1st Edition

Poor Relations The Making of a Eurasian Community in British India, 1773-1833

By Christopher J. Hawes Copyright 1996
    244 Pages
    by Routledge

    244 Pages
    by Routledge

    The sixty years between 1773 and 1833 determined British paramountcy in India. Those years were formative too for British Eurasians. By the 1820s Eurasians were an identifiable and vocal community of significant numbers particularly in the main Presidency towns. They were valuable to the administration of government although barred in the main from higher office. The ambition of their educated elite was to be accepted as British subjects, not to be treated as native Indians, an ambition which was finally rejected in the 1830s.

    Chapter 1 British Men, Indian Women, Eurasian Children; Chapter 2 Charity and Children in Care; Chapter 3 Eurasian Employment; Chapter 4 Eurasians in the Official Eye; Chapter 5 Towards a Reluctant Community; Chapter 6 Eurasians Up Country and in the Indian States; Chapter 7 The Eurasian Struggle for Self Advancement; Chapter 8 Political Protest;

    Biography

    Hawes, Christopher J.