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HISTORY

Mussoorie, like other hill resorts in India, came into existence in the
1820s or thereabouts, when the families of British colonials began
making for the hills in order to escape the scorching heat of the
plains. Small settlements grew into large stations and were soon vying
with each other for the title of “queen of the hills.” Mussoorie’s name
derives from the Mansur shrub (Cororiana nepalensis), common in the
Himalayan foothills; but many of the house names derive from the native
places of those who first built and lived in them. Today, the old houses
and estates are owned by well-to-do Indians, many of whom follow the
lifestyle of their former colonial rulers. In most cases, the old names
have been retained.
Take, for instance, the
Mullingar. This is not one of the better-preserved buildings, having
been under litigation for some years; but it was a fine mansion once,
and it has the distinction of being the oldest building in Mussoorie. It
was the home of an Irishman, Captain Young, who commanded the first
Gurkha battalion when it was in its infancy. As you have probably
guessed, he came form Mullingar, in old Ireland, and it was to Ireland
that he finally returned, when he gave up his sword and saddle. There is
a story that on moonlit nights a ghostly rider can be seen on the
Mullingar flat and that this is Captain Young revisiting old haunts.
There must have been a
number of Irishmen settling and building with names such as Tipperary,
Killarney, Shamrock Cottage and Tara Hall. “The harp that was once in
Tara’s Halls” must have sounded in Shimla too, for there is also a Tara
Hall in the old summer capital of India.
As everywhere, the
Scots were great pioneers in Mussoorie too, and were quick to identify
Himalayan hills and meadows with their own glens and braes. There are
over a dozen house names prefixed with “Glen.”
The English, of course,
went in for castles—there’s Connaught Castle and Grey Castle and Castle
Hill, home for a time to the young Sikh prince, Dalip Singh before he
went to England to become a protégé of Queen Victoria.
Sir Walter Scott must
have been a very popular writer with the British in exile, for there are
many houses in Mussoorie that are named after his novels and
romances—Kenilworth, Ivanhoe, Woodstock (later an American mission
school), Rokeby, Waverly, The Monastery. And there is also Abbotsford
named after Scott’s own home.
Dickens lovers must
have felt frustrated because they could hardly name their houses
Nicholas Nickleby or Martin Chuzzlewit but one Dickens fan did come up
with Bleak House for a name, and bleak it is even to this day.
Mussoorie did have a
Dickens connection in the 1850s when Charles Dickens was publishing his
magazine Household Words. His correspondent in India was John Lang, a
popular novelist and newspaper proprietor, who spent the last years of
his life in Mussoorie. His diverting account of a typical Mussoorie
“season,” called “The Himalaya Club,” appeared in Household Words in the
issue of March 21, 1857.
It is well over 50
years since a person lived in the parsonage and its owner today is
Victor Banerjee, the actor, who received an Academy Award nomination for
his role in David Lean’s A Passage to India. Victor doesn’t mind his
friends calling him the vicar.
This naming of places
is never as simple as it may seem. Let’s take Mossy Falls, a small
waterfall on the outskirts of the hill station. You might think it was
named after the moss that is so plentiful around it, but you’d be wrong.
It was really named after Mr. Moss, the owner of the Alliance Bank, who
was affectionately known as Mossy to his friends. When, at the turn of
the century, the Alliance Bank collapsed, Mr. Moss also fell from grace.
“Poor old Mossy,” said his friends, and promptly named the falls after
him.
THE HIGH RIDE
Most people ascend the
400 meters or so from the fashionable Mall to the historical Gun Hill
with bated breath. For them, there is the thrill and excitement of
reaching Gun Hill in a cable car, coupled with the promise of rare,
mesmeric views of the great Himalayan peaks and a bird’s eye view of
Mussoorie and its environs. But not many people are aware that both Gun
Hill and the ropeway and its two cable cars have a chequered history.
More than 160 years
ago, after the Gurkha War in 1823, a shooting box was set up atop a
hill—143 meters above sea level. Thereafter, a gun boomed everyday from
the hill at 12 o’clock to keep time, and the hill became known as Gun
Hill. Today, ironically and yet appropriately perhaps, the gun which
once marked time for Mussoorie has itself been whisked away by the
marching times, but Gun Hill lives on.
Once accessible by a
steep, narrow bridle path, Gun Hill can now be reached in just about
four minutes by a ropeway set up in 1970. On a bright sunny afternoon in
October 1978, a handful of people lazing on the terrace of the Hill
Queen Hotel were astounded when there was a loud cracking sound and the
cable car going up to Gun Hill landed with a resounding thud a foot or
two away from them.
After a year’s lay off,
the cable cars were back in business swinging their way up to Gun Hill,
now dotted with mock ornate photo studios, welcoming chai (tea) shops
and a couple of telescope shops—with load after load of starry-eyed
passengers. Today, during the peak summer season, the cable cars swing
between the Hall and Gun Hill more than 100 times a day.
AROUND MUSSOORIE
The highest point that
one can visit around Mussoorie is the famous Surkhanda Devi Temple
at 10,000 feet—35 km down the Mussoorie–Tehri road. Perched on a peak,
the temple demands a stiff two-km climb form devotees. The temple, goes
the legend, was built on the site where the head of Shiva’s consort
(Shiva is the destroyer in the Hindu trinity) fell after it was chopped
off to stop Shiva’s terrifying dance of death that was shaking the
universe to its very core.
Nag Tibba, 41 km
from Mussoorie, also soars to an altitude of 10,000 feet, and entails a
fairly long, taxing but exhilarating trek, and therefore more time.
Thick pine forests, mountain brooks and slate-roofed villages keep one
company for the greater part of the trek to Nag Tibba peak. The nearest
accommodation is a forest rest house at Deolsari, about five
hours of trekking below Nag Tibba.
Most people looking for
a few quiet days prefer to sojourn amongst the picturesque pine-clad
slopes of Dhanaulti, 24 km from Mussoorie, 11 km before the
Surkhanda Devi temple. A comfortable Tourist Bungalow and a private
hotel, the Dhanaulti Breeze, make Dhanaulti an ideal getaway from the
milling season crowds at Mussoorie.
Thirty-one kilometers
form Dhanaulti, along the Tehri road, is Chamba—the home of
apples. A tourist bungalow has been built atop a mountain, and with the
approach of the monsoon, fluffy clouds come in low, enter through the
windows, move across the room, and float out through the door.
Closer to Mussoorie, at
an altitude of 4,500 feet, Kempty Fall is perhaps the biggest
attraction. The highest (over 40 feet) and most beautiful (the fall
splits into five distinct cascades) of the waterfalls around Mussoorie,
Kempty Fall is 15 km from Mussoorie, on the road to Chakrata.
Past Kempty Fall, 12 km
downhill, you cross the Aglar River and reach the legendary
Yamuna River. Trout are in abundance here, and fishing permits can
be obtained form the Divisional Forest Officer, Mussoorie.
The latest addition to
man-made attractions around Mussoorie (six km away, on the road winding
down to Dehradun) is a small, artificial lake, complete with pedal
boats.
WALK-WAYS
Often described as the
piece de resistance of walks in Mussoorie, Camel’s Back Road
rivals the Mall in popularity. About three kilometers long, Camel’s Back
Road was so christened, it is said, because of a rock that resembles the
back of a camel. This distinctively shaped rock can be seen from a point
near the gate of Mussoorie Public School. Curving round a mountainside,
the road itself looks like the back of a camel. The Hawa Ghar is
the most inviting of the resting places along Camel’s Back Road.
The two-kilometer walk
from Library Chowk to the colorful Municipal Garden, still known
by its old colonial name of Company Bagh, is yet another favored
walk in Mussoorie. Beyond the garden with its artificial lake, the walk
can be continued, if one is so inclined, towards Cloud End. In
the vicinity can be seen the estate of the first Surveyor General of
India, Colonel George Everest (later sir George Everest), after
whom the world’s highest mountain is named. A Bibi Khana—outhouses for
the Indian consorts of Englishmen—is an interesting feature of the
time-ravaged estate, which, according to land revenue records of 1839,
“belonged to Colonel Everest.” This sprawling 192-acre estate has been
now acquired by the state government which plans to convert it into a
holiday resort.
For many cricket fans,
the walk towards Cloud End offers a landmark of more recent times. On a
road branching off before Cloud End, is a house that belongs to the
father-in-law of Sunil Gavaskar, the cricketing legend.
Camel’s Back Road, the
walk to the Municipal Garden or Company Bagh, and on towards Cloud End
are gentle, leisurely walks blessed with superb views. Quite obviously,
scenic beauty is a feature shared by all walks in Mussoorie. Even the
walk towards Charleville and the Tibetan settlement of Happy
Valley is a rewarding experience. However, for the more intrepid
tourist there are challenging walks as well such as the ones to Benog
Hill (7,000 feet high, seven kilometers from Library Bazaar, it
boasted once of an observatory), and to Lal Tibba, the highest
peak (8,000 feet) at Mussoorie. About four kilometers from Picture
Palace, Lal Tibba is an ideal location for a picnic. Near Lal Tibba is
Childer’s Lodge, where a powerful ‘coin-operated’ binocular is
available for surveying the mountains around. In the distance can be
seen peak after peak of snow-capped mountains.
GETTING THERE
There are regular,
daily Vayudoot and Jagson flights from New Delhi to the Doon Valley (50
minutes). From the Jolly Grant airport, taxis and buses ply to Dehradun,
from where they go up to Mussoorie (2¼ hours, 60 km).
The overnight Mussoorie
Express links Delhi to Dehradun, the railhead for Mussoorie.
Delhi to Mussoorie is
290 km by road. Dehradun to Mussoorie is 35 km. There are direct buses
from Delhi to Mussoorie, along with private taxis. Buses ply every half
hour from Dehradun to Mussoorie. Private taxis and shared taxis are
favored by a majority of visitors.
WHERE TO STAY
Mussoorie has more than
a hundred hotels from which to choose. Upper-bracket hotels include
Hakman’s Grand Hotel, Holiday Inn and Classic Heights. Brentwood, Valley
View, Connaught Castle, Rockwood, etc., are mid-range and economy
hotels. Cottages and flats are also available on lease.
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