the National Art Gallery (originally the Empress Victoria Memorial Hall and Technical institute) was completed in 1909 and is a loose copy of the Buland Darwaza, or "lofty gateway" at Fatehpur Sikri. The stone is an easy-to-carve pink sandstone from Tada, about 40 miles to the north.

Henry Irwin was the architect. Despite the elegant masonry, the roof leaks, and the building is closed because leakage has corroded the building's steel frame.

Other kinds of maintenance are delayed, too, but the chhatris (the decorative stone umbrellas that drove Edwin Lutyens into furies) seem indestructible.

Another angle.

On the same property along Pantheon Road is the Connemara Library and its attached theater, also by Irwin.

The library received surplus books from the India Office, and the theater put on classical dramas. When those fell out of favor, the theater was abandoned. The government acquired it in 1830 and added the arcaded rotunda in 1854.

The High Court building opened in 1892. It was designed by J.W. Brassington and Henry Irwin. (Irwin also had a major hand in Simla's Viceregal Lodge.) The tower on the right served as the city's lighthouse for many years, though no longer.

One of the towers, photographed in the days before cameras triggered the wrath of security forces.

Security has been greatly tightened since this photo was taken in the 1990s. Now, guided tours can be arranged, but photos are strictly prohibited.

Long ago, on a weekend morning, the place was open, unguarded, and without a soul save the judges on the walls.

Adjoining the courts is the Madras Law College, now the Dr. Ambedkar Government Law College.

Entrance detail. This work, too, is by Henry Irwin.

This tower supported a lighthouse in operation until 1894.

The base of that column.

The Indo-Saracenic Senate House of the University of Madras. (The university has stuck with the city's old name, as have other Indian institutions including the University of Calcutta and the Bombay Stock Exchange.)

It looks a lot like the High Court but is a decade earlier. It opened in 1879 to a design by Robert Fellowes Chisholm.

The arcade.

Detail of a capital.

Dereliction only becomes evident if you poke your head through a broken window and look inside.

When publicity shots are needed, this is the angle of choice.

Several notches down the grandeur scale: the Post and Telegraph Office, 1884. The architect was still Robert Chisholm. If the tower looks brutal, that's because its pyramidal cap was lost to a storm about 1950.

The Ripon Building or city hall opened in 1913. It's named for the viceroy who believed that self-government wasn't a bad thing. Remembered as the father of self-government in India, there was little mourning among the British when he left India. Kipling in particular wrote some unkind words.

Name change!

Heavy-duty renovations in 2013, occasioned perhaps by the general upheaval accompanying construction of the city's new subway system. The building may yet become the "vision in white" intended by its architect, George Steel Travers ("G.S.T.") Harris. Harris was a consulting architect working for India's Public Works Department, and before arriving in Madras in 1896 he had spent eight years in Gwalior, whose Jai Vilas Palace seems to have stuck with him.

The Victoria Public Hall, from 1887, adjoins the Ripon Building and was designed by Robert Chisholm in a much more European mood than his Victoria Memorial Hall of 1909. The building had been closed for decades before renovation work began in 2009. That work included the demolition of dozens of shops that had encroached on the property.

Simple elegance. The engineers of the public works departments of India usually built with solidity in mind, not grace. Here's an exception: a floral display in ironwork over the printing office.