- Apcar family
For more than a century the Apcar family was prominent in commerce and industry in
India .Aratoon Apcar (born
New Julfa Persia 1779 diedKolkata 16 May 1863) was the founder of Apcar & Co in 1809 and Senior Member until his death, 54 years later. He came to India in 1795, first toMumbai and then to Kolkata in 1830. He endowed theArmenian Apostolic Church of St Mary at New Julfa, and established theArmenian Patriotic School there. He had four sons, Seth, Thomas, Apcar and Alexander, all of whom were involved in the family business. Seth Apcar (born Mumbai 12 May 1819 diedLondon March 1885) was the first ArmenianSheriff of Kolkata . He was awarded theOrder of the Lion and the Sun by theShah of Iran , which was presented to him by theGovernor-General of India. As a London resident in the 1870s, he was Honorary President of an Armenian committee set up to increase British awareness of the plight of Armenians during the decline of theOttoman Empire . Alexander Apcar (born Mumbai 4 November 1824 died Kolkata 12 November 1895) was the Consul for Siam (Thailand) in Kolkata until his death. Alexander’s son was Apcar Alexander Apcar (see below).Arratoon Apcar's younger brother, Gregory Apcar (born
New Julfa 1795 died Mumbai 23 June 1847) came to India in 1808. He was noted for his charitable work, particularly to theArmenian Apostolic Church and Armenian College. On 6 January 1827 he married Catchkathoon Sarkies in Mumbai. Their son Aratoon Gregory Apcar was born 4 November 1827 and died on 1 February 1916. His son, John Gregory Apcar (born 1849 died London, 28 October 1923), known as "Father John", was elected a member of theBengal Legislative Council at the 1912-13Bengal general election as one of two representatives for the Calcutta Corporation. He was also Clerk of the Crown and a municipal commissioner. He was admitted to theInner Temple in 1871. He was educated atHarrow School , as was another son Gregory Apcar (born London 1848? died London, 17 May 1935). Both were benefactors of that school. Described in 1936 by Harrow's Governors as "an endowment which has never been equaled in the School's history" and "a shining example of love and care for Harrow",Fact|date=April 2008 Gregory Apcar left the School an estate valued at around £320,000, which increased the value of the School's property and Trusts by almost two-thirds.The most recent Apcars from the armenian bloodlines is Peter apcar and his two son joshua apcar and samuel apcar. Peter works as a property developer and his sons josh and sam still go to schoolApcar & Co and the Apcar Line
Apcar & Co acted as general business agents and insurance brokers and controlled the Apcar Line.
The Apcar Line ran a fleet of five vessels from Kolkata carrying Chinese
coolies and cargo, largely to and fromSingapore ,Hong Kong andAmoy (Xiamen), with connections toJapan .Pirates were active, and well into the twentieth century, the ships had to be armed and sandbagged against attacks.Apcar & Co also entered the
coal business. In 1862 coal seams were discovered nearRaniganj andAsansol . Apcar & Co purchased an extensive stretch of land and started a mine atLachipur (4 miles from Asansol). They also opened coal mines atCharanpur , Faridpur andBorachuck . A large number of Armenians either owned collieries or worked in various capacities in the coalfields. Seeing the rapid development of the coalfields, European firms purchased large areas from Apcar & Co on a royalty basis and started to mine the coal. As a result Asansol became a large and developed mining district.On 27 February 1912 Apcar & Co, ships, workshops and mines, were sold to the
British India Steam Navigation Company for Rs 800,000 and absorbed by BISN. Sailings from Kolkata to Japan were still advertised as being conducted by the Apcar Line into the 1950s. The coal mines were managed by Mackinnon, Mackenzie & Co until 1951.Apcar Alexander Apcar
Sir Apcar Alexander Apcar, KCSI (born Kolkata 3 October 1850, died at
Bangalore 17 April 1913) was a prominent Armenian businessman inKolkata , and head of Apcar & Co.After going to
Harrow School , he returned to Kolkata in the early 1870s, never again visiting Europe. He was a keen cricketer, and rackets player. He was president of the Calcutta Turf Club. He kept a fine stud, recruited from a breeding farm he owned in Australia. His stud was "summered" at Bangalore, where he spent a good part of the hot weather season.Sir Alexander (as he was known) took a prominent part in the work of the Bengal
Chamber of Commerce , of which he was vice-president in 1903 and president from 1904-1907. He represented the Chamber on theBengal Legislative Council , and on the Supreme Legislature from 1900-1909, and for many years he was one of its representatives on the Kolkata Port Trust. Sir Alexander succeed as the Consul for Siam in Kolkata on his father’s death in 1895. He was created a CSI in 1903, and was advanced to knighthood of the Order on the occasion of the CoronationDurbar at Delhi later that year.He was unmarried. The Times Obituary stated that the death of Sir Alexander, “removes one of the best known and most popular of the merchant princes of Calcutta.”
References
The Times "Obituary Sir A.A. Apcar, died 17 April 1913".
Jacob Seth Mesrovb, History of the Armenians in India from the Earliest Times to the Present Day (published by the author, Calcutta 1937) 190 pp
Christopher Tyerman, A History of Harrow School 1324-1991 (ISBN 0-19-822796-5) (Oxford University Press: 2000) at 421
External links
* [http://menq.am/history/chap1_part01.htm Armenians in India]
* [http://www.indiaprofile.com/lifestyle/armenians.htm Merchant Princes of India]
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