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Gandhi Garden (Karachi Zoo)

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Full Story of Karachi Zoo:

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Gandhi Garden (Karachi Zoo) in 1900's.
Karachi Zoo located at Garden East Area, in Jamshed Town, Karachi.


Karachi zoo is the second oldest and the biggest in Pakistan. Although the zoological gardens have undergone numerous changes, served various purposes and held different titles since its inception in 1799, they remain one of the oldest landmarks of the city.

In 1775, the merchants of the East India Company were evicted by the Kalhoras as they were suspicious of the British. Subsequently, during the early Talpur rule, local Hindu merchants also placed an embargo on the presence of the British. But ultimately, when the Talpurs gave in to the Company demands, Nathan Crow was sent as the British Agent to Karachi and Thatta in 1799. It was in his administration that the East India Company established a factory in the then deserted outskirts of Karachi in 1799. The factory had huge gardens surrounding it. Due to his dubious activities, Crow was expelled in 1800 and the factory was closed down. The gardens became government gardens — known locally as Sarkari Bagh and marked on the map of Karachi prepared by Commander Charles in 1833.

As the British constructed quarters in Karachi for their soldiers in 1839, this 43-acre garden began to be used for cultivation of fruit and vegetables for the consumption of British forces under the supervision of Major W. Blenkins, Assistant Commissary-General and Superintendent of Gardens. Blenkins undertook its redesign. The irrigation was arranged from Lyari River and a dairy farm was also established on this piece of land. The government provided 100 rupees each month for its maintenance. In 1847, Major Blenkins reported that he had not drawn that subsidy for two years and, on the contrary, during the same period had made a profit of 17,032 rupees for the government. This was achieved by feeding vegetables to the troops, fodder to government cattle, the sale of its produce to private parties and the supply of pigeons, rabbits and leeches to the local hospital. By this time it had at least 15 wells and a reasonable water delivery system too.

The government transferred the garden to the municipality in 1861 on the condition that it will not be sublet or transferred. It was converted into a public garden in 1869 and was renamed as Queen Victoria Garden which was locally called Rani Bagh, presumably some time during this hand over. Travel writer Richard Burton described the availability of sweet water and a bandstand for music in the garden in 1877. The municipality sought some improvements and in 1878 planned to develop a zoo with a proviso that it be maintained on public subscriptions through a trust.

HRH Imam Aga Ali Shah built a palace in Karachi which was known as Pir ji Wadi (the valley of the pir) that faced the zoological gardens. He obtained permission from Henry Napier Bruce Erskine, the Commissioner in Sindh, to build a gate of the garden in 1882. The Imam bore its cost; an existing plate indicates the donation of the space for the gate.

As was happening with some other colonial gardens, a small zoo was established in 1884 which was laid out under the supervision of Benjamin Traill Ffinch as Chairman of the Garden Committee (he was also the director of Indo-European Telegraph Company) assisted by H.M. Birdwood. Cricket and croquet grounds, a handsome bandstand and well-laid paths were established. Ffinch conceived the idea of importing plantation from abroad and obtained expert advice from botanists. His correspondence to this effect is archived in the records of Kew Gardens in London. Karachi’s own residents donated much of the early animal collection. A beautiful and well-laid garden emerged. By 1890, there were 93 mammals and 465 birds housed there. W. Strachan was appointed as its first professional (zoological) superintendent in 1889 who served for 10 years. The succeeding European superintendent failed to do a good job and left soon after his appointment. After that, for the first time, the locals were assigned this position. Initially it was Ali Mahomed who served until his death in 1911. His brother, Ali Murad, who initially supported the zoo as an overseer of the animals, took over as superintendent in 1911.

The centrepiece of the garden, a beautifully executed Victorian fountain was constructed in 1883 jointly by the municipality and N.N. Poochajee in memory of Bombay philanthropist Cowasjee Jehangir Readymoney. An 18-foot high four-layered fountain is connected to an 11,000-gallon tank through which water keeps circulating.

Sir Evan James, Commissioner in Sindh (1891 to 1900), took a great interest in the flora and fauna of the province. He introduced California grapes and a vineyard flourished in the garden which became famous for its delicious grapes for well over half-a-century. A variety of those grapes was popularly known as Karachi Gulati.

Some evidence of donations from local philanthropists exists in the way of old plates, one of which reads: ‘The metal for this cage was presented by Seth Nanhamal Banarisdass 1903.’ Another reads: ‘The cage was presented by His Highness Mir Sir Faiz Mohamed Khan Talpur GCIE Ruler of Khairpur 1905.’

The Beaumont lawns established in 1910 stood in midst of all this change. These lawns were named after T.L.F. Beaumont, President Karachi Municipality and Chairman of Garden Committee 1903-10, who was also a member of Bombay Natural History Society.

However, little mention of the zoo can be found before 1913 when Furrel and Ludlow wrote that while Karachi was a young city with not many attractions of interests to tourists, the zoological garden was well worth a visit. In the early part of the century, the zoological garden and surrounding botanical garden were a popular meeting place on Sundays for all sections of the community. In 1921 the zoo had three maalis (gardeners), a clerk and a shop.

On his visit to Karachi in 1934, Mahatma Gandhi received a huge welcome in the very same garden. It was arranged by the Karachi Municipal Corporation. In that event, it was announced that the name of the place was being changed from Victoria Garden to Mahatma Gandhi Garden. It then became one of the main centres for political gatherings before the Partition.

Following Partition, the name was changed again to Karachi Zoological Gardens, yet it continued to be popularly known as Gandhi Garden. In 1953 the KMC appointed a zoo curator and a veterinary doctor. When the first curator was announced, the garden still bore the crest of Mahatma Gandhi. Free entry was discontinued in 1955 when a charged ticket was imposed.

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Swans on the lake in the garden

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Areas and attractions

Elephant House is the most famous exhibit in the zoo.
Natural History Museum, renovated in 1992, is one of the more famous attractions in Karachi Zoo. Apart from stuffed animals, skins, antlers, horns and feathers etc. are also placed on display in the museum. The facility is used by zoology students for research and educational motives.

Reptile House was extended and renovated in 1992. It is one of the few reptile houses in Pakistan. There are 13 species of snakes and lizards. Newly born hatchlings of testudines and crocodilians are also exhibited.

Veterinary Hospital was established in 1998 in Karachi Zoo with modern diagnostic facilities. There is an operation theatre, equipped with X-ray and sonogram facilities, multiple sick bays, a laboratory and an incubation room.

Mughal Garden, established in 1970, has green lawns with seasonal plants that occupy a major part of the garden accompanied with Mughal-style fountains. The garden is famous for different varieties of roses and other flowers that are exhibited there.
White Lions, purchased in 2012 and a big draw for the zoo, are a part of a breeding programme.

Karachi Municipal Aquarium
Karachi Municipal Aquarium was constructed in 1953. Located inside the Karachi Zoo, the aquarium has a total of 28 tanks which contain a total of around 300 fishes of about 30 species.
 
Considerable amount of my youth was spent in this garden in the delta dedicated to Mohandas Gandhi.

It should be renamed to Shaheed Gandhi Garden.
 
c. 1880s: Garden & Fountain at Karachi..


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Karachi zoo
History

Karachi Zoo also known as Karachi Zoological Garden is located on Nishter Road and Sir Aga Khan III Road in Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan. It is the oldest zoo in the country after Lahore Zoo.

The Karachi Zoo has an interesting history as it forms a part of the ground where the old East India Company’s factory was situated.

In 1799 when the ruling Talpur Mir’s of Hyderabad Sindh removed Mr. Crowes, the factory Manager of the old East India Company, little did either of them know that the Government garden surrounding the present site would ever turn into the emerald, green paradise of Karachi where the biggest Zoo of the country would be housed.

In 1838 when the British settled in Karachi, the best use they had for this piece of land to grow vegetables for the tummies and Lucerne for seeds.

Originally consisting of 43 acres, it was established to provide fresh vegetables to British troops. From 1845 till 1858 vegetables and fruits of all kinds were grown here and the farm administration took further measures to make this land even more fertile.

In 1860, the Bombay Government after controlling this piece of land for nearly 20 years transferred its ownership to the Karachi Municipality after which the KMC opened it for public as Victoria Park in 1881.

The Victoria Park then got the unofficial status of Zoological Garden in 1890 when a good number of animals and birds were brought to this garden and the park’s administration begun considering charging fee for entry in the garden.

In July 1934, Congress Leader Mahatma Gandhi paid a visit to Karachi Zoological Garden and the Karachi Municipality arranged a civic reception in his honor. Mr. Gandhi planted a tree in the park and paid tribute to the KMC for developing such a beautiful park. The Municipal Administration on this occasion, announced to name the Karachi Zoological Garden as the Gandhi Garden.

After the creation of Pakistan in 1947, the Karachi Zoo was transformed into a modern zoo with rare species of animals and birds kept here. This park got its officials status as a zoological garden in 1953 and the KMC decided to create the post of full time curator, a qualified veterinary doctor, to keep the animals in good health.
 
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Karachi Zoological Garden, which children remember as zoo and elders as Gandhi Garden, has many lost historical references within it, some of which still make Karachi a city of animal and tree loving city.

The history of the Karachi zoo is also connected to the city of Karachi. The name of Karachi is seen on the pages of history. Before this, the attention of Talpur, Axes and Mirs were attached to Hyderabad, Sukkur. Mirpur and remained limited to Khas and Khairpur.

History shows that the coastal strip was owned by Khan of Kalat, till the Talpur added it to their limits, but did not understand its importance because these rulers have Thatta and more. The ports of Badin were present.

Before the British, Karachi was composed with some Goths of Manora, Kimari, Lyari and Malir. It was a small coastal town. That is why it was made by Albert William Hughes in the gazetier of Sindh, not Karachi, but 'Taluka' ' It is written.

Karachi's historian Sohrab Kark may have been the climate and location of the main reasons the British selected Karachi as the main city of the area. Sohrab in his article ' President of British Sindh '. Riched Burton's report sent to Charles Jem Napier, citing that ' Karachi's weather is more fair than Hyderabad, then there is a possibility of trade with the Persian Gulf on sea routes. '
So the English people showed great interest in the construction and development of Karachi and as soon as they saw it, they made it a trade center of the whole region.

When and where was the first brick of Karachi zoo?

This is the story of less than a century before the zoo was established. In, Talpurs gave the current zoo land to the East India Company to build a commercial cottage. Meanwhile, a garden or farm in the commercial cottage premises. The foundation was also laid. In the same year , the trade cottage was closed due to illegal works and the garden on its premises was given under the government.

Charles Napier (named after Napier Road in Karachi) has created a map of Karachi, which can be seen as 'official garden'. You will be surprised to read it. In times, this garden was watered from the 'river Lyari'.

Today, Karachi people know the Lyari river as a stinking, black,
But that time it was fair rainy canal where monsoon flows and sometimes flooded and destroying the raw houses around.
When, the whole of Sindh had come out of Talpur and joined the crown of Britain, fresh fruits and vegetables were delivered from the same garden for the British soldiers in Karachi cantonment. Within seven years, the British made Karachi a municipality. People from other parts of India came and settled in the city, they started building, and meanwhile the garden of East India Company was decorated.

The official name of the garden that spread on the acre was ' Queen Victoria Park ' but the people took the name of ' Rani Bagh '. The first initiative was only special for the entertainment of the British families. They planted fruitful and decorative trees. Also started bringing animals here In, it was thought to turn the garden into a zoo and so the former commercial cottage garden was turned into a zoo, After Lahore, this is the second oldest zoo in Pakistan. A regular trust was formed for this purpose, they did decoration and took responsibility of plantation.

The garden is greener after more than years and still has trees years old. Zoo's hearty culturalist Zamin Abbas says it's about years old tamarind, bah and others. There are types of trees and the oldest, thickest and shade tree is of banyan, about two hundred years old.

It was called Gandhi Garden until the establishment of Pakistan because Gandhi addressed a large public gathering here in, according to official documents, it was named Karachi Zoological Garden. Even today many people still remember as Gandhi Garden.

Several years ago when the Victoria Garden was converted into a sparrow, social and experts from many local communities took part in its decoration. Seth Banaras Das donated a cage but the details about him could not be known.

At the beginning, Karachi zoo administration run by locals along with the British. This was the time when the local population took part in building animal cages.

Waliyan Khairpur State also expresses interest and gifted animals to Karachi zoo. Khairpur State Sir Faiz Muhammad Khan Talpur built a fox cage and Ali Nawaz Khan, the grandson of Sir Faiz Muhammad Khan, built a jackal cage.

The Wali of Khairpur state also donated a cage. Ismaili community's gifted entrance gate to the zoo . Victoria fountain gifted by the Parsi community. This fountain is adorned with a lion's mouth and floral design. The water wells in the zoo was attached to it.

Karachi zoo is the identity of Karachi and a good and affordable entertainment for Karachi people.



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Anjum Khan

My early memories of our ZOOLOGICAL GARDEN

or GHANDI GARDEN which was its old name is one of the happiest early childhood memories of my life .. The fun and excitement of seeing live animals in front of you (in cages ofcourse ) at that age is beyond words.
😄


If you remember, that place had a very distinct kinda smell , like a mixture of odour from dirty pond water where the ducks swam with a mist of other animals and the smell of their pee and all added with a whiff of cigarettes smoked by the male visitors around all fused in one, but ..we didn’t care.
All we wanted was to run from one cage to another to another to another in a crazy frenzy state of excitement !

We were of course yelled and scolded at in the coarse
UDHAR KIDHER JARAHI HO,..
IDHAR AAO!!
KOI PAKAR KER LAI JAIGA !
NAHI ,DOOR NAHI JANA ..
HATH PAKAR KER CHALO..!!

Yeh woh u know ..
☺️

Than we were asked to pose for some pics , yehan aisey khari ho ,yehan baith jao ..idhar camera mei daikho!
🙄


Just like all kids my fascination was with the lions and the monkeys ofcourse .
A lot of people especially ladies used to ride that huge elephant ..
But we never got to do that .

Birds were never my fav place to go I always used to drag parents away from there ..I didn’t like seeing birds in cages like that.

CHALAIN NA YEHAN SEY ..
AAGEY CHALAIN ..MUJHEY BUNDAR DAIKHNEY HAIN !
😄


There used to be a model of a lion in black sitting somewhere along the paths if u remember ..I bet every one one atleast once in their life as a child visiting,must have sat on it or taken a photo on /with it ..right ?
I remember there also used to be a wobbly wooden bridge covering a small pond, yaad aya ?
Remember those box waley jhoolay there ? ( don’t know what they were called ) Kids would be heard screaming in these jhoolas from far.
Some Bhutay walas used to sell Bhutas and cold drinks under the shade of trees along with a local ice cream wala vendor with his stand .

Aik lambi qataar (of mostly males ofcourse ) was usually seen at that famous “Mumtaz Mahal” you know what I am talking about , that apparently half women half fox lady who according to her dropped from the Moon along the lines and decided to live here in the zoo .. wah wah kia Amazing story hai
👏🏼
👏🏼
a lot of naive and gullible people I am sure actually bought her story than, the picture shown on the board outside her Mahel was entirely different from the real deal.. It was clearly a man with horrible makeup on ,posing to be this crazy specie, only his face was visible his body was tucked away beneath somewhere .. what a tough job na imagine he could not move for hours from that position..

No wonder woh bechara always looked so bored and done with his life and didn’t seem to care less for the random

hootings and rude comments thrown
at him for no reason.

Marine life inside the aquarium was another attraction where people thronged in There used to be this huge Azdaha type snake bored to death pearched on a small dead branch counting his days in there thinking

Ya Allah what did I do to deserve
this ...Everyone loved touching the glass panel .. it did felt good to be safe on the other side !!
☺️

Aur bhi bohat sarey animals aur birds hotey thay wehan .. but sub key sub
Adum Bezar dikhtey thay.

Dad bought a monkey at our house once from a seller somewhere which we later donated to the zoo after wards

His name was Tony .. couple a times in the following years we went to the zoo just to see him,
We used to call TONY TONY to all the monkeys (much to the amazement and amusement of the bystanders )hoping the real TONY would come closer and I could swear I did see one coming closer to the railings once .

Tu Yeh thi jenaab hamari apki bachpan ki aik aur yaad jo mainey first clas tarka laga ker taza kerdi ..sirf apkey liye
😊


Hope u enjoyed taking this trip down the memory lane
😊

Now days lot of zoos have opened in Karachi .. I am sure they must be ten times better in quality and fun and entertainment wise to choose from,

But Hamarey waqt mei sirf aik hi zoo hota tha which we also used to call “CHIRYA GHAR”
😊

Ps :- let me tell you one thing

people who used to live around that area could actually hear the lion roar at night time ..Sachi ! I am not joking .

it felt kinda scary at that time... Pta nahi he was hungry or cold I used to wonder as a kid ..my biggest fear was I hope he doesn’t break the cage and come running in our house ..
😄
 
It should not be named after Gandhi at all. Statues are being brought down right, left and centre. Better to rename it affer Mandela, Malcolm X, or some other non controversial world leader.

Regards
 
It should not be named after Gandhi at all. Statues are being brought down right, left and centre. Better to rename it affer Mandela, Malcolm X, or some other non controversial world leader.

Regards
Stop it your rants, we are free to put the name of our any place of our in the name any Indian nationals, we are not racist like you guys
 

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