Isha Basant Joshi

Isha Basant Joshi (born Isha Basant Mukand; 31 December 1908, date of death unknown) was an Indian Administrative Service officer and author. She published books under the name of Esha Joshi. She was the first Indian to be accepted into the "Bastion of the British" school of La Martiniere Girls High School in Lucknow, India.[1] She was the first woman Indian Administrative Services officer of British India.

Isha Basant Joshi
Born(1908-12-31)31 December 1908
EducationLa Martiere Girls Lucknow University
OccupationCivil Servant, author

Early life and education

Joshi was born on 31 December 1908. After attending the La Martinere Girls High School, Lucknow, She went to Isabella Thoburn College and the Lucknow University, where she gained her Master of Arts. She undertook higher studies in Britain and then became a part of the Indian Administrative Services.

Career

The first woman IAS officer of Independent India, Joshi was posted as Magistrate and then as Assistant Commissioner in Delhi. She held senior and honorable positions in various departments and became the Commissioner-cum-State-Editor of the District Gazette. She then served in senior roles in the Ministry of Education. She edited a magazine before retiring from service in 1966. Joshi started her next phase of career as an author after her service as a civil servant of India. She published a number of books under the name of Esha Joshi.

Personal life

In 2004, it was reported that Joshi, who at that time was a 96-year-old widow, was being looked after by distant relatives in the servant quarters of a mansion on Kabir Marg in Lucknow. Following media reports, she was taken inside.[2]

Major works

  • The Jewel in the Case and other stories, ISBN 81-7189-564-6 [3]
  • Spindrift: Poems, ISBN 81-7189-562-X, 1994, Writers Workshop [3]
  • Sanctuary, poems, 1987
gollark: Or they just say in advance "it did [unexpected thing], this is a virus, how do I uninstall it" *then* complain.
gollark: Generally they just directly say "I do not understand this, this is a virus" or something.
gollark: Ask what?
gollark: You only need to factor it to *uninstall* potatOS!
gollark: I'll add that as an option, perhaps.

References

  1. Uncivil Treatment Shahira Naim The Tribune 14 November 2004, Chandigarh, India accessed July 2007
  2. The Lucknow Observer January 2016
  3. Esha Joshi at Alibris.com accessed July 2007
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