Homi Maneck Mehta

Sir Homi Maneck Mehta KCIE KBE JP (1 April 1871 15 April 1948) was an Indian industrialist.


Homi Maneck Mehta

KCIE, KBE, JP
Born(1871-04-01)1 April 1871
Mumbai (Bombay), India
Died(1948-04-15)15 April 1948
NationalityBritish Indian

Early years

Homi Maneck Mehta was born in Mumbai (Bombay) to poor Parsi parents. Through hard work and perseverance he became a millionaire through Textiles, Banking and Insurance. He started working at the age of 17 in the Bombay Mint at a wage of Rs 20 a month (£1.50). He managed to save enough to travel to the UK and there he gained his knowledge of textiles as an operative in the Lancashire Cotton Industry. He also attended engineering classes during his apprenticeship.

The Industrialist

In his mid twenties Sir Homi started business life in Mumbai. He slowly attained controlling interests in a number of cotton mills in Mumbai as well as in the State of Baroda. Apart from his own mills in Navsari and Gaekwar, he was managing director of two Indian Insurance Companies and also of chemical and sugar companies. Sir Homi was also involved in banking [1] and was on the Central Board of the Reserve Bank of India and served on many select committees.[2] Sir Homi also used his experience and expertise in East Africa and was one of many Indian Industrialists investing in the textile industry in Uganda.[3]

Public life

Despite being a busy industrialist, Sir Homi Mehta had time for public and philanthropic work. He represented India at the League of Nations in 1933-34 [4] and in 1936 he represented the employers of India at the International Labour Conference in Geneva [5] He was elected to the Council of State at New Delhi.[6]

In 1941 Sir Homi was invited to the Presidency of the Bombay National Democratic Union which body strongly supported the War effort. In 1945 the media reported that there were not proper amenities for Indian troops and he was invited by the Viceroy Lord Wavell to visit Indian camps in war zones to investigate these allegations.

In 1944 Sir Homi chaired the Bombay War Gift Fund and later after the war the Victory Thanksgiving Fund. He and his committees were responsible for raising £4m in total (quoted in The Times Obituary 17 Apr 1948).

Other Interests

In 1934 The Bombay Hockey Association was established and Sir Homi was the first president.

He was also President of the Bombay Photographic Society 1944-45.

Sir Homi was President of the Bombay Cricket Association for two years between 1946-48. Sir Homi had a Cricket XI that entered the Bombay Festival Tournament of 1946/47. They reached the final drawing with AA Jasdenwala's XI at the Brabourne Stadium.[7] Notable players in Sir Homi's team were two Indian Test Players Dattatraya Gajanan Phadkar (batsman and right arm off break and fast medium bowler) and Khanderao Moreshwar Rangnekar (right arm medium pace bowler).

Knighthood

Homi Mehta was knighted by King George V in 1933 [8] and received further honours from King George VI in 1941 KBE [9] and in 1946 KCIE.[10]

Air Crash

The grave of Sir Homi Maneck Mehta in Brookwood Cemetery

Sir Homi was killed in the Pan American Constellation crash in April 1948 at Shannon Airport in which 30 persons perished and there was only one survivor.[11] He is buried in Brookwood Cemetery.

gollark: Oh, and aeroplanes are somewhat less dangerous than cars, so if you discourage people from using airports via airport "security" and make them use cars instead, you're sort of causing additional deaths.
gollark: I'd want less "secure" travel, really.
gollark: Air travel is waaaay better than anything else for quite a lot of journeys, and trains, while sort of better, don't get implemented many places.
gollark: It's a shame that suborbital rocket travel is still so expensive.
gollark: And my stuff gets X-rayed, which is probably not very good for it.

References

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