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Legends
of Mussorie
Frederick Wilson was born inYorkshire in 1817. It is believed
that he joined the East India Company at the tender age of
17. He is believed to have deserted the army during the first
Afghan war. He arrived in Mussorie around 1841.
He went to Tehri Garwhal and made a small fortune by hunting
wildlife for meat and trophies. He used pheasant plume to
make fashion accessories for English ladies in the plains
of India. He also traded in Musk deer pods.
Wilson was ahead of his time. He made a pact with the Maharaja
Tehri for logging rights for a mere Rs.150 per year. The Maharaja
thought this mad Englishman would not get far with his ambition.
Wilson however proved the Maharaja wrong by using the Bhagirathi
river (one of the main sources of the Ganga) to transport
his timber, which was then collected near Haridwar several
hundred miles away. His timber business was boosted further
during the heyday of railway construction in Northern India.
He soon realised the environmental disaster he was causing,
stopped logging and started reforestation, then got into other
forms of trading. It is estimated that his annual turnover
was equivalent to around 8 million pounds today.
SIR GEORGE EVEREST AND SURVEY OF INDIA
by Mary M. Root
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The
highest mountain in the world is named for a surveyor,
Colonel Sir George Everest. It is a fitting tribute
to the man who, for more than twenty-five years and
despite numerous hardships, prevailed in surveying the
longest are-of-the-meridian ever accomplished at the
time. The Great Trigonometrical Survey India, begun
at Cape Comorin in 1806 by William Lambton, would then
run almost 2,400 kilometers north to the Himalayas,
extending over 20 along the meridian. During this tremendous
undertaking, Everest was relentless in his pursuit of
accuracy. To that end, he made countless adaptations
to the surveying equipment, methods, and mathematics
in order to minimize problems specific to the Great
Survey: immense size and scope, the terrain, weather
conditions, and the desired accuracy.When Everest "inherited"
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the position in 1823,the
equipment originally employed by Lambton consisted
of one 36" theodolite manufactured by London
instrument maker Cary, a zenith sector by Jesse Ramsden,
a Ramsden 100 foot steel chain, and a chronometer.
The Cary theodolite, weighing over one thousand pounds,
had been damaged in two separate mishaps, and was
badly in need of repair. The micrometer screw on the
zenith sector was worn out, and the steel chain had
not been calibrated in twenty-five years. To further
complicate matters, Everest became so dangerously
ill that he could not carry on with the Survey, and
work was suspended.
England was the solution to these problems. In November
of 1825, Everest returned to England, bringing with
him the mathematical observations and calculations
for the Great Arc thus far. For the next five years
he worked on improvements for the survey and compiled
an account of the work achieved between the parallels
of 18 degrees 03' and 24 degrees 07'. Everest spent
a great deal of time in the workshop of instrument-makers
Troughton and Simms, where an additional 36"
theodolite, a new zenith sector, and six small theodolites
were under construction. Of the last, Everest wrote:
"I have devoted some consideration to the improvement
of the common theodolite which is both cumbersome
and more expensive than need be and after frequent
examination of all the best devices I could meet with
in the shape of the various makers in London, Mr.
Simms has at my suggestion designed an instrument
which contains all the useful parts of the old construction,
is quite free from superfluous apparatus and is cheaper
by one-fourth...The model has only a 5 inch diameter
but the principle is so perfectly applicable to all
instruments for secondary triangles that I should
respectfully recommend the propriety of adopting this
as the Honorable East India Company's form for all
small theodolites not exceeding 12 inches diameter
and preserving on all future occasions the strictest
uniformity."
The next issue Everest addressed was the measuring
of distances. He learned of Col. Colby's work with
compensating bars on the Irish Survey, and visited
him there in 1829. Being very much impressed with
Colby's system, he acquired a double set of six bars
for the Great Trigonometrical Survey, and practiced
with them at Greenwich.
At the same time, Everest produced a clever document
which summarized the repair and replacement needs
of the Survey, showing that the most cost-effective
solution was to have an instrument maker placed in
India. His request was granted, and Henry Barrow was
appointed to the job. Later, in India, it was Barrow
who laboriously repaired the damaged Cary theodolite,
earning his praise from Everest: "I must do that
artist (Barrow) the justice to say that for excellence
of workmanship, accuracy of division, steadiness,
regularity, and glibness of motion, and the general
neatness, elegance and nice fitting of all its parts,
not only were my expectations exceeded but I really
think it is as a whole as unrivalled in the world
as it is unique."
In June of 1830, George Everest returned to India,
this time as Surveyor General, in addition to his
post as superintendent of the Great Trigonometrical
Survey. During the first year he spent little time
on field work, as he organized general mapping surveys.
Everest's first work on the Arc was to create a baseline
near Dehra Dun using the Colby compensating bars.
The 39,183.783 foot baseline was meticulously surveyed,
using every precaution to safeguard its accuracy.
He then connected the Dehra Dun baseline to the Sironj
baseline, a distance of over 400 miles, using a triangulation
gridiron. This was across a vast plain, which necessitated
the construction of masonry towers, designed by Everest,
most of them 50 feet high. The great theodolite was
then hoisted to the top, and Everest performed and
recorded the observations. By day, heliotropes were
placed on distant points, reflecting bright flashes
of sunlight towards the survey towers. On days when
refraction became a problem, observations were taken
at night, using an Indian version of the reverberatory
lamp which could be seen for thirty miles, and sometimes
by using cylindrical blue lights whose visible range
could exceed fifty miles. Transportation was interesting;
a typical foray included 4 elephants for the tiger-wary
principals, 30 horses for the military officers, and
42 camels for supplies and equipment. The 700 or so
laborers traveled on foot. Progress was steady; by
May of 1836 half of the gap between Sironj and Dehra
Dun had been completed, and the rest was completed
the following season.
Everest next turned his attention to astronomical
observations throughout the arc of meridian, especially
at Kalianpur (24 degrees 07'). Unfortunately, ill
health prevented him from completing this task, so
it was Andrew Waugh who stepped in to finish the job,
including re-measuring the Bidar baseline with the
Colby compensating bars. The subsequent error of closure
between the observed and computed length of the Bidar
base, after 425 miles and 85 triangles from Sironj,
was 0.36 feet in a line length of 41,578 feet.
By 1841, twenty-three years had passed from the time
Everest had first begun work on the Great Arc. It
would take him two more years to complete the computations,
and compile the results before he retired and returned
to England.
In 1848, he was awarded high honors by the Royal Astronomical
Society. In making the presentation, Sir John Herschel
said: 'The Great Meridianal Arc of India is a trophy
of which any nation, or any government of the world
would have reason to be proud, and will be one of
the most enduring monuments of their power and enlightened
regard for the progress of human knowledge."
POSTSCRIPT:
It is not known whether or not George Everest ever
laid his eyes on the great mountain that bears his
name, but his triangulation network was extended and
used to locate the summit by Andrew Waugh, Everest's
successor as Surveyor General in India. Waugh's admiration
of Everest's achievements led to the naming of "Peak
XV" in the Himalayas. After its discovery by
his team, Waugh, wrote: "...here is a mountain
most probably the highest in the world without any
local name that I can discover...", so he proposed
"...to perpetuate the memory of that illustrious
master of geographical research...Everest."
Raj Tamang Responsible Adventures
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