It is perhaps Mumbai’s most famous statue in honour of a man described as the ‘Lion of Bombay’. Every day, thousands of tourists admire the imposing statue of Sir Pherozeshah Mehta outside the municipal headquarters building at CSMT in South Mumbai.
On April 3, 1923, the bronze statue was unveiled by Governor of Bombay, George Lloyd to commemorate the services rendered to the city by Sir Pherozeshah Mehta, who was the father of municipal government in Bombay.
A month after he died in November 1915, a public meeting was held in the Marine Lines Maidan, where a memorial committee was appointed to raise funds. According to The Times of India, a sum of Rs. 80,000/- was collected. In October 1917, it was resolved that a statue be erected in his memory. Distinguished sculptor, Derwent Wood of London, was requested to make a bronze statue, which cost £ 4,000 (about Rs. 60,000/-). The life-size statue showed Sir Pherozeshah in a pose during a “great oratorical effort either on the public platform or in the municipal council hall, and of his peculiar gesticulations when trying to emphasise his points.”
The ceremony to unveil the bronze statue was held on 3rd April, 1923, in front of a large gathering including Lady Mehta and George Lloyd, Governor of Bombay.
“The spot on which the statue has been erected is on the South-East corner of the municipal office, which was tacitly acknowledged to be meant for Sir Pherozeshah’s statue for many years before his death and it has at last served its destined purpose… The statue is all the more attractive on account of the elevated pedestal on which it stands and from which it towers over similar memorials in the neighbourhood. The pedestal has been designed by the well-known architect Mr George Wittet, and with its adjuncts has cost Rs 20,000,’’ reported The Times of India on March 30, 1923.
Mehta, the uncrowned king of Bombay and a prominent figure in local city politics, was involved with drafting the 1872 municipal reform Act. As one of its founding members, he also presided over the Indian National Congress in 1890. Addressing the session, he had then said, “All movements of the kind in which we are concerned pass through several phases as they run their course. The first is one of ridicule. That is followed, as the movement progresses, by one of abuse, which is usually succeeded by partial concession and misapprehension of aim, accompanied by warnings against taking ‘big jumps into the unknown’. The final stage of all is a substantial adoption of the object of the movement, with some expression of surprise that it was not adopted before. Well, gentlemen, we have pretty well passed the first two stages. We have survived the ridicule, the abuse, and the misrepresentation…’’
Once when someone proposed erecting a statue of King George V in front of the Bombay municipal head office, Sir Pherozeshah roared, “What business has he to be placed in front of the corporation building? He has done nothing for the city.’’ The resolution was defeated by the corporation, but not before someone taunted him, “Do you want your own statue to be erected there?’’ Pherozeshah shot back, “Why not? I have served this city for 30 years.’’ Ultimately, it did happen! Sir Pherozeshah’s statue was placed by unanimous vote on the spot where King George’s was to be – in all its imperious splendour!
[Courtesy: Article by Nauzer K Bharucha in Mumbai Mirror]
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