Google doodle honours engineering genius
M. Visvesvaraya
Google’s doodle for Saturday, September 15,
features a man wearing a Mysuru peta with a wall in the background.
He is none other than Sir M. Visvesvaraya, and the wall represents the iconic
Krishna Raja Sagar dam built across the Cauvery river in Mandya, Karnataka.
Today is the 158th birth anniversary of M. Visvesvaraya, according to his
family.
“While some sources cite his birth year as
1861, after speaking to his family, we’ve learned that Sir MV was actually born
a year earlier,” Google’s blog post read. The government of India celebrates
his birthday as ‘Engineers Day’.
Mokshagundam Visvesvaraya, better known as
Sir MV, was born in a modest family in Muddenahalli village in the erstwhile
Mysore State. Having lost his father at the age of 12, Visvesvaraya faced a lot
of hardship to continue his studies. “According to stories passed down over
generations, Sir MV had to walk over 60 kilometers to Bengaluru to attend
United Mission School, eating the food served at temples around the city and
studying under street lamps,” Google said in its blog post.
Engineer’s Day 2018: Why is it celebrated on September 15 in India?
While serving as the Diwan of Mysore, he was
awarded ‘Knight’ in 1915 as a commander of the British Indian empire by King
George V. He received the Bharat Ratna in 1955, became a member of the London
Institution of Civil Engineers before he was awarded a fellowship by the Indian
Institute of Science (IISC) Bangalore.
Visvesvaraya was not only known for his
contributions in the field of engineering but was also called the “precursor of
economic planning in India”, according to the Institution of Engineers India.
It stated that he is best known for his discourse “Planned Economy for India
and Reconstructing India” which is the first of its kind to describe the
country’s planning efforts.
He breathed his last in 1962, leaving the world
with his beneficial contributions. His memorial stands at Muddenahalli, which
is managed by the Visvesvaraya National Memorial Trust as his name lives on
through various universities including Visvesvaraya Technological University in
Belagavi.
Jawaharlal Nehru and Mokshagundam
Visvesvaraya both received their Bharat Ratna the same year, 1955.
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Visvesvaraya graduated from Bangalore Central
College and studied Licentiate in Civil Engineering from College of
Engineering, Pune. He joined the Indian Irrigation Commission in the late 18th
century and worked on irrigation and flood control systems. He is credited with
building intricate irrigation systems in the Deccan Plateau, the floodgates of
Khadakvasla Reservoir near Pune and Tigra Dam in Gwalior, and the flood
protection system in Hyderabad when the city was under Nizam’s rule.
The British Empire under King George V
conferred him the knighthood for his contributions. In 1909, Visvesvaraya
retired from serving the colonial empire and returned to his roots — Mysore.
This was the time the State was reeling under severe drought and Visvesvaraya
proposed constructing a gravity dam across River Cauvery in Mandya that would
not only help in irrigation but also provide electricity to the nearby areas.
Construction began in 1911, and the dam was inaugurated in 1914. Named after
the Wadiyar dynasty king who ruled Mysore then, it was one of the largest dams
in Asia then. The Krishna Raja Sagar Dam still provides drinking water to the
whole of the Mysore region and Bengaluru, apart from taking care of the
irrigation needs in Mandya.
Visvesvaraya was also instrumental in
bringing the Mysore Iron & Steel Works to Bhadravathi. It was renamed
Visvesvaraya Iron and Steel Limited post-Independence.
Visvesvaraya also served as the Dewan of
Mysore. It was during his period as Dewan that the Mysore Soap Factory (which
makes the iconic Mysore sandal soap), the Bangalore Agricultural University,
the Bank of Mysore (later renamed State Bank of Mysore and now merged with the
State Bank of India), the Century Club, the Mysore Paper Mills, the Bangalore
Press, and the Mysore Chamber of Commerce were set up. He was also instrumental
in charting out the road construction between Tirumala and Tirupati.
Visvesvaraya was also known for his love for
Kannada. He set up the Kannada Parishat.
“Despite his many achievements, he never
forgot his roots. He was simple, honest and committed to his work,” said Satish
Mokshagundam, the grandnephew of Visvesvaraya. “It was his contemplative nature
that allowed him as a young rural lad, having achieved a Civil Engineering
degree, to think outside of the box and start Recreational Clubs, Banks,
Chambers of Commerce, Educational Institutions, and a Literary Association for
Kannada,” Mr. Satish, the president of Visvesvaraya National Memorial Trust in
Bengaluru recalled.
The Trust maintains a museum in
Visvesvaraya’s hometown in Chikkaballapur district, where all the artifacts
that he collected and other items that he used during his lifetime are
preserved.
He penned his autobiography, Memoirs of
my Working Life, in 1951. True to his autobiography’s title, Visvesvaraya
worked till his last days. He was over 90 when he was the consultant for the
Mokama Bridge project across the Ganga in Bihar. The bridge, known as Rajendra
Setu, was inaugurated in 1952 and is functional till date even though a
parallel bridge was recently constructed.
“Industrialise or Perish” was Visvesvaraya’s
mantra. “A popular anecdote has it that he exclaimed, “What a waste!” when he
saw the Jog Falls in Shivamogga district, since hydro-electric power could be
harnessed at the site of the waterfalls, wrote Chandan Gowda, a chronicler of modern Mysore,
in The Hindu in a tribute to Visvesvaraya.
Visvesvaraya was honoured with the Bharat
Ratna in 1952. He passed away in Bengaluru on April 12, 1962.
Engineers Day 2018: Mokshagundam
Visvesvaraya, the Bharat Ratna awardee and engineering legend, was honoured
by Google on
his 157th birthday with a doodle featuring him on its
homepage. September 15 is also celebrated as the National Engineer’s Day
to appreciate the contributions of M Visvesvaraya.
Born on September 15, 1861, in a village
called Muddenahalli in Karnataka, Visvesvaraya studied Bachelor of Arts
from the University of Madras. Later, he pursued civil engineering at College
of Science in Pune. He patented and installed an irrigation system with water
floodgates at the Khadakvasla reservoir near Pune to raise the flood supply
level of storage in the reservoir to the highest level. This was also
installed at Gwalior’s Tigra Dam and Mysuru’s Krishnaraja Sagara (KRS) dam, the
latter of which created one of the largest reservoirs in Asia at the time.
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