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Patna High Court building glows with pride at 100

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Press Trust of India Patna
Last Updated : Feb 03 2016 | 1:07 PM IST
Hailed as one of the finest specimens of European architecture, construction of the Patna High Court building, which turned hundred today, was pursued with "unfailing vigour" despite the Great War which otherwise had thrown a spanner in the building of the New Capital of young Bihar.
Built in a neo-classical style based on a Palladian design, the grand building was formally inaugurated in an impressive ceremony on February 3, 1916 by Viceroy Lord Charles Hardinge, who had also laid the foundation stone of this august institution on December 1, 1913.
"...The financial situation resulting from the war has made it necessary largely to reduce the expenditure on our new capital; and the construction of the Secretariat and other buildings has been in consequence been postponed or retarded.
"But, it was recognised that whatever else might suffer, nothing should be allowed to delay the establishment of the Provincial High Court. The construction of the building was therefore pushed on with utmost expedition....," said Sir Edward Gait, the then Lt Governor of Bihar and Orissa in his speech on the occasion.
Incidentally, Lord Hardinge had played an instrumental role in creation of the province of Bihar and Orissa carved out of Bengal, with Patna as the new capital, the announcement for which was made in the 1911 Delhi Durbar by King George V.
The site for the new capital, christened the New Capital Area (informally New Patna) was chosen just west of the Bankipore railway station (old Patna station) and the new area was laid out in a planned manner by its chief architect J F Munnings, whose other grand contributions to the architectural fabric of the city include the Government House and the Secretariat.
In laying out the court on the historic Bailey Road, Munnings was assisted by A M Millwood, and the two architects gave birth to an iconic landmark that has practically remained unchanged in these 100 years, weathering floods, several quakes including the killer 1934 temblor.

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"The British Government, even under the distractions of
this troubled time (First World War), pursued with unfailing vigour the aim which it has always proposed to itself as one of the fundamental objects of all good government - the desire to facilitate the administration of justice to all its subjects," Lord Hardinge said in his inauguration speech.
Constructed by Calcutta's Martin & Co., the Viceroy was presented an ornate ceremonial "key to the Patna High Court" by the company on the occasion as a symbolic way of opening the court.
Soon after the building's opening, a Letters Patent was issued by King George V on February 9, 1916 constituting the High Court of Judicature at Patna. The formal session of the High Court began with its first sitting on March 1 the same year.
The first judges of the Patna High Court were Chief Justice Edward Maynard Des Champ Chamier and six other puisne judges including three Indians -- Justice Saiyid Shurfuddin, Justice Basant Kumar Mallick and Justice Jwala Prasad.
Former judge of Patna High Court and author of 'Patna High Court: A Century of Glory' justice (retd) S K Katriar says, "Both foundation-laying and opening ceremonies of the court were grand. And, Lord Hardinge possibly became the first Viceroy to participate in both functions."
And, grand occasions they were indeed as the Viceroy arrived in Bankipore (Patna's civil station) in a special train and later visited the function site in a ceremonial procession escorted by Behar Light Horse volunteers.
Old pictures archived at the court museum shows the chosen site was surrounded with tall palm trees when the construction began. Some of those trees can still be seen around the periphery of the building, which is considered till date a celebrated work of architecture, and now a veritable city landmark, with Patna Women's College's equally beautiful building right opposite to it, complementing its look.
The main building with its red-coloured mansard roof punctured by dormer window is now basking in the glory of its 100 years, standing tall as a magnificent symbol of dispensing impartial justice in the province which has been through easy times and turbulent times including the country's partition and the Emergency era.
The court's main building houses the grand Marble Hall, one of the high-points of its architecture, while the wrought-ironwork on its main entrance (for judges) to the lobby and the British-era lifts add to the old-world charm.

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First Published: Feb 03 2016 | 1:07 PM IST

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