Meerut
Cantonment is one of the earliest and the second largest Cantonment
of India. It is a historical site which was established by the East
India Company in 1803 after the Battle of Laswari. The historic Sepoy
Mutiny of 1857 triggered from the Meerut Cantonment by an unit of
Indian army known as Kali Paltan (Black Army). There was a
temple known as Kali Paltan Mandir in close proximity to the sepoy
barrack, which served as the meeting place for the freedom fighters
and the officers of Kali Paltan. The temple was well surrounded by
trees and had a well which was used by the soldiers to satisfy their
thirst.
In
1968, the old Kali Paltan Mandir was reconstructed while a hexagonal
hall was constructed in 1987 for religious ceremonies and bhajans. A
4.5 kg gold plated kalasha was installed at the spire of the temple
in May 2001. It is now known as the Augarnath temple. The Meerut
Cantonment has a unique historical significance. It is a witness to
historic events such as the Dilli Chalo Andolan, and the Revolt of
1857. Apart from Kali Paltan Mandir, there are few other structures
such as the Shaheed Smarak, Meerut Museum, etc in the Cantonment
which bears the memories of the bygone era.
Apart
from other issues, the proximate cause which initiated the mutiny was
the introduction of greased cartridges (with fats of cows and pigs)
of the latest Pattern 1853 Enfield Rifles by the British government
in August 1856. The outer covering of the cartridges were to be which
had animal fat had to be opened by mouth before the rifles could be
loaded. This was unanimously refused by both the Hindu and Muslim
sepoys. The Hindu sepoys saw this as an attempt to break their caste
as a preliminary to making them all Christians, while the Muslim
troops were also disgusted and no less insulted than the Hindus: the
revolts were about to happen.
On
March 29, 1857, Mangal Pandey, a sepoy of the Bengal Army at
Barrackpore parade ground refused to bite off the end of his Enfield
cartridge and opened fired on his sergeant Major James Hewson and Lt.
Henry Baugh who came out to investigate the unrest later. However,
some of the sepoys did not support him, and he failed to incite an
active rebellion. Pandey tried to commit suicide to avoid
unhonourable death at the hands of British, but only succeeded to
wound himself and was later court-martialled on April 6, 1857. He was
hanged on April 8, 1857.
Meerut
army Cantonment had one of the largest concentrations of British
troops in India consisting of 2,357 Indian sepoys and 2,038 British
soldiers with 12 British-manned guns. On April 24, 1857 Lieutenant
Colonel George Carmichael-Smyth, the commanding officer of the 3rd
Bengal Light Cavalry, ordered 90 of his men to parade and perform
firing drills. 85 men were court marshaled on May 9, 1857 as they
refused to use the obnoxious cartridges. Eleven younger soldiers
were imprisoned for 5 years, while the others were sentenced to 10
years rigorous imprisonment. Once imprisoned, the 11th and 20th
cavalry assembled and broke rank and turned on their commanding
officers. Kotwal Dhan Singh Gurjar opened the gate of the jail and
all the sepoys along with 800 other prisoners escaped. After
liberating the 3rd regiment, chaos ensued in Meerut, and the rebels
engaged the remaining British Troops.
The
garrison in Meerut was the first to record the event of bloody
uprising on the evening of Sunday, May 10, 1857. The mutineers
murdered every British they found and burnt half the houses in the
station. The church was full of screams and frightened cries of
ladies and children. 50 British including soldiers, women and
children were killed in Meerut by the mutineers. The church, which
was established by Chaplin Reverend Henry Fisher on behalf of The
East India Company in 1819 still maintains a burial register with the
names of all those who died here that demoniac day. On the following
morning the Britishers launched a military operation only to discover
that the rebels had left Meerut and marched off to Delhi under the
leadership of the Moghul Emperor Bahadur Shah. Three other regiments
stationed in Delhi were ready for mutiny. On the conjunction of the
two army units, the horrors of Meerut were repeated in the majestic
city, and every European who could be found was massacred with
disgusting atrocity. The agony of sudden unwarned violence added its
bitterness to the overwhelming horror.
Bravery
and self-reliance might serve to turn the tide of thought for a time
but not forever. On May 17, 1857, a week from the outbreak, the
avenging force began to move forward. They defeated the rebels and
drove them back into the city. In Cawnpore (Kanpur), 200 European
men, women, and children were murdered in the mutiny. Vengeance was
swift and harsh: suspected mutineers were tied to cannons and
executed. The British crushed the rebellion killing more than 100,000
Indians in the uprising and its aftermath. Some British troops
adopted a policy of “no prisoners”. The painful screams of women
on seeing their husbands and sons butchered was unforgettable. The
revolt was crushed in six months and British power was restored by
the next year.
The
British lost a maximum of 11,000 men (3/4th of them were killed by
disease or heat-stroke). More than 100,000 Indians (sepoys and
civilians) perished including more than 150 from Meerut but there are
no reliable figures. Both guilty and innocent were at peril and the
scars of the rebellion could be seen widely - ruined cities, burned
villages, dead fields, burial register of the church, etc. India was
further burdened by a debt of £30,000,000. The shadows of the past
still haunt the city. You may occasionally hear patter of hooves of
the horses and cries of people trapped in the mutiny. Most of the
people when going through St. John's Church avoid the ancient
graveyard, which consists of magnificent sculptured tombs shining in
moonlight. The locals believe ghosts of the sepoys still wander
abandoned cantonment. Visitors have often reported sightings of
decapitated apparitions and spooky shadows. They claim sense
supernatural presence and have heard mysterious sounds of dripping
water. An IPS who spent a night in the abandoned cantonment says that
the supernatural power can make things run around in circles and
create animal-like sounds.
You
need to visit the abandoned Army Cantonment in the night to
experience the eerie feeling.
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