- Pachaiyappa Mudaliar
Pachaiyappa Mudaliar (1754-1794) was a leading
Madras merchant ,philantropist anddubash of the 18th century.Early life
Pachaiyappa Mudaliar was born in a poor family in Periyapalaiyam in Thanjavur district. Invited to Madras by dubash Narayana Pillai he became a "dubash" in his teens and amassed a fortune by the time he was 21.
As Dubash
A protege of Narayana Pillai, Pachaiyappa Mudaliar rose to dubash-ship soon after the demise of his mentor. During the same time, his employers the Powney family comprising the brothers Henry Powney and Thomas Powney rose to Mayorship of Madras. This increased the stature of Pachaiyappa Mudaliar and he emerged as one of the richest and most powerful men in Madras city.
Lifestyle
Despite the fact that he was one of the richest men in the city, Pachaiyappa Mudaliar lead a simple and austere lifestyle. He built a house at No. 26, Pagoda Street in the year 1790. Here, he lived until his death. His life has been the subject of a detailed biography by one of his contemporaries [ [http://www.epw.org.in/epw/uploads/articles/2995.pdf New Social Elites and an Early Colonial State, a dissertation by Kanakalatha Mukund] ] . Witnesses recall that Pachaiyappa Mudaliar would bathe in the Coovum everyday along with his affluent neighbours before worshipping at the temple at Komaleeswaranpet. He divided his time between Madras and Tanjore and used to travel to his village regularly. During the journey, he used to stop for days at
Chidambaram to pray at the famous Hindu temple.Death
Pachaiyappa Mudaliar's health deteriorated rapidly and one such visit to Thanjavur in 1794 he fell ill at
Kumbakonam and died atTiruvaiyaru .Will
Pachaiyappa Mudaliar was one of the first Indians to leave a will. He had set aside Rs.4.5 lakh of what he had left be spent on Hindu religious institutions and the remaining Rs. 7 lakh on providing an English education to Hindu youth. The bequests, however, remained contested even after that and it was 1909 before the courts appointed a Board of Trustees and formulated a scheme for the smooth running of the Trust. As the 1990s dawned, it was reported that the Trust was worth over Rs.150 million, one of the biggest in this part of the world. Apart from administering religious charities from Kanyakumari to
Varanasi , it ran six colleges, a polytechnic and 16 schools in Tamil Nadu, helped several medical facilities and owned several properties in the State.The
Pachaiyappa's College is one institution for which Pachaiyappa Mudaliar became well known. This college was established as Pachaiyappa's Central Institution at Popham's Broadway on January 1, 1842 from the amount Pachaiyappa Mudaliar had allocated to charities as per the contents of his will. In 1856, the institution shifted to its own premises at China Bazaar. It became a school in 1850 and a college in 1889.The Pachaiyappa's Central Institution is the first non-missionary, non-British-financed Hindu education institution in South India.References
External links
* [http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/mp/2003/05/07/stories/2003050700110300.htm A great philanthropist -- A biography of Pachaiyappa Mudaliar in The Hindu dated May 7, 2003]
* "Madras Rediscovered" by S.Muthiah
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