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The Visakhapatnam Revolt of 1780 - first ever rebellion against the English company rule!!

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Visakhapatnam mutiny of 18yovizag.com

Little is known about the the first-ever sepoy mutiny in British India that  took place in Visakhapatnam, Andhra Padesh.

When you take about the great rebellion, the Sepoy mttiny or the first war of independence of 1857, the one that began in Meerut Cantonment (10 May 1857) over the greasing of  cartridges of  Enfield rifles  comes to our mind. This is because the revolt lasted for more than a year over a wide area and there were lots of casualty on the  Indian side. On account of its time factor and its political impact on the unjust British company,  the other small rebellions that predated the Sepoy revolt of 1857  were  eclipsed by it. 


Much ahead of the Vellore mutiny of 1806 and the Barrackpore  of 1824,  first ever revolt by the sepoys against the British took place on 3 October 1780  in the harbor city of  Visakhapatam, AP.  Though it  happned to be the first major protest (sepoy mutiny) in India, as coined and recorded in the Gazetteer in the London Archives, no proper recogniztion is not yet given by the centrl and state governments. As to the other revolts like the Vellore mutiny of Tamil Nadu, etc they are little known across India, particularly, in the northern states.  

vizag. 3 British officers buried here. timesofindia.indiatimes.com/


Above image:  Visakhapatnam revolt, 1780 CE. All three British officers  killed in the revolt might have been buried at the Old European Cemetery in the city. But today only the grave of  a young officer by the name Kingsford Venner is left intact............


In the 1780s, in the  two  regiments of the Grenadiers  stationed at Vizagapatam and Masulipatam (now Machilipatnam a preponderence of them  were Muslims.  Ever on the expansion mode, the British  wanted to establish their hegemony in the southern parts of India. But the ruler of Mysore Hyder Ali  was a stumbling block to their expasionism. This led to  the Anglo-Mysore wars between Hyder Ali and East India Company 


In order to reinforce the  strength  of the army the then Governor of Madras, John Whitehall  on September 14, 1780   got in touch with  the then chief of Vizagapatam and Masulipatam settlements, James Henry Casamajor, to send troops for reinforcement to confront Hyder Ali. 


The Indian soldiers at the Vizagapatam and Masulipatam   settlements  were quite disappointed  with the British over non- payment of additional salary for the extra duty done by  them -  collecting  taxes, etc.  They were entitiled to additional  pay which the English never paid. Besides, Muslims in the troops were relectant  and averse to the idea of fighting a fellow Muslim ruler  along with the English troops.

 

Under the command of Capt. Lysaught on October 3, 1780., the Sepoys at Vizag were to board the Sartine frigate after the inspection of guards around 3pm. Quite hesitating to be part of troop to fight against the Mysore ruler, several soldiers refused to board the ship.  As they were quite adament, the British used force to cow them down. When the army kept intimidating the sepoys by using physical force  a few of the sepoys led by one  Sheikh Mohammed Khan resorted to violence. Using their muskets  they  fired  at the troop,   causing death to  three officers namely Lt. Crisps, Cadets Kingsford Venner and Robert Rutherford, the paymaster. and injuring  Capt. Maxtone and Capt. Lane.


As  there was no resistence from the English  army, the rebels, having taken  several civil servants into captivity finally took control  over the town. In the process, they freed  a French  spy who had been jailed for sometime.  Undaunted and unstoppable, the rebel soldiers began looting  the Company’s coffers - cash  to the tune of   Rs.21,999.plus company's   property.  


On the morning of October 4, 1780 the rampaging sepoys,  with a view to joing the troops of Hyder Ali were  trying to  march out  of the town with the chief  Henry Casamajor and the other officials as captive. But, finally they gave it up upon the inteerference of the local Zamindars, in particular,   Gajapathi Narain Deo.  It  turned out  to be  a grve mistake because  Casamajor  returned to the army camp and  briefed  the seniors  about the rebel soldiers.


The English forces chased the rebels and finally    them  near a gorge in Gudderallywanka at Payakraopeta, now a  border town in Visakhapatnam district. There is no clear historical records as to what had happened later. But it is believed that some of them were killed in the ambush and the others, including Shaikh Mohammed, were ''executed mercilessly by the Company’s men,”  accoding to Historian Prof. Suryanarayana. (of History and Archaeology of Andhra University),


But for the grave of  Kingsford Venner in the now dilapidated Old Town cemetery, and the tombstone states that he was killed in the Sepoy Mutiny of October 3, 1780., there are no proper remnants or records of this mutiny that short lived. The mutiny was reported in Hickey's Gazette , the first English newspaper in India, a couple of days later. As to the British casualty, there are no records of the graves or tombs. Either, they would have been destroyed due to time factor or it is likely they might have been tampered with  by the company.   Today, only the grave of a young officer by the name Kingsford Venner is left intact and undisturbed  The inscription on this grave, confirms  this historic event. 


inscription in the grave. Visakhapatnam mutiny, 1780yovizag.com


This  brief mutiny is just like  the First Sepoy Mutiny  of Vellore. In 2006 the Indian govt. issued a potal stamp  to commommorate the 200 years of Vellore mutiny  - 10 July 1806 in which about 130  British soldiers were killed.  Several rebels were hanged to death and executed by the British, some were blown before the cannons.  

The Vizag mutiny may be a brief one and the British casualty is not very much. However, it took place for the first time even prior to the Vellore mutiny.  So, it  is time for the A.P. government  to  recognise the First Sepoy Mutiny of Visakhapatnam against the oppressive early colonial rule.   Already 236 years have gone by since the  first upraising.  British records  mention  that three British officers were killed in the mutiny. “The chief of the settlement was imprisoned, the treasury and armoury were looted, and the cantonment was plundered by the rebels. The rebel soldiers  were tried for the mutiny and looting.''   


Vizag rvolt, 1780 agaist the British company. chaibisket.com


This first revolt against the British in Vizag created ripples in London and as of today nothing is done about this brief  revolt by the governments both at the state and central levels.  Heritage conservationists in the city have put forwarded  the state government to  develop a memorial in  ''One Town'' in the city   where  the first Indian uprising against the British took place.

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/visakhapatnam/historians-call-for-memorial-to-mark-countrys-first-mutiny/articleshow/85335451.cms

https://www.yovizag.com/1780-sepoy-mutiny-in-visakhapatnam/





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