Bombay: Census of India-1901
Bombay: Census of India-1901
VOLUME ·XI.
BOMBAY
(TOWN-!& ISLAND)
.· PARTV.
REPORT
BY
_S. M. EDWARDES, I.C.S.
POMBAY:
-
PRINTED AT THE "TIMES OF INDIA " PRESS.
rgor. .
1
. .
CONTENTS.
PACE
ARBA OF IsLAND ... ... ... ,.. ... ... .... ... 8
INPIRM1Tl89 ... ... ... ... ... ·- ... .... ... !'~· '48
CASTB ... ... ... ... ... ... ... .... ... ' so
· OCCUPATION ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... H
CoNCLVSION ... ... ... ... .... ... .... ... ... ... ... "7
INTRODUCTION~
ON the night of March let, 1901, the decei:inial · cenens of BOm~y Ci(y
and Island wail carried to completion. Inasmuch· as an entirely new' system
of enumeration was adopted, and in View of· the fac·t that certain-·circumstances~
for :which our previous census history afforded·no precedent, combined .t<f_ render ·
unique.the operations of 1901, it has been- deemed advisable· to-prefix to -this
.statistical portion of the City Report a few remarks, dealing with ·the more· notable
features ()f the organisation and enumeration.- The -full' arid detai_led report ttpo~ ·
the measures devised for the taking of the census, and ilpoil · the , finanCial asp~t ·
.of the work, will be .found included in ·the adminiStrative- volume for 'tho ·Pre~i•: ·
dency of Bombay. ·· · !.;... ~
The third main feature of the late operations may be summed up in.. the
eingle word '' Plague." The enumeration was carried out in the teeth of a severe
epidemio; and two Enumerators, I regret to say, are .alleged to havtt lost their
lives tb,rough having to work in ill-cooditioned and infected ch&ls. The probab~lity
of a reorudesoenoe of the disease and of a consequent exodus of. ibe inhabitants-
had beon em:ly foreseen ; and, subsequent to the visit of tiLe Censu~ Commissioner
in January, speoic1olarrangemenLs were made with theobjec~ of acquiring inform-a-.
tion regarding • the oity-homes of those wb~ .
were; even ·at- ~t. date, eommencin.,.
. . . . . 0•
to seek the less-infecteQ. aif of Salsette and. other. places in Ilia· Thana . district....
The value of the information thus recniiv~d will be discussed~ a rater p~rag_,a~h
dealing with the actual population of our city. The extra trouble necessitated by
IIi
snoh measures, however, was vial in comparison to that which had to bs faced.
in February. No sooner had plague properly decrlared its presence, t.han·agenerd
latA,,, qui peur took plnee, applications for paid enumerators.hips suddenly dimin-
iahed, and many, who had previ_ously ~e_n e_~~lled, declined to undertake the·
work through fear of i?fection. Though at the commencement of Febnmy, Wf,l·
were short of the req~rred total or census-operators by some 600, the ftdf number
t~gether with a reserve force of 200 men was posted througholit tht;t island by thtt
Dlght of Saturday, February 23rd: and this result was effected chiefly by the-
assistance of the Volunteera, the Sohools a_ud the Mercantile and Legal Finns, wh()
obtained or contributed Ennineratcirs.: On Monday morning,' the
25tli Februarf,l
_the preliminary enumeration commenced, and the staft' began to work its way
through the plague-~nfeott>d dwelling-house's of the city. By Monday ·evening
some 300 Enumerators (paid) had thrown down their papers, declaring that tho
duty entrusted to Lhem was equivalent to the diroot courting of' infection and
death. By Monday evening; therefore, the reserve-force had been taken ·up, and
we still lacked a hundred 'men. I can never forgot the. manner in which the
EuropPan• Police, "too Volunteers and Government and Municipal empl~ylla
oehaved in the emergency: the former not only found· fresh men from sources"
tinknown to this office, but they in many cases themselves did ·the work of
enumeration. Notwithstanding their efforts, notwithstanding an order' passed
from this office to all sections !}lat double pay would tJe awarded to every man
who completed &n extra block, it was apparent by 'he evenin_g of \Vednesday,
the 27th February, that some sections could not be entirely complet!!d by the
morning of March let, nnless a rery considerable body of men· was at work on
the 28th, which was not gazetted a. Government-holiday for census purpoaes.
The. situation was saved partly by the paid Enumeratbrs and. Volunteers, an~
partly by Lhe. action of the Municipal Commissioner, who in response to an
urgent" appeal from this office permitted the whole. Municipal staff to rsmain on
census duty in the sections during the 28th. By this means, the preliminary
enumeration of all sections was finished by the morning of March 1st; and we
were enabled to· carry out the final cenana or check of entries between 7 p.m.
and midnight of that date.
Owing to the considerable assistance afforded by all ranks to. the Census
Department, the evil eft'ects of pl~<TDe were counteracted, so fill' as aotual organisa-_
,tion _was eoncerned. Bu& the result of the enumeration exemplifies the depopu.
Iating power of the disease. I do not believe that the CI>DBIIB resulm of 1901 are
leila accurate than those of 1872, 1881 or 1891. The huge exodus of inhabitants
tiuring the months of January and February, and th& high pl~oue mortalily, evi-
dence of which is aft'orded by the fact thac many persona included in tho) achedulee
during the preliminary census had died before the hour of the final check, were
inevitably bonnd to elfcot a decrease. in numbers ; while, on the other hand, if
o:De reoolleots that these epidemioe have been recurring annually sinoe 1896, it
seems surprising that the schedules do not show a fill' larger deorease.. It is proof
of the inBuenoe and vitality possessed by the city that, notwithstanding die
blighting eft"eot of aix yaara of ill-health, her population in 1901; exclusive ol
plague refugees, fa&! Is short of that in 1891 by onlyaome ~5,000 Jl8r&o,n&.
I
What is the ~p~tion of Bombay 1:· '.J.'his ·the question .which primarili
is
demands disaassion, and, if possible, settlement. Thij Provisional Total, based
upon the totals for his book 'supplied by each Enumerator'and 811bmitted· by
telegra~ to Gove~nuient on the 6th March, wae 770,843•. · These.:fignres, however,
fall short of the real total of persons enumerated.oii the night of Ma}:ch...li;lt · by:•
5,163: for, subsequent to the publication of the Provisional< Total, Housepold ~!!d;
l'rivate schedules appertaining to 324 persons, which Enumerators had omitted,
to collect, were received in the· Census office ; :while the .careful check .Qf ea!l~;
enu~eration book ·in the abstraction office pr~ved that in ileverai ~ases the ~nu..
merators had added up their totals incorrectly, and that 4;839 persons had ~ereby.
been OI!litted from the Provisional Total.
The grand total of persons enumerated within the limits of the is~n\1 o_Ii
March let is therefore 770,843 + 32~ + 4,839, or 716,006, ·
Now while this total is put forward as an approximately accurate estimate
of the island's population at the time ·that the census was taken, it is not admWed.
that it represents the magnitude of the population that would have been resident
here under normal circumstances, that is to say, if au epidemic" of plague had not
been raging. T~e experience of :five or six· yeara has proved that outbreakan
of plague in the cold weather months leads to a very considerable exodus of
inhabitants from their homes in the city ; and further tllat'~he·inhabitants who
thus emigrate, fall roughly into the following three classes :-· ,
. .
(a) Those who go far afield to Cutch, Ratuagiri, the Southern Mai:atha'
Country, etc., and stay away for months. . .
(b) Those who live in tempor~ry camps 11t .Mahim, ·Dadar, ~io~:
and other places in the island. · ·
(o) · Those who go to places on tl).e B. ·B. and C. L ~ailway. b~t~e~~
Bandra and Virar, and on the G. I. P. Railway betwe.en.<&orl~
and Kalyan, and, taking season-tickets, travel to and f'rom,theU:
work in Bombay every day. . . · . . ..
last week of every month. In the hoPe of obtaining some check upon the railway
results, it was arranged with the Collector of Thana tlmt the Enumer11tors in hi•
district should place the letter !' B " and the locality of his city residence _against
the name of any person, properly a resident of Bombay, but temporarily domiciled
in the Thana district at the time of the enumeration.
Now about the 1st March, private information reached this olli~e that the
Thana Enumerators had not fully or carefully carried out the orders of the
Collector, and that in oonseqnence a very considerable number of Bombay r~
sideuts had not been entered as ·suoh in the Thana schedules. As an extra chock,
therefore, upon both the Railway and Thana totals, this office sent out five men
-three along the B. B. and C. I. Railway and two along the G. I. P. Railway-
who were· instructed to record the numbers and city addresses of all J.lombay
residents, whom they might lind betw~en the stations mentioned above. As time
was short, and they had to finish this work by the 31st March, they were can·
tioned not to go into the heart of the Thana distl'ict, bot to visit only places
actually on or easily reached from the z:ailway.
We have thus been furnished with the following three sets of figures,
purporting to show the number of Bombay residents, living outside the island on
account of pla..,"''le at the date of the census : -
(i) ·{G. I. P. Rnilwny refu_.<TOOS ... - - 3,501} 33 394
B. B. nl!d C. I. ,, ,, -· - l!U,833 •
(ii) Tolall'8<:0rded by five Bn.mhay clerks ... 8,443
(iii) ., ,. by Thnnll Enumerators ,.. ... 2,1'96
It is, imprimir, apparent that the Tnaoa total (iii) is inacourate, being very
consiJersbly smaller than the total discovered by the five clerks (ii), working
along the line ofrailway on! y ; and the figures must, therefore, be discarded as
worthless. The total under (ii) is of value only for proving the incorrectness of
the total under (iii), and cannot be cunsidered an approximately accurate estimate
of the rafugee populatiori.. It remains, therefore, to determine the value of the
railway estimates.
I incline to the belief that the B. B. and. C. I. Railw3y estimate is a tril!e
below the proper mark and t.hat the G. I. P. Railway estimate is very much so.
For. in tho middle of March when plague had appeared at places situated near the
G. L P. Railway, and t.he persons who had been residing there up to March lst,
were either llying further afield or returning to the city, the two enYOys &om
tbia offiuo reoordcd roughly l!,500 individuals. Between the lsi January and the
lat ::lfaroh it ia n11t unlikely that some 6,000 persans fled to parts of the Thana
diatriot 1 approachable frollj. stalione on the G. I. P. R11ilway behvt>en Coorlaand
Kalyun ; aud, allowing thil to be corroot and •>stiuJAting the B. B. and C. I.
Rail way rofugoea at SO.OOO, it appears tha1 our actual papnlation of 'li6,006
abould bo inoreaaud to 81!1,006 by the inoluaion of Than11 and &lsette rt>f~.
IL i1 uufortutulle lhat tho tigul'tlll of Mal arrivals and 'depnrt\treS. by 8ltlll aud land
l'nrnialled by the C~>lloot~>r of llombay and the rllihnya for tho ~ame period, throw
no light uponlhe eubjooL Aooording to these NIIU'n&, 9iiS,OOO ptm.ODII lt'l\ ll.unb.:1y
and 734,000 nrrivoJ in tho il!and : or iu olh\U WOl'lla lhe ci'J' pt>pullllion
dill!te&uod iu lwo n1on1L1 by lHU,OOO. Thi1 informatioo llt't'U18 h> \lll vahl\•l•-
P 1 11111 of OIIJUIUM lul11lll, W11 therolore ealimate thll ••·tul\ll"'l'ulalioo of F•uu~;~
o& 770,006+36,000 (Sol•etto 111d '1'hau11 refugoo~). II alill rooailla to 11dd t\\ lh~
.
7,
total a theoretical estimate .cf the number of those. who went ·further afield than
Kulyan or Virar: It is well-know~ that directly.plagne breaks out i.Q the city, a
considerable number of people seek their native places beyond the Thana district;
and it would not perhaps, in the complete absence of. ~~ord, be very inaccurate to
t~stimate their numbers at one-fifth of the total of Salsette and Thana refugees, tha~
is to say, at 7,200. Aduirig this to previous totals; ·we opine t.hat the actual
population of Bombay enumerated on March Is~ shoulq have ·been 8!9,206 mllde
up in the ttJIIowing manner:- .. . ..
Actual population ennmeruted .,. -· . : -- 776,006
Thana nod Snlselte refugees ,;, ••• 36,000
Refugees to more distant places--... "' . ... 7,200
· Total ,.. 8l9,206
. Again, there are seven sections from which the annual exodus umiaHy
takes place, namely, the Fort North, Market, Dhobi Talao; Fanaswadi, Bhuleshvar,
Girgaum, and Chowpatty. The aggregate population of these seven areas in 1891
Was 218,486 : in the year under report it was i49,102. These seven seotions then ·
have together lost 69,384 persons. But from this figure must be deducted the
numbers of those enumerated in Health Camps on the island, as shown below :~
0
Dndnr Honlt.h Cnmp . ... 5,833
. M.l\rin~ Lines Health C~!IIP .,_. 4,163
Miacellnoeons Camps ·· ... "' 6,000
This 'is · nearly· the exact numbet recorded on . the schedules. That • thcr
census of 1901 was tolerably aconr11te I venture to lay claim : and that· 114,000
approximately represents the net loss due to plague, is al~o credible. But whether
·the numbers of onr population in 189l·wer(l not nndersatimated, and whether our
estimate of 43,200 for the refugee population of 1901 is not too small, is by Do'
·means certain. One would be inclined to place the latter at between 70,000 and
80,000; and adding thereto the humber actually counted t•lus 114,000 for net plague
losses, would estimate the normal :population of 1901 at 970,000 or vory nearly' u
million. Speaking generally, it may· be said that the troubles of the last 'eix
years have robbed the isfand of nearly 2 lakhs of inhabitants.
It remains to remark: that all the Imperial and Special Table• have bee11
worked out upon the basis of the . population actually enumerated, tnZ., 776,006.
We have n·ot. been able to subject the Thana and Salsette refugees to abstraction
and iabnlation inasmuch as none of them, except those accounted for by the
. census staff in Tha:~a, appear upon the schedules; and the latter, as we have seen,
form a very small portion of the total. Except in so far as they neceBSitato an
amendment ohhe theoretical total for the whole island, the plague refugees have,
therefore, been disregarded; and all results and figures, hereafter included in this
report, are based upon the actually enumerated populntion of 776,006.
•
There seems to be a doubt in many minds regarding the exact area of &ht>
Island. In default, therefore, of any authoritative statement upon the point, we
have assumed the area of the whole island, 8!1 given in the Census Rt>port ofl881,
to be oorreot, have added thereto the areas reclaimed by the Part Trust between
1881 and 1891, and the portions of land so acquired between 1891 and 1901 ;
and finally have worked out the area of each seclion, by adding together the
area of each cansua circle, compeeing the section,· and seeing whether the IaUer
~'Orrespond with the sectional arena given in 1881. The IaUer work has been
most carefully performed by a Municipnl Surveyor, and due allowanoe has in
every onae bet~~~ mnde for areu oooupied by roads, eto. The result may 'b&
brieBy eummariaed as fwlowa :-The total area of 1881 plu the reclaimed areas
Lalliue with the total area of 1901 ; but the areas of five aecliona,
••i:., Mahalakllhmi, llfahim, Worli, Byculla and Pare], diller oonsiderahly from th
areu giv~n egaiuat thum in 1881•. The three tirat·nl\llled han increased in area,
thv two Iauer have dllOftlaaed. &lieving that the statement which is subjoi!Wd
ill vury uearly oorreot, we only iuf~reuce to be drawn is llilhw thai the oaloula•
lione of 18!11 were incorNOt or lhat Wtll'6 has boon a readjuslmeut of the l.l't'a
o•umpriaed io euob of Lb011a tlv11 regiatralion eeolione ainco the year 1881.
'l'ho lola! ar1111 of the i•laud, aa llh(\Wil in the e\ateml)lllo ie 1-&,~3-30 at'l'tll
.. r ll:bll equl\ro noil111 nt~~•rly.
In th11 Iauer ponio11 of tba I'OJlOI't dlllllil~ wiU. \ho S~lal Tabt"" lb...,..
u( llllUU QtllliU• oirolo will bo f11Uild Wl\fbd 0111,
9'
. - ...
~ ·~ ......
ANa a £ - · ...... added added Total are& iD
Ward. lfaDIO a£ 8eoi!DD, u per Cewu from 1881 from 1891
lleporU« 1881., 1890. . lo 1901.
Acres. Aores.
{
.a. ... Fort, South
Fort, North
Oo!Bba
.
•••
181-70
133•04 -
2•78
........
..... ······
l!4·1~
1•26
5·3ll
2-40 265•64
131•70
134,-80
662•39
L Esplanade 832'95
-
.
lfandvi ...
Cbakla ...
...... ."'.. ...... 164•86
51"58 ······
......
......
.......
164•66
51"5s·
B
'
···{ Dongri ...
... ... ...... ......
Um.,.khndi . 105•33
285•47
...... .......
······ ······ . ''
105•33
ll85•47
. .
I
llfarket ...
Dhobi Talao
...... ...... ...... 89•11
99•69
....... ······
...... ......
89•11
99•69'
Kbara Talao ... ...... ...... 41•64 ....... :1 ...... I' 41•64
KumbhariVIIdo ...
.
46•06
······ ...... 46•06
Girgnum
D ...J Ohoupati ••• .... ... .... • 111·71
124·60
······. 124•60
······
...... ...... ......
111-77"•
I Mahaluumi
Wolkeshwar
~
545•43
851•18'
......
··~··· ......
...... ······
545•43..
642•01'
•
. ,
( llfazagon •••
-·... ... 57"406 "i·OO 33•86 614•92'
······ .....
•••
... .
ll
..
I Tarwadi ...
2nd Nogpada
Komathipura ....... ...... "'... .
...
-,, 84•00
66•14
479•68
...... ····-·-· .
...... ......
'
479•68-
···t Tnrdeo
Byoulla
...:.. - ....
... ......
...
... ......
'
228•68
934•97 ···.···
. ···-· -·-
.-~.·~~~ '
'
'
. . . ..
228•68
---- .
511"52'
' .lsi Nagpada •... 29:60 ....... ....... -~-
- .29·~(), c. !
. . ..
I'
~:·{
Pare!
Sewri ......•... ...... ......... ......... 4,26t•o8.
1,109•65
426•97
. .-.....
. ..... .18•50
..... 552·4~ .
····- ........
M5•47
Blon ••• 4,261"08 ..
;
...{
'
Mnhlm ...... • ...... ...... ... 1482'15 ........ .··~····
... 929-90
G .
' ...
Worli
.. .. ......
. ..... I .
. 1,286•23
1,815•6&
.. .
'•
' . .. .. . . .,, ' ;
' '
'
. ' ..
. • •,r
. ..
.
.. ..
..
.i
' '
'•
I
. ~-'
To&al '· .... 14245•94
• •
f; :
.85•02 . 61•34
... ~4.~:80.•
..
'
•
10
DENSITY OF POPULATION.
.. . . .·
. . . ~
.... "~' ..
' ..
. ·· '\ ·
.· ' .
'·
·~
.' .
---·
. ..
- ··
BACK BAY
.I
\ i
MAP
tSL.AND Of BOMBA'(
Slmvir.J lhf' tJM. : . .t . tr ··; :.:' n ;:J
~or11Jt: r s: •·.-.-. ·:.,<.
11
This fact may be considered to account in some measure for the diminution
of density per acre. On the oilier hand, n should be noted that Mandvi hae been
ateadily losing population since the year 1881 ; and one is disposed to favourably
receive the sug,uestion that there has been a gradual exodus of Hindu inhabitants
from :Mandvi to the more noribem portions of the island. If, indeed, the increase-
of.popnlstion and ~l density per acre in Parel, Sewri, Sion, Mah~ and Worli
may be taken to portray a desire on the part of the oity popnlation to distribute
itself northwards, there is no ground for despondency regarding the future
welfare of the city. The growth of factories and mills since the year 1881 has
doubtless augmented the industrial population of these sections ; but one fannies
that with increased "facilities of transit, ihe mercantile and official classes might be
encouraged to relieve the pressure of population in the central wards, by establish·
ing homes in Sion and neighbouring areas.
The total density per acre for the whole island has 1iecreased from 57·75 to
51·47, which compares favourably with the ·London and Calcmta figur;; of 1891.
In the former there were 56 persons to the acre, in the latter 54.
Lastly, we would draw attention to tho fact that tho homeless population
was in all probability included, when calcnlating tho sectional density of 1891 ;
but that the numbers of the Homeless, the RaHway and the Docks population·
have been omitted from the corresponding calcnlations of 1901. The homeless
are, as their name implies, persons without a residence ; and O'f~g to the fact that
they were enumerated by wards and not by sections, it cannot be determined to
which of the smaller areas any one individual belongs. Rather than give this or
that houseless person a fictitious abode in any one section, it has bee~ deemed ..
advis~ble to exclude them from tho reckoning, and calcnlate the density per ..
acre Jrom the number of persons actually living in "houses·" in each sectioli on .
the night of the 1st March.
12
Donallf per Aoro.
SoatloD.
-
Esplllllllde ... ... 20·9 15•9 15•6
Cbakla ... 726·4 624·11 U2·7
.Mandvi 261-4 226•5 190'7
Umarkhadi ... ... ... 525•5 498•1 460•2
-
Dongri ... ... ••• ... ... ... 118·0 106•2 90·3
llarket . ... ••• ••• ... ... 558·2 502'2 818•8
Dhobi Talao ... 402•1 400•7 296'4
Bhuleshvar -
Kumhhanrada
-· ... ...
508·0
777·5
506•2
699·3
398'8
598·0
Chaapati
- ... ••• 99·7 103'0 60't
Walkeehwar
... ...
... - ... 21-11 Jol'l 1!1'3
... ... -
-
lfahaluumi
- 16'9 45'6 !8•1
'fardeo
K._thlpura
- ... ...
... ... ... ..
S9·7
U7•7
88•0
Ul•5
91-6
•wr
bt Nacpada ... ... ... .. 3~3·1 371N 85T'l-
...
. . . . .CIQ
-
... ... ...
-........ ... ... ... ... ... ..
...
tl9·1
lH
5S'i
"j5•9
&So.&
HOUS'BS.
~- .- ...
A House was defined in the Bombay· Census Code. to be " & bnilding;•to
,which · a separate census number has been affixed " for census purposes ; -an~
prior to the painting-up of Circl~rnumbera, ·Block-numbers and Hous~rnumbers;
it became neceasary to decide what class of building should have a separate celJl.
.us number. According to the instructions issued to Enumerators in England 1n
18911 " all the space within the externsl· and party walls Of a building" ·was
to be considered a separate house ; but, after visiting one or tWo localities in: thiS
city, it appeared to U8 desirable to make the "roof" of a· bniJdiDg the chief fiwWr
in determining whether it shonld have a separate number'. · In other wor~ 1\
separate house was held to mean ~· a building under one undivided roof. " This
definition will be found suitable throughout the greater portion of the city ; bUi
a few cases do occur in which one building is provided with two or inore separale
roofs. This being so, an addition was made to the definition, to .the effect that ·
a building having two or more separate roofs was yet to be considered a sepa-
rate house, if those separate roofs were connected inter ae by subsidiary roofs.
For example, in a case where the roof of a line of servants' quarters was con-
nected with the roof of a stable by a subsidiary roof, covering a passage, ~e
stables and servants' quarters were considered to .form one buil~g or one .
separate house ; but in oases where the subsidiary roof and passage were absent,
the stables and servants' quarters were considered as two separate houses for
census purposes. Now the principle adopted at the census of 1901 for.the D1JD.I:-
bering of houses debars one from comparing the total number of houses ·no'\V
·existent with the number recorded ten years ago. No information exists as _!iQ
the method followed in 1891 ; bnt it is believed that in many oases separate
census"'lumbers were given in that year to " portions " of what, according to the
above definition, would form one separate house. The one-floored ch&I, of whi$
there are many examples in the city, and of which~ sketch is given, will. se~e
to elucidate our meaning.
/ .
'\. .. :
,- - ,_ ,.......;;...
"
,..-- r--- ,..-- .
A B
~·
0 B I!' G
. .
·This ~s a buildmg under one separate roof,
..
.contatmng seven separate rooms 'or
· dwelhng-placoe, each occupied by a different family. The illiterate tenant or olV:ner·
of_roo~ A or D or G, calls that room his • house' or • ghar'; and we belie~e that
thts VJ.ew of " the house" was adopted by the census authorities of 1891 and that
a sep~ate censu& number was affixed to each of those separate rooms. ' But,
acaordmg to th~ arrangements in 1901, the whole building containing those ileven
rooms was looked upon as one separate house, and was marked with one hous&-
n~~r: while the se;en rooms were regarded merely as tenements in that ·on~
building: The ques_tion of tenell:)?nts never entered into the census arrangl)m-
of 1891 , and accordingly any stnct definition of the word." ho\IBe" was mmeoeB-
.sary: and a building such liB tha.t above, which ranked as "one house'; in·IDOi
was recorded as "seven ho'llses" in 1891. · · ., ·· \·''
•
The question of "teneme,utl ''· may be briefly discussed here, notwith-
standing that the tables and figures oonneoted therewith are included in the !&tter
pottion of · this. report. A tenemen~ was defined' to be !• The holding of a rent•
:pay~," an.d might,. therefore, oonsiat of one or more rooma, A room was defined,
for ~he benefit of the Enumerator, to be "an apartment, with or without partitions,
havmg a separate entrance. from a verandah, passage, or street." Supposing,
therefore, that in the ground-floor ohal, .shown above, room• A, 'B and 0 were
reJited, and oooupied by ·.one man and his family, room D was rented and ooonpied
bj another man and hill family, and ·rooms E, F and G l>y a third tanant and hla.
·family, then for the purposes of the speoial tables, the building was entered u
~one house, of one 8oor, containing seven roo IIlli, and comprising three separate
. ·tenements, VIZ.; 2 three-roomed tenements, and one Bingl~roomed tenement." In
-the ~vent of room G being unoccnpied, it was classified as " one vacant tenemen'
'of one room"; and the totabi.umber of tenemente in the house was altered from
three to four. ·
n will be apparent that any comparison. between the house figures of 1891
and 1901 can be of little practical utility. It will snfiioe to mention that the
'authoriLies of 1891 discovered 66,959 oooupied houses; and that we, working
'along etriot lines, find the total number of oooupied hou&ee in the Town aod
·Island on March 1st, 19011 to be 80,125. If the stricter and, in our opinion, more
ratiOnal classification of 1901 be adopted at future censuses, valuable compariaons
and inferenoes will be forthcoming i but, for the reasons given above, n seems
'advisable to neglect all reference to past atatemenls, and deal solely with tht>
'house-figures of 1901.
'nlo auoliona oontaioiug \he large~& nun\ber o( hqp-, both 000111~ aud
·unoocupilld, are Alahlm, Worli and SiOD, with 3,010, !,T:!~ and !,433, rM~ti"'ly l
but iD all three areae are a OOlleiderahle n\UU\w ol' -\lllred h11te, whillh h.a1 •
tho olt'IIDt ollnortaal11g the Mal, but do uot Nllder th\l leuUI.llll slr111:1ural!J
overurowd...t Oomiuar to the oeutral porlloa of lh• Wlaul}. wo lud ~ Aikt'olh~ar
whh l,6fll houa1111, MU~t."\lll with 1,8-&S. \he U.u-ut wi\h l,MS. D~obi 'lalao ,.. ,!.h.
1,6U,llahalakahml whh 1,639, and l'arel wilh 1,4.68. Uawkhadi and th• Nl)llh
fun ooulaha l,SU 111d l,ll18 eepeuoate bou-. r..peolivel1•
i6
It is of some: interest to note '>the variation in dilferent sections of th&
average number of houses. per aore: and a lable is given on page l611howing (a)"tile
averag~ number of total (oconpied and unoccupied) houses peucre, and (b) tile
average number of oconpied. houses per 'aore. Under both heads1 the following
raven sections show the highest averages :--'-Chakla, Kmnbharwada, Kamathi-
pura the Market, Khara Talao, Bhuleshvar and 2nd Nagpada-; and with the
exoe~tiou of Bhuleshvar and tile Market they are a1l'seotiC?DS marked· ·bY ·a high
density·rate .of pop~tion, The plague-e::~todus frQm -these two ~eaa inevitablr
lowers their rate of hmnan density; but onoe the l!ecessity for :flight is.remove.d,
their considerable.. structural aocommodation is bound td draw ·population' into
them. In:the matter of both oconpied and unoccupied hpuses, taken' together,
the Market ranks as a more structurally crowded section than Bhuleshvar; but
the position is reverSed, when WB Come to deal With the number of OCCUpied hoUS!JS
only per nore, This result aooords witli the 'lesson· drawn from · compariSon of
the average numbf!r. of persons per acre in the two sections, to the elfect that, while
a pl,ague-exod'!ls takes place from both sections, tha~ from !Jle Market ie probably
greater than that fr001 Bhnleshvar. · · · · · · ··
.
' . '. ' . ..
. One feels no snri>rise at· .Chakia heading ~e list with. an" ave~~ <!f 18
houses per acre and 15 occupied houses per aor~ •The most cursory inspection
will show tha:t it is one of.the smallest areas in the island, and is at the same time·
densely p&oked with structures, not of the small one-stor~yed species, but.' hug&
four•storeyed dwelling-places, with scarcely room for a sweepel'l to .pass between·
them. Chakla was one. of the few sections in which, at the time of dividing'and
numbering, it was occasionally. found necessary to make one house only 'into-one.
single 11 enumeration-block."
The sections showing the smallest. number of houses to the acre are Sion,
the Esplanade, Worli and Sewri. By judicious extension of communications Sion
Bewri and Worli can each be with advantage rendered more suburban than they
'. ,
now ars ; · and !ll'e also of an area sufficient to admit of the. ·erection of more three
and four-storeyed houses than they now contain.,· The ,nature. of the buildings in
the Esplanade keeps the !'Verage number per acre at a low figure; for. structures
like the Secretariat, the ·High Court, the Post Office, Oriental Buildinge or
Standard Buildings, eto., rank according to the rules of 1901 lid only one house.
The average number of occupied houses per acre for the whole island is 2·10.
A_more detail~d discussion Of habitations a:u~ their relation to the. population
will be found m the later portion of this report. •
-~
. SBO'Hc:nr.
. ' J I,
No. ot Boutell per!"""- \
Tolal, . . OocuplecL
Bavrrolf,
: !olol. Ouuplod.,
...
Uppe~:Colaba
.... .... •32: •27 Girgaum .... '"
9'86 6•56
"
. ....
Lower Co~ba. ... .•
3'()8 11'07 Chowpatty ... ... 7•64. ft'OO·'
,.
~ort,S?utb
ort,,North
... ...
. ...
-·
2•54
'9'07
i·78
.NO
W~keehwar. .... ...
MahaliiXllmi ... .
r-Tardeo ... -
. 3'03
2•87
l·23
.
'
1'70,
. " I
..."EspkDad.i'
'
... ... 1-11 •83
.. ... .. ... '
3·27·'. i'U
-·... ......
''
7-47
14•19
5•9!1
llahim •••
Worli ... . ... -·
i'M
N9
1'80
l'!ll
Wud.
~ Ooeupie4. I UBOOOUpi.a. I
A
- ... ... ... ... 1,386 '167 8,133
0
p
... ...
... ... ·-... ...... ...... 5.419
4,691
l,s,3
l,T71
6,7U
f,HS
Tuwn Ulllloiau4
..... -- -~ -~---~-
81),116
l.litt
e..na
-
#&..~~
-·
N
f~
. /!tcfl!OS~
. ofI to/(}pr cent
'
~ . Increase of/ to IIJpe~ l'l!nf
.. •
~ I ncrMse of40 fiJ lOPprtrnf
, MAP
- of the
ISLAND OF BOMBAY
. · · Sh,•wm!l VonlJ!wn p~r ~mt qf l'opuloh'on o/ .Srdians
, J'iFIC8 /IJ72. .
•
VARIATION IN POPULATION· SiNCE 1872.." "
.t ·, ·. ;_. ..; . . • . . .....: •
' : Jmperial Table U show~ ihe n~~ iDcrease or" decr~se.in_ e:Wh s~_ti?~ Of ~J
iSland since the year 1872 ; and the. chart, wbich.w.e _ha~e IDile.rted .opposite thiS:
paragraph~ porLray~ the incroase. or ~ecrease'}lOr cent. m population smco that Y~:
Counting the Harbour, Docks and Railway areas !oget~er ali a se~ar~te secti-:>n
-or census charge, the island is oomposed _of. 3<> sections, ?f which 18 sh~w
'311 increase per cent~ and 15 show a decrease -por cent. ~mce 187~ : -w!ille
the island taken en bloc, shows: an increase of 20·42 per c~nt. The. sections
which sh~w the highest ,percentage of increase are Worli, Parel, Sion, Sewri,
Byculla, and Mahim. As _regards'_ .Pare!,; . Worli, and Byculla, we sho~d
be inclined to ascribe this_ result mainly to the growth_ of mills and f~~
~ri!JS, 1111d to the consequent !mmigration _of an industrial popUlation·; ·a~d ~
theory is to some extent oonfirmed by ~he foot that the total mimber of persons sub~
sisting as aotun1 workers and dep~ridentB upon iiidust~i~s classed as "Silk; Cotton;
..Into, Flax, Coir, et.c.," exceeds the number recorded m 1891- by about 30,900!
Sewri, Siou and Mahim, on the other hand, are" sections of refuga" and offer
-acoommuchtiou to the fugitive population of the central portions of the island.
Some few mills, it is true, have risen in Sewri during the last twenty years ; but,
_generally speaking, this section shares with the other two northem_ areas the
l)onour of providing dwelling-room for the surplus or fugitive denizens Qf B,
-c, or D wards. It seems to us indubitable that the tide of population has
been gradually setting northward during the last twenty yea.r,s; _for. the sections
lying north of Byoulla, or let us eay the areas comprised between- Grant Road
and the Muhim and Sion Causeways, have been gradually gaining populatio11- at
the expense of sections like Chakla and Mandvi. Six years' plague must have
-doubtless heightened any tendency that may have existed among the people of B_
and C wards ten years ago, to move outwards to less-crowded areas; but., judging
by the results of 1891, such a tendency did exist. B and C wards, as has been
pointed out in the History, Part ,IV, were very densely populated by 1872,
in consequence chiefly of the commercial delirium of the early sixties; and so
long as the mania o£ thosr years lasted, the popu,lation forced itself into the central
portions of the island regardless of its own· convenience or 'he inevitable conse-
quences. But. it seems poss;'Jle that, -as soon as a more tranquil condition of
public affairs made itself fO:.., the people, or let us say l'ather the Hindu popula-
tion of Band C wards, began to feel the pressure and discomfort, and by_ some
undefined but natural instinct commenced to seek the wider and· less populous - _
areas in the north of the island. Historically speaking, B ward belongs by pre-
scriptive right to the Mahnmcdan; for he had built houses there long before the
feverish transactions uf 1860-70 had enticed thither the poorer class of Hindus
fr?m tlie Decc~n and Konkan. Is it.impossible that the last thirty years have
Witnessed ~ slow but gradual reversion to the old condition of thingR, _and that
by some Inscrutable law the Hindu population is gradually working back to
those areas which its co-religionists first occupied in almost prehistoric ages ?
Laying theory and fancy aside, it seems to us that the futu~e welfare of
our island must lie in the At!>ady colonisation of its northern &Actions. But this
--<Jill1not take place - without increased facilities for transit. The rail ways have
effected and continue to effect much ; and ~bt effect would be enhanced by 1
speedy and well-alTanged tram service to those parts wbich lie at a distance from
the railway.
•
. Even if no other community were •
WJlling to move further afield I it
ia probable that the Jains would gradually bid adieu to H aud 0 wards, provided
that no undue obstacles were placed in the way of building, and that inoreaaecl
faciliLie& were provided for settling, in the north of the island.
•
I& shoulti be noted that the increase per cent. in Tardeo, and 1st and 2ncl
Nagpada, is calculated from 1881 only;· inasmuch as prior to thnt date these are 111
formed portions of other BeCtious and were not Reparately enumerated.
Viewing· the general resu Its, there seems no ground for despondency ; for,
notwithstauding the appalling mortality of the last five years, the islandhasaddell
20 per cent. to her numbers of 1872; while any loss that may have occurred betwee~
ilie Mint and Pydhowni, and botween the Native Genrral .t,.ibrary and the nortli
boundary of Kumbharwada, has been amply compousated by a large increment ot
inhabilants between Byculla and the Can110ways.
Tn PEKOEliTAGB oF IIIOB1UBB oB DEonABB B'l SEOTioNs.
.
....
I
Upper Colaba
·- .•. ... 18•16
Lower Colaba ·- 1'73
Fort Booth
Fort North ...
.,. -... +' 401>3
22•79' ~-
- ....-·
Dongri + •87
Market ... ... 34•22.
Dhcbi 'l'alao 22•06 •
Iaanawadi
Bbaleshvnr
...
...
... ... ...
... - !1•22
161>9
Kambharwadli ... ... •18
.... ,,
Oh
-KharaTalao - 2'01
Kbetwadl .... ... + 9·46
Girgaam ... I
••• I .· 29•99
Cbaapati ... •••I; ... ... ... 10•61
... +
WnlkeohWBl'
MahalBJmmi ·f.... ... + 819•08
86•45
_ The Christian, Parsi and Jew population each form approximately the
same peroentage of th~ total population that they did ten years ago,-as will be
plain from the subjoined statement:- .· '·
188L 1891. 19111.
Christian .... 5•5 5•5 5•8
Pal'li ... ... 5•8 .
Jew ... ... 0'6
One might have supposed that the Christian community would have shown
a net deoresse of proportion to the total ·population, by reason _of a high
mortality-rate among Native Christians. But :Possibly the very low death-rate
among Europeans, notably in. 1899 when the rate was the lowest recorded since
1894, has militated against such a result.. Further, the Christian, Parsi and Jew
are more ready than the members of other communities to take advantage or
the lessons of sanitary science, and to submit -to such precautionary measures
as inoculation. It is worth noting also that European males and fem.ales have
increased by 6 per oent. and 5 per cent. respectively sinoe 189_~. Turning to the
proportion of females to males by religion, one finds the Jew community heading
the list with 921 females to 1,000 males, the Parsi next with 904, and, as we
have previously remark('d, the Mah~mmedan third with 617. Among .Christians,
there ore only 520 females to every 1,000 males.
The bnlk of the {lhriatian ·population lives in Upper· Colaba and the
North Fort, the remainder living in smaller numbers in the Esplanade, Dhobi
Talao, Walkeshwar, and Mazagon. Some 5,000 odd appear among the floating
population j and 119, of whom- threa only are females; are described. -as
"Homeless." The Anglican Church claims the largest nuinber of followers;
the number of ita adherents standing to the Roman Catholic community in the
proportion of 2·36 : 1. Persons belonging to these two chief denominations are
found in every section of the island, except Bhuleshvar, Khara Talao and
Kumbharwada. Among minor sects, we note that Baptists and Methodists
have increased by 46 and 47 per cent. respectively since 1891, and that Pres-
byterians and Salvationists have decreased by 60 and 67 per cent.
. ,.
The Parsis reign for the most part in thl! North Fort and Dhobi Talao,
where they form respectively 43 and 82 per cent. of the total sectional population.
An approoiable number also ars resident in Khetwadi. Thottgh history connect&
the name of the Parsi with dockyards and shipbuilding, a comparatively trivial
number spend their life afloat ; while the general well-being· of the· com- ·
mnnity is perhaps shown by the fact that out of the total number of homeless
and deatitule only 24 are Parsia. For the same reason the small Jew com-
munity, which is scattered all over the island, appears to be fairly prceperous.
Th e la_rger proportion of them frequent the South Fort, Mandvi, Umarkhadi,
0 o~gn, and the two Nagpadas.
22
' ; The 'proport.ion 1iorne by Hindda in general'to the 'total population hai
deoreased from 66·1 to 61i'li ; while the' Jains, also, who formed 3 per cent. of the
population in 1891, now form only 1 per cent. It is surprising that· the Hindu
a
population does not show larger decrease j for sUCh of them as are able and CaD
afford to do so, have fled from the city ; an!l the death-rate among low.caete
~ndu males and females has rieeu on occasions as high· as 122 and 148 per 1,000
oFpopuia:tion.· On the other hand, the average number of Hindu females to 1,000
Hindu males has risen from 571 in 1891 to 610 in 1901; and in thoee eectiOUB
which may be regarded as Hindu industrial areas, the proportion of femalss to
males is high. The only plausible inference is that the extremely bad seasous
which have occurred during the last five years have resulted in a very large
immigration of female operatives and dependents,. an immigration large enough to
more than counterbalance an annual emigration and a very high death-rate.
As regards other religions, one may note the almost complete absence of
Sikh women ; and that Buddhist males are nearly ueble. as numerons 1111
Buddhist females. The appearance of Buddhists in A ward· might seem at 1iret
.aight curious or inoredible : but we have satisfied ourselves from scrutiny of the ·
schedules that the statement is correct, and that the numbers· roughly represent
the members of certain well-known Japanese banking-houses and their families.
The cause of the preponderance of Buddhist females in Tardeo and Kamathipnra
will be obvious to any one who takes a stroll along the thoroughfare dividing ·
those two seonons. Agnosticism, Free-thinking and Theosophism share with a
strange creed, recorded as. "Optimism", the honour of being to all intents and
purposes non-existent I
!4
Porcoatap of
BIILIGIO.. Popalallon. lotal popolalloll
oflalaad,
•
Mabommedu ... ... - ... ... 61NJ
Chrllllu ...
BuddW.& ...
... ... ... ...
... ... ... ...
-...
...
..
5iO'Si
3'$•1J
Join ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 881'1~
lllkb ... ... ... '" ... ... ... ... ... .. 4Nl
l'anl ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ~~~~·Sl
Jtw ond olho11 ... ... ... ... ... ... .. Ul"''
··-- ----
N
W E .
I
I '
·. .- - ~ ...-
8ACK 8AY
-~- --
-- - - -- _
,
·,
...
' '
25
given above Ji>nd aupporb: for, from the age o£15 to &he age of 40 the women
"Steadily decrease in numbers, from the age of 40 to the age of 60 a.ud over they
..teadily inor111111e.
. • :A wo~d may be said ~ the subject of the infant popnl11tion of the oit.y, that
is to·slly, children under one year of 8ge. Ten yema ago it numbered a little over
:25~000 ; and during the six years prior to 1897, the ye11r of the greut plague
.exodus, the rate of infant mortality was fairly couetant. Bnt with the plague
-came dislocation of family life and ·desolation of many a home; and ita dieaatroua
-9iFect upon infant life iB indirectly ahlldowed forth by the feot that, notwitlJatand·
ing a huge exodus of population in 1897 and 1898, the rate of infant mortlllity
was almost up to the normal In 1899 the rate rose to 1!30 per thousand ; and in
'1900 it ie staled variously as 530 or 640 per thousand. In view of the recent
famine, and tbe consequ~:nt inflow into the city of persona in a low state of vitality ;
in view also of the figures of the intimt population in 1901, we are inclined to hold
that 640 per thousand ·is not too high au estimate of t.he infant mortality-rate.
Whether there is auoh a t.hing as plague sterility, it is not for us to diacnBB ;
but either from this cause, or from emigration, the bll'l.h-rate of recent years
has been extremely low. This fact coupled with a truly terrible mortlllity hu
brought the number of our infant popula\ion down from 25,000 in 1891 to 9,900
~cld in 19011
The civil condition of the population next demands aHention : and, dealing
with the relation bnrne by the married, unmarried and widowed of each main reli-
gion to the total populati •D of the ieland, it ·appears that married Hindus show the
highest peroantage, 11amely, 38. Unmanied Hindus form 20 per oPnt. of the total
population of the island, as ag'1iust 1 por oeul formed by unmarried .M.Wommalaus,
and 3 per cent. by both unmarried Christiana and Parai& llarriud llnhommedans,
on ihe other hand, form 10 per ceo'- of the total population; and Dlllrried Jaius
form a higher percentage of the total t.ban the unmarried. But \hie increase of
married o,·er nnu•arried, which ia common to Hindus, Mahommedana aud Jaius,
is not followed in 1he oaao of Paraie, Chriltiane and Jews, whoee married _popuJ..
tion forme only :~·15, 2·22, and ·33 per oeul respectively of t.be tow population.
Under the heading of widowed, Hindus show the h!ghoel percentage, namely, 6 i
Mab<oDimeJana "laud nezt with a pdtcentago of lt, and Jews and olhera last wilh
a peroeut&j,re of "()6. •
Eaplanade •••
-ohAkla ... ......-· 431•44
661'94
Mandvi ... ... ...... ......
Umarkhadl '" ... 705•42
692-71
_Dont:
Mar et
...... ... ...... ... 770'58
516'76
DLobl Talao ...
Flnuwadi ... ... ......
' ... ..-.
666'17
629•85
BliuJ&~bYU
Kambbarwada • ... ... ... ... 579•77
''681"15 ..
""Khetwadi ...
Khan. Talao
... ... ... 635'20
·- 66'1-58
... ......
Tnl'deo
Kamatbiptll'll
Ia~ Nagpada ... ... ...
-
....
718'()4
748'S.
676•75
lind Nagpnda
·- 748'()8
Byonlla
Tarwadi ...... ... 668'77
603-96
.
...... ...
..;.lluagon 683•72
Pare!
634'36
Bewri
Sloa
-.Mllhim ... - ·- 658-16
680•62
- 8
Bcmooy Town and Island
-1 GINO
80
TABLE .showing the peroen~age of unmarried, married and. widowed in eaoh
section &o the &otnl population of the section :-
SoctioD. Unmarrlecl,
I Marrlecl, Wlclowocl.
Upper Oolaha
Lower Oolaba. ... ...... ......
•••
...... 52•88
84:91 .
41'18
D5•46
6'44
9•68
Fort South ...
Fort North ...
...... ...... ...... ......
41•80
42•29
52•97
47'91
5•28
9•80
Esplanade ...
Ohakla ... ...... ...... ......
. ...
...
85•99
87•94
57'()4
62'29
6•97
8•77
llbnleobvar ...
Kumbbarwada.
...... ......
... ...
... .. ...
83•58
80·75
54•89
57•80 . ·. 11'58
11'45
Khnra Tnlao ...
Kbetwadi ...
... ...... ...... .. ...... 85'26 54'7!1 .. .. 10<02
NO
.. . as·so 51'86. .. • 11•84
Wnlkeobwar ...
-
... ...... ...... ..
85•18
85'61
85•49
•
58'87
52'16
56'85
12'28
?'66
Mabalabbmi
-· - 86·17 58•96 9·87
Tardeo
Kamalhlpnra
... ....... ...... ...... ...... 8!'59
li9•6S
59-70
58•46
7·71
11•89
l'yauUa
Tlinradi
...... ...... ...... ...... ...... 81'15
86·06
liN.&
55'44
Hl
HI)
Muagoa
Pare! ... ...... ...... ...... ......
..... 8NI
&NI
69'98
Sli·U
0'60
10'ili
6•58
Binda
Mahommedaa"'
OhriallaD •••
Jain ...
-
... ...... ... ......... .........
... •••
•••
20'28
7•66
3•18
•64 ,
38•68
10•41
2•22
1•06
2'00
•44
·IS
•56
2•15
oth;;;. ... ...••• ...
Pani ••• 3•25
J&W and •39 •33 •06.
• ••
Married
U~~~~~arried
...... -...... . ...... ... ... 575 565 548
Widowed ... ... ... ••• .
336
8!l
349-
86
354-
98
i - .
T.&BLB showing the percentage of married, unmarried, and widowed to
total popUlation of the Islan~ J . . .
I
_.,
Married. Unmarried.
I .Widowed:
TABLE showing the number of females per 1,000 males at each age-period.
Agoo. No. of females to 1,000 malee •
~ a~ eaoh age-period.
0-1 999
1-2 1,079
2-3 1,068
84 1,033
'-5 994
0-5 t -- 1,031
6--10 929
10-lli 684
15-20 . '106
ll0-25 629
ll5-30 480
30-85 441
35-40 419
40-45· 611
45-50 556
60-55 688
·55-60 716
60 and owr 869
St~
. I
0--1
I-ll
1•28'
•89
......
•01
.......
.....
2-3 1 •57 •OJ ......
3-4 1•52 •01 ......
{-5 1•53 ·oa
8-5. 6•79. '08- .••••••
.....
5--10 81)6 •36 . ·OS ·
10-15. 7-19 1•98,. •10
'15--20 51)1 4•7ll 'iii
20--lll! 3•86 8'75 •56
25"-30 • lJ•34 10'73 •89
30-35 1114 9•91 1•11
35-10 '41 5'81 . 11J
40-45 •81 5•57 1'&9
45-60 •Ill li•J6 ·84
5~5"- '
•13 1'44
- I'll
55' 66v 1)1,. "77 t.' •5111
60 and cmr. o()9•i l"ttJti 1'61
-
Mala '"
i-97
Female ... 10"69
•
:s..b•- .. 18•66
9'11
------~
33.
EDUCATION•.
. .·.- .
At the census of 1891 the pop111auou. wae divided for th~ purpose of edu·
'
E ndll at Ot per llent. : that tiom 10 to 111, thi• tlg~1re d~ to T8 pel' ~&..
onoe agalu to TO par oent. at the ag&-period U-30. It ie perhape natural &hat
pereenlll6,>e oiiiUterate eho11ld be higbeat at the age-period 0.10, and ~
that the peroentage, whloh gradually dropa np to the as- of l!O. should apia M
aa the age-period llO and over; for the greaa mase of the illhwa.. la~pllia
don lmmitrrt~tea to the olay al\er the oompMiOI\ of thel!Oth y.u of ap. llahe alld
36·
females who oa.n neither read 1101 write form.~ eq~fprppo~Pll- !If ~he t<J~. P~.
pularion at the age-period 0-10 ; from 1Q w t5, ?ond ?ot 20 and qver, th,e. p~rce~~:~.,
of illiterate females falls considerably below. ~t ofl;4~ males; ;md 1t • olll:r· ~
the period 15 to 20 that the pro pomona borne by illi~ate m,Ues and fem.a\~Js iQ
the total population at that period appro~~ more olQsely to one another. - T4!!
precise reason for iliis phenomenon it is no~ -easy to give, ·lJnJ.eea one "uppose!'!
that female immigration is more general be~een the age~ of 15 and..20 ~ a~
earlier or later periods of life ; owing w the :fact that qt that period they are len, .
tied down to domestic and maternal duties, and can D10re easily seek their OWIJ .
livelihood and subsistence. · ·· . ·/'
met with among Eurasians, 84 per cent. ofwhom, of both se:r.ea together, ar&
able to read and ·write that tongue. The slandard of education amongst Native
Christians appeani somewhat low: for 68 per cent, of their numbers are illiterate,
ob.t of whom 40 per cent. are males and 28 per ·cent. are females ; while the
proportion to the total Native Christian population borne by males and females
literate in English, stands at .18 per cent. and 6 per cent. only.·· This absence of
literacy is no new feature: for in 1881, 47 per cent of the males and 68 per cent.
of the females, following the Christian religion, e:r.clusiv~ of thoae in the pupU
stage, ·were illiterate, the result being almost wholly due to the large nnmbsnt
of Native Christians, who were incapable of reading and writing. ·
•
A final word may be added on the subject of literacy in English. For the
island, as a whole; I find that only 70 persons in 1,000 are able to both read
nd wri1e that language. This prl!portion, however, ia subject to considerable
variation by sections. In the South Fort, Upper Colaba, Dhobi Talao, Esplanade.
For.t .North and . Lower Colaba, .the number of those literate in English amounts,
respectively, to 364, 314, 16~, 161, 160 and 157 per 1,000 of popolation. Kbara
TalaO and Dongri are marked by the lowest proportion, namely .14 and 15 per
1,000; 2nd Nagpada is only slightly better with 17; Chakla, Mandvi, Umarkbadi,
Knmbharwada, Kamathipura, let Nagpa~ and Sewri contain from 20 to 30 per
1,000; Parel shows 31; The Market, Bhnleshvar, Bycnlla and Worli shelter from
40 to 60 persons per 1,000; Tardeo bas 51 ; and the remaining sections from 70
to 130, Excluding the Harbour and Docks, which ooutain 123 per 1,000, one may
eay generally that literacy in English is mainly confined to the southernmost
sections of the island, or to looalitiea in which the European or Pam element
predomiuates.
ar
TABLE showing the proportion boq~e by males ~nd females literate in .English o~,
ot.her Iangnages, and by illiterate males and females .to the populatio_n at~
each age-period. ..
rDii~te·•.
I I
Males ... ... } ··79 1'07 1•72 •22 •13 47•09
... I
'
Females
'
...
·:·} 120 & ova
... l 1'15
·- '58 1•98 •09 •23 31·~7
;
.
Males ... ... }......1{ 5•76
I•
3•97 7•76 1•34 1•26 46•43
I I I
.
lllaloo. I .Fema!oo.
LANGUAGE.
i:Olleci.orate. · The resulte reoorded in 1901 in no way oon11ict with those of 1881,
in which only 3 per cent. of the total Jew population returned Hebrew as a·.
language ordinarily spoken. In general, those who ordinarily make use of
Hebrew are to be found in A and E wards ; and in three sections of the latter,
namely, Tardeo, Byculla, and 2nd Nagpada, female speakers of Hebrew out•
number the males ; - a proof possibly that the example of the B ward Jews iB.
being followed by the male Jew population resident in other.parts of the island..
Speakers of Persian appear in every single section of the island except Upper.
Colaba. Twenty years ago this la~gnage was unknown in Pare! : but aceording
to the present returns it is now the ordinary speech of 23 persons in that section.
The Fort North, Tarwadi and Umarkhadi are the strongholds l_)f the language, in
the last-named of which appears aiso a dialect, recorded in the schedules as
•• Moghli ",which we take to be equivalent to "Mugli'', classified in the "·Indexes.
·of Languages " as Persian. From the way in which it is spelt in the schedules·
one would be inclined to look upon it as a mixed or corrupt Persian, in
vogne among the Moghal-Mahommedan residents of B ward. A fe~ speakers of.
" Moghli " appear in E ward, aud also, curiously enough, in W orli. The majority
of those who speak Chinese are to be found in the Market and are mostly of
male sex. A certain:number of males only appear among the Harbonrpopulatiou,
and form the same oroportion of the total Harbour. and Docks population as the
speakeril of Japanese. Arabia is roturned as the ordinary tongue of some two
thousand residente, less than on&'third of whom are femaleP. .B ward, the
Nagpadas and Byculla shelter the majority. :'
Becaoa.
t
Lauflll&go predomluaaug, I
Proporllon lo lbot
lotol c•puloliou
borne 1 opeakero,
lfaap
-l'uel ... -
... ...... ...... ...- D6. Do.
-
... -... ...... •.. 58"17
81'65
-
8ewrl
IliaD
...
- ...... ...... ...... ...... Do.
Do.
- -
...... ... - .... 77'14
'1rti6
-
•t.hllll,..
WorU ...... ...... ...... ... lla.
... ... ...-
Do. -...... - .........
••• ....
..
'18-20
7H3
Barbour, Dookf, Ao. Do.
- •
41'$&
•
llua~L.J Tuwu ami lolau4 "' ... anlhl ... ... ...
43
T ABLB showing the percentage of females speakiJig any one of three main
languages to ~he Mal sectional popnlation speaking that langnage.
Section. Language.
Percent-/
OS" of
fem.lea.
Langu"S"_·
Percent-
age of
females.
Language,
I
i
Percent-
age of
femal81.
Upper Oolaba
Lower Colaba
••• Marathi
••• Do. ...- 15'72 ED!!:lish
28'82 Gnjarathi ...... 8'97 Hindustani
4t72 English ..... 5•10
- 5'17
Dongrl
Market
...... ... Do.
••• Gujarathi
...... 88'21 Gnjamtbi
l!0:,94 M&l'lltbi
...... 8•19 Hindus!Ami ...
9'77 ...... ......
8'45
... ...
Dbobi 1'alao ...
FaniiiiWIIdi
Do.
... Mnmthi
...... 20'80 Do.
25'08 Gnjamtbi ...... 14'75
8'61
.••••••
..... .......
......
Bhnlesbvar ... ••• Gujaratbi
......
!
21•35 Hindustani •••
...
5·18 .•..... -······
.······
Kumbbarwada ... Maratbi 26'06 Gnjarathi 9'79 •••••
...
Kbara Talao ... ... Gujaratbi
...... 17'34 HindnataJii
...... 1N4 .....
....... .....
Kbetwndi ... Marathi 19'21 Gnjlll'lltbi
.
18'16
_.1. --. ······
...... ...... ......
'
Gi!'flaum Do. ...
....
29'31
27•95
-Do.
.Do. ...... 5•28
6·42 ·-·····
......
Ohowpatty Do. ••••••
Walkesbwnr ...
'Mpba]alrabmj
....... Do.
Do.
...
...
16'22
25'05
Do.
Do.
...... 9'51
9•73
.......
..... .......
.....
Tardeo
Kamatbipura
... ...... Do.
Do. .
......, 26•94 Do.
22'67 Hindnatani ...... 7•22
7"69 Telngu
......
- ••••••
8'.ll>
lat Nagpada...
2nd Niigpada '
...... Hindustani
Do. ...... 81•82 Do.
22"85 Marathi
...
... 4•88
15•00 .'"···
..... .......
.....
B;youlla
Tarwadi ...... ...... Maratbi
Do. ...... 26•95 Hindustani
25'55 Do. ...... 8•59
8•71
.......
..... ......
····~·
Masagon
Patel
...
•••
...... Do.
Do. - ... 24'19 Do•.
82'79 Gujaratbi
...... 6'42
2'92
........
...... .•.....
•••••
Bewri
Bion ...... ...... Do.
Do.
...... 81'26
81'18
Do.
Do. ...... 5'04
5'10
.....
....... .······
.....
Mnhim
Worll ...... ..... Do.
Do.
...... 82'54 Hindustani
82'50 Do.
...... !1'41
li·IS
...... ....•.2'86
Gujaratbi ...
Harbour, Docks, &o.... Do. ... .l·i9 Gnjlll'llthi ... 9'43 •••••• ......
.
Bombay Town ani
Island.
~~ ... l!O'.li Gnjlll'llthi ... 8•05 Hindnstani•••
'
4•7&
4f
BIRTH-~LACE.
lug, tho ltuukaui, who ie d_,t•udt~d frnm th& old" Nawai&" oorn•uuuity, iotas vld
a ,.,.it.ltmt ol the i•lau<l ae lhe Par•i, and originally llhart'd th11 N•>rlh F<llt wuh
the !aiL"'· liD i• by t.lt!IK'eul wboll,v distinct frOJU abe Mu~hal, Llu~ I'IALh.w or Dl\1111
fll<IIIUl Mahunt...llln itntu4:ranbi from the north ,.r India; aud eo lw.g aa h<.l
r 10 main• in thao, bill t~~~rliuotl home, "' loug will a h~h ptiNtlllla,l..'\• of lh<' ('bal. Ia
r..
P''l'ullllntl Lo utul lu have b.."" l><lfll iu u.. m~y. 'l'tu• "•urlh IW~i·w. ~
l'\a.:p 4 ,J 11 , aloo uuulaiuo 1 f-.ir 1111111l••r 1>l'l"'l'8••n• btdou~il..: ~ e<•WtUIIUillt'a whu~h
1118y IMt uaJ ao ha•• uul\111 lhol l•l11nd th..\r howe. llf th•- I '"'*" I'"'U..·ullu-1)'
11te lllolln•J.ri•, ,J,.,,,,.,n,hut'- ul' earU•••I adllt•t·o~, tlto Ch.u11t..hw-. ~· M•~'•i•, ~uJ llwo
Julah.••·
I
Cotch is a region which supplies the ciCy with grain merchants and others
'whose daily work obliges them to live near the port;.and hence one finds Mandvi
more thickly-populated with Cutch-born residents "than any otJ:ler section. A
amall number live in Bhuleshvar, Chakla and the North Fort; bot speaking
generally, one need never look for a Cutchi outside Mandvi ; and a stroll down
Dongri .Strent and the Clive roads and streets of that section will convince one
of the truth of this assertion.
Turning to the Deccan, it appears that Satara-born persons are most
numerous in Dongri, Fanaswadi, Kumbharwada, Khctwadi and 1st Nagpada; that
Poena supplies a certain number of people .to Dongri and Byoulla ; and that the
number of Ahmednagar-boru residents is comparatively trifling, Kamathipura
being the only region in which they form more than 5 per cent. of the total sec-
tional population. The inference deducible from these facts is ~hat the Deccan
supplies us with coolies, bullock-cart drivers, small traders, shoemakers and the
like, but not with mill-hands. The Poena-born population in Byculla probabl,r
includes a few of the latter cL'Iss; but, as a rule, we should say that the Deccan sup-
plies labour other than iliat connected with cotton spinning and weaving. !tis
noteworthy that Deccan-born males are invariably more numerous than Deccan-
born females ; and one inclines to the belief that from 15 to 20 per cent. of the
population of Fanaswadi, Kumbharwada and 1st Nagpada is a shifting population,_
liable to augmentation and decrease at certain fixed seasons of the year•
.'1 _l ••
'· · One glanoe at the figul'el! sliows thai the Kirnkan, that is to say Ratnagiri
iorms a vast and unfailing souroe of supply of population. There a1·e Indeed onl;
five sections in which the native of Ratnagiri forms leBB than 6 per cent. of the
population, namely, the South Fort, an European business centre, the Ncrth Fort
home of the Parsi race, Chakla, home of the Mahommedall, Bhuleshvar, inhabited~
merchants, and Khara. Talac, which is given over to the Mnsulman. Thirty-five per
cent. of the Girgaum. population, forty-two per cenc. {)f the Chowpatty population
:were born in the R11tnagiri district, which supplies the oily with clerks, with sepoys,
<l:llice-hamals, peons and others. Even in Lower Colaba this disirict claims 16 per
eent. of the inhabitants ; for there are mills and presses there, a Tramway Com•
pany's head-quarters, a cotton bandar .and a Bassoon Dock, which offer steady
wages to the labourer of the Konkau. And when we fare northward of B ward,
Chowpatty and Walkeshwar, we find the Ratnagiri·born population ubiquito1111.
In Mazagon, Tarwadi, Pare!, Sewri and W orli they form from 27 to 44 per cent.
of the total population of those sections, while in Tardeo, Byculla, Bion, Mahiln and
the Docks, they provide from 16 to 24 per cent. of the totaL Thers can be little
doubt that the bulk of the · industrial population, the weavers and the
cotton-spinners, come to the city from Ramagiri ; and that in many cases
they come for short periods only, leaving their families behind them. In
Pare!, Sewri and S~on, for example, the Ratnagiri-born males are very neru-ly,
though not quite, double the number of Ratnagiri-born females ; and this male
preponderance is visible in every section. In the Docks and Harbour the feature
is further intensified, for out of a total RaU.agiri-born population of 11,531,
lhe females number only 217 I The one section of the island in which they
form no appreciable proportion of the total residents is Chakla, which doea not
snppll' them with the species of labour for which they are best fitted. ·
. Lastly, the population oom outside India demands attention. One is scarce-
ly surprised to find that it forms about 13 per oent. of the total harbour population ;
for the arrival of vessela belonging to the big European steamship companies,
the pressnoe of ships belonging to His Majesty's navy, and the considerable
number of Enropeana, Africannndothers who spend their life between the bandars
and the shipping in the atream, aro inevimbly bound to affect the totaL So far as
the land eec:tiona are ooncemed, ooly two areas contain any appreciable proportion
of penons born ouiside India 0 namely, Upper COlaba. with ias Enropo:m military
element, and the South Fort, with iia hotels and 1!ais for Europeans, its EDglish,
German, Frenob, Bwiaa, Greek, Prullllian and Japanese establishment& With ilia
oxoeption of Wl\lkeshwar and the Esplauade, the population bom oulside the limils
ollndla ill pracUoaUy non-exietent between tht North Fun and Si\>n l'D &hOl
Eaat, ond betwellft Dhobi Talao and Wodi on the West.
•
4'1
. Boetimll.
i
1 I . .,
~~apr. &lara. Bam.-
mbay Ahmed· girl. Cukb., ~~ ISural. I0j..~
... -
Vpper Colaba•••
Lo•erOolaba••• ... ...
22·67
22'28
1•39
2'78
• 4•171
6'22
7·23
I6·3l>
'()5
•53 :I I
2'20
476
25'68
6·69
-Eoplaaado
... -· ·- f 44'18
2·77
I 1'33
1'31 6'19 1•63 (•8(
Cbald& ·63
Haadn ... ... ... I 16•39 1'14 6: 675 36117 •(1 111 ·st
Umarkhadl ... ... ...I 31'79 1'62 5'49 9•26 8'70
.
'55 1'37 2'13
Doasri
-Harka. ...
... -... ...
-".II 9'75
22'66
s·so
1!4
11'59
7•70
15'07
10'02
4•18
112
'll
2'97
•29
('94
·2~
•36
Dbobi Talao ... ... - 41'89 •76 S'SG I W04 74 •74 7117 •74
F&nanracli
Bbuleeb•ar
-... ..... ... I
!
••• j
26'21
25·08
-97
·GO
14•39
1'48
20'19
4•07
'57
li'77
2'79
71!4
8'77
8'31
·88
•56
.
.B:111Dbho.,..da ... ···I 19•79 1'94 22'48 16"30 1•22 111'i 1'19 •22
Xhora Tolao ••• ... ••• II 34'10 1•73 8'98 4'31 2'63 1•88 ~25 1'46
Girsaum ... '" 28'88 •42 6'43 35'26 1•26
:l
•78 '2'23 ·SO
Kbenradl ... ... =I ~8·59 1•94 18'32 u-s3 I •57 1-16 4•55
.
•71
·Cho~alty ... ... ... 27'49 ·37 2'01 42'34 1'07 '28 8'()1 •bS
Wallmlnrar ... ... ... 24'08 '58 4'66 20'60 1-13 •99 809 4-52
'" ...
I
lbhalabhml ... 22'66 1•05 I 7'02 37'97 '.76 '68 (•f>S -98
ldaugoa ... ... ... 22'49 1'16 6'96 ' 27'37 '91 •IIi 2'69 -95'
Tarwadl ... ... ... 1&'77 1-94 18'18 28•48 71 '61 1•34 3'12
Byaulla
-· .. - 111'95 3'29 &65 22'15 1'06 2'50 "17 -97
Eamathlpara .,. ... ... 15'31 6'21 8'17 11'66 •95 '97 1•01 ··98
Tardeo ... ... ... 18'48 8•48 10'60 16•74 '98 '72 1•59 1'17
lot Nagpada , .. ... ... 11-17 5•88 16'22 18·80 ·&7 '43 '39 1·87
2nd Nagpoda ••• ... - 88•77 3'19 7•32 6·59 •67 •82 '84 1;73
Pan I ... ... ... , 13'()5 3'71 5•21 44'89 1'05 . ·co 2'85
.·s1
1lloa ... ... ... 82•65 1'77 7'42 24•61 3'34 ·'64 2'54 •2(1'
'So'll'ri
!tlahlm
... ... I
... ... -I -· I
25'59
35'85
1'39
1'87
5•18
&·u
42'67
19'78
•52
1-15
~
-23
1'12
119
·«
·•82
-Worn -· -· ...-! 19'07 1'34 111'08 82'76 '7il '19 2'06 •40
fiarboar, Doob Aa. 1 ··48 1'54 8'33 so·GO 2-19 1'15 7'22 13•38
I
i I
·-I 23·•s II
I
Bombay To..a aa4 Ialand 1·94 7"181 18'79 S'6S 11!4 3'23 H&
-
-
18
INFIRMITIES.
Infirmities.
r- 1872.
•
I 1881.
I 1901 •
the most noticeable ccmniunity in three out of the six sections llf 0 ward ; but
the l'arsis disappear as a predominating element from Bhuleshvar, Kumbharwada
and Khara Talao. In lhe first and last named sections the Mahommedan Shailr
is supreme, notwithsta~ding that the Vani clings to Bhuleshvar, and the Borah
disputes hill claim to predominance in Khara Talao. In Kumbharwada the Kon-
kani Maratha and the Bhandari strive ineffectually to approximate in numbers to
the Kunbi. In D. ward the Maratha Kunbi again heads the list for each section ;
and leaving him aside, one finds Khetwadi given over to the Parsi, to the Shaik
and to the Julhai or Jolaha ; Girgaum given over to the Brahman, in particular
the Chitpavan ; Chowpatty tO the Parsi and Bhandari ; and W alkeshvar and
Mahalakshmi also to the Parsi. In every portion of ·Eward appears the Mahom-
medan Shaik ; while in 2nd Nagpada and Byculla live a fair number of Jolahas,
aJ?.d in the former section also a good many Pathans. Mhars are numerous in
every portion of the ward, except 1st Nagpada, where the Gauli, the Teli and
the Bhandari appear : while of other low-castes one notices particularly the Mochi
in Kamathipura, 2nd Nagpada and Byculla. The chief feature of the F and G
warda is the predominance of the low-caste Hindu population. There are a
certain number of ?tlahommedan Shaiks in both wards, and some Parsis in Pare!;
but the larger proportion of the residents in these ·areas falls under one of the
following headings : Kunbi, Konk~ni Maratha, Mhar, Agri, Koli, Gauli and
Mochi : and from 37 to 47 per cent. of the population under these heads are
females. It is worth passing remark that the six Hindu castes, which show the
largest proportion of females, are the Marathas (Kunbi and Kbnk;ini),· the Mhars,
the Bhandaris, the Mochis and the Ko!is ; and that these six divisions are far
more numerous iu the eastern and northern portions of the island than in the
central and .southern. The " Atit " caste, otherwise called " Gosavi, " has no
female population whatever.
It has already been remarked that so large a number of persons were re-
turned simply as ''Brahmans,'' tbat it seemed inadvisable .to keep the sub-divisions
in the table. But it may be noted that, of all the sub-divisions which found their
way into the schedules, the Audich and the Gaud Sarasvat were numerically tha
greatest, and-1lontained respectively 3,181 and 5,089 persons, members of these
sub-divisions being discoverable in every section of the island. The Chitpavans
bulked largely in Girgaum, but scarcely appeared at all in the A and C wards.
"Brahman Prabhu" waa the designation of 9 individuals who have in the table
been included among the Prabhus. '
Of the other old communities of Bombay Island, the Bhandaris, who form
2 p:r cent. of the. total p~pulatio~, an~ .tbe Panchkalahis, are still to be found in
~a;.,er n;mbera m ~ahim, ~eli or1gmal home, than in other sections of the
18
and, ut tho Agna, the Maha, the Bhois and the Thakurs seem to have spread .
'
liS
themselves'f~r '!Dora' i~pa.rtinlly ·mr the face. 6f the island, aild ·~0 h~'Ve-taken
t!ome· advautage. of ·the ·livelihood · afforded: ·by -work in· the Dooke and ·He.rbuur
The Kol~, who were ·here Defore' any of .the ab®e·DIA!ntioued. communities, an~
who are by natiue seamen, 'appear in far larger numbers in the Hnrbour;·nnd
Docks than eliiewhete, · but their numerical strength in Lower Colaba, Mandvi,
Dhobi Talao, Mazagon, Sion, Mahim and Worli, 'proves that they find it iliflioult
'to leave those areas which were chosen· as the sites of early hut-settleme 11 ts. by
their ancestors. · · . . : · · ··
Among low-co.ste Hindus, both the .Dheds and the :Mhsrs show an. increase ' :
·since 1881; and the rise in the latter is very considerable, namely, from 27,000 ttt
-40,000. Whether this is entirely a matter fOP congratulation, is open to question , .
for the death-rote among such clnsses is high, and the conditions, onder- wliich ·
they often live, are bound to operate-as a menace· to the public health, particolarty ·.
in sections like Byoulla, Tardeo llDd Kamathipora. · . . .:
~.4
___
OCCUPATION,
....,....._...
.. · · T~e columna of the schedule dealing with ""g uuuu.l''""'uua uuo" popwa,1on
were not as fully or as carefully written up as one would have wished. As has
elsewhere been stated, there were three ~olomns in the sche"dule, headed " Occupa-
tion in Bombay", "Occupation elsewhere", and" Subsidiary Occupation", the
o~ject being to ·discover the hom~H>Ccupations of the huge immigrant popula..
tion of the· city. So far as the city-occupations of the people are oouceroed.
there is little reason to quarrel with the work of the Enumerator, notwithstanding
titat some of the entries were far too indefinite: 'lint great numbers of them failed
to :fill up the two latter columns, and thereby vitiated the results which one had
h,oped to .obtain. The chief reason for the omission was probably the very large
quantity of information which had to be written down in regard to the stmctural
characteristics o£ th!l island, and the desire of the Enumerators to escape from the
possibility of plagu~infeotion, by :finishing the enumeration of their blocks as
speeciily as possible.· Provided that no plague-epidemic is raging on the occasion
of a future census, -and that fou:r days. instead o£ three are set apart for the prelimi-
nary enum~ation, there seems to be no reason why all the information sought
for in 1901 should not be fully obtained. Considering the conditious undPr which
the lar.e census was carried out, it is perhaps surprising that the sbfl' followed
their or.den as olosely as they did.
We would deal firstly with the thrae or four. oocupations followed b:v- lhe
largnllt number ol peranua in the islaud, lakan 111 bloc and by 1100tions. A
ptrtllllll of Table XV ehow• that the four OOOit)'alil.lna which olaim the largt'll
number of per110u1 in the hiland are (i) 'rhe preparation of Cottou, (ii) Gt>nt>nl
Labour (1ub-order 711 ill the auheme of olueitioatiou). (iii) Boa& and ~ man
and (IV) lliloellaneonl! or ullapooilieJ domllltio eenioo. N1.1w th11 proportioa
borne by the population oiUalifted unJur the hea Jiug .. c~.~uon .. lu the P"l'lllatiOil
of tbe iMiand amonnll to 11·01 per Oolll&., ou\ of which 9·~3 ptJf ooul. AN J><'l'80011
lllli:"ll"d in or depotu..h•n* upon the nulnnfaoture and preparatiOil of t'OiiOil b;r
att-•m·power. The bala110e is ma•le up ofperaona et~"'\ged in the blw.d-lnJIIIf.lrY•
or In oooupationa uut tliret•lly oo•weott>d with the oolloo·miU inJu~try. Of ilie
*"'"' 11 Oullvn 11 popullltil.lll whic•b 1\0iually wurk11, IOLU& N pt'l oollt. arell~ auJ
116 po>r ouui are li>m11lea ; wbilu dt~pemlt>Utli up..-.u a<Jtu!\1 w•'l'kllN f,II'Ul NU¢hly ~
l"'' ounl. ol till Mal. The popullltiun UU•It>r thia ht>llll ilantOi\ \IUIU\11'\'1111 iu lh•
fulluwiul! h111 auotiuua :-Worli, llyoulla, l'!Wl, Ma¥~""'1\ Ml\ha~UIIhmi. ~'"
.-55
The main ocoupaf.iona in ilia South Fort are very similar to lhoae followed
in ilie last-named area ; with this exception, that ootton mill operatives dis-
appear almost entirely. General labour, the culiDary art, and menial· ~ce
account for the bulk of the population, and are, moreDl'er, eonfined pracncally a}.
together to the male sex ; while under General Labour only doee &he proportion
Gf the dapendents to 100 workers rise to a high figure, Ill&. 9~ The110 thJee
ac:eupationa are followed by 5 per cent., 3 percent., and 4 per cenL of theresidenU.
in the North Fort; but a new elemenL is also introduced here, namely, that ~
" Writers" or "Clarka" unspecified, who form 3 per cent. of the see&iolllll
population, 8 per oen&. of the total population under the heading "Wri&era ~
fied." and whoae dependents Btand to the workers in the proponion of 178 to 100.
Thia proportion among writers in the North Fort is indeed higher than lhe propor-
&ion borne by the dependenta in any of the fonr main ooonpa&iona in other seeiioo&
General Labour in the North Fort alau provides for my months, there being
109 dependeota ~ every 100 workera in cha~ area. In the Esplanade ~e miliAry
oo.lllpaiiou again predominate&, owing to the presence of two NatiTe lnfanuy
.regiwenca, wh<JBe nou-commiaaioned offioera Blid aepoya together form 10 per
G~tnL of the total aectional population. After them oome once mora general
labourers, funning 9 per oent., ooob forming 'per cent., and other domesUI!aervaniB
lormiog also ' per oenL of the total The proportion uC dependt>nts under the
four oluaea i•, except in the Cllll8 of genenl labour, ams1l ; there beiug, for
aampl&, only 17 dependenill per 100 workera among the domestics of the
E-ulanade, aud only !6 per 100 among the aoldiera.
M1111ial &rvice and General Labour 11ra agtW1 to the fore in B ward ; 1M
IaUer J*fiioularly in Dougrl, where ita populatillO amolllile to 24 pt'f - ' - of she
to&al, tho formeJ' In Chakla, where II• folio~ amoWll to aboul9 ~ o.mL of she
&olal population of Bombay, eo.,"'lggd in domeacio ~ice. But &here ..,. ohabgea
to be notioecl ne-.wtbt~INa. 'l'ailoraand millinen appear in ChakJa. wh.ld
dept>uJonta aaand 1o autual workent in tho proportillQ uf 81' ptr e111t.; wn"\ots :Wso.
wi'b dopend..uiM Jlumbtirinslil6 per-'- of worker-. and hrokolll and a;<-~ta.
who numbotr 11 por oed. or the total populalion ot' she ialand, eab~ in brukwg
eod rnoral .......11")'. Of tho r:eneral miiiOhanta of Bonlba1· aud ul g~~
111'11, ~moo Cl~ posr oont. a~ul 91 Jill' eeut. IOlllpet"U~..,. to t..o-.1 in. M~lllivl; aud
both lh11111 oh111•ea IU pporl a large nambor of noa-wwk.-, tlltalliug '" ~ f.'lllk'f
oa1111 to 108 and lu tb11 lalllll to U:t pu Ol'llt of \ft~A;\.wiu~ hi t?_..k.h:»"li
theat two cwouJlllli\llla cli•ppeu ba &-rout of oar,~-, 111-l .....,lio...._...
5i
In Dongri cart-owners and cart-drivers, !llld mill-operatives form ~e largest
proportion of the populat:on, exclusive of the general labourers. Taking B w:mi
88 a whole the proportion home by female workers to the whole working
.population~ very small, except among the labourers of Mlllldvi or Dongri,
where it amounts to roughly 5 per cent. and 3 per cent.
• A very large proportion of the 0 ward population follows the occupations
classified as General Labour and Miscellaneous domestic service; as for example
in Kumbharwada, where 17 per cent. of the population, of whom 14 per cent. are·
males and 8 per cent, are females, falls under the former category. Brokers and
agents form 2 per cettt. of the Market population. Tailors, milliners, &c., form
2 per cent. and l per- cent. of the Dhobi Talao and Khara Talao populations;
carpenters form 2 per cent. and 3 per cent. of the Bhuleshvar and Knmbharvada
popuJ&tions; shoemakers appear to the extent of 3 per cent. in Khara Talao; while
''Writers unspecified" lind a home in the Market, Fanaswadi, an~ Bhuleshvar.
So far as dependents are concerned, the proportion per cent. of actual workers is
highest among the writers of Ifan&&wadi, Bhuleshvar and the Market, and the
carpenters of Bhuleshvar and Kumbharwada,
passing on, tliat the position occupied by general labour in Tarwndi and Maze.-
gon, namely, that ofthe second most widely followed means of subsistence ia
usurped in Bycnlla. by the cotton-wea.ving ha.nd industry, which su:pports 6 'per
oent. of the population of that section, composed of 4 per cent. who are males anc1
2 per cent. who are females. This same hand industry also :ligures to a less
extent, in Tardeo and 2nd Nagpada, where 2 per cent. and B per cent. ~f the pe~
pie are returned as hand-weavers of cotton. Of other main oocnpations, one r~
marks sweepers and scavengers, who form 4 per cent. of the Tardeo population;
tobacco and snuff-sellers, chiefly· female, who form .£ por cent. of the Kamathi-
pura community ; constables, messengers and peons, etc., forming 2 per cent. of
the 1st Nagpada population; shoe, boot and sandal makers, numbering 4 per
cent. of the population in 2nd Nagpada, and carpenters, who comprise 2 per cent.
of the population of Mazagon. Fro'll the earliest years of 'British occupation
Mazagon h~ always served as the home of the carpenter, who finds plenty of
employment in the dookyards a.nd bandsrs. The proportion home by dependents
to actual1(()rkers is hightest among the carpenters of Mazsgon, the ootton-mill
subordinates of 2nd Nagpada, the labourers of Tardeo, and the personal servants
resident in 1st Nagpada, and averages from 102 to 121 per 100 workers.
Turning to F ward, one is ~ooain face to face with a large lzr.bouring and
industrial population. In Pare! 39 per cent. of the population, in Sewri 26 per
cent., and in Sion 11 per cent., are returned as cotton-mill subordinates; while the
female population falling under this heading forms 11 per cent., 7 per cent. and 4
per cent., reepectively, of the total population ofthesethreeareas. General labour,
which is the second most widely followed meana of livelihood, accounts for only
3 per cent of the Pare! population, 8 per ·cent. of Sewri residents and 7 per cent. of
Sion inhabitants : whence one may infer that F ward ia the chief home
of the mill-operative and subordinate. In regard to other oocupationa, most com-
monly met with, the three sections vary considerably in character. In Pars!, for
e::uunple, In-door servants and Railway or Tramway operative& constitute the ne:st
moat numorou1 cluaes, 9 per cent. of the total population of the island under ws
latter heading being domiciled in that seotiou. In Sewri, these olaases yit>ld
pLwe 1o alOne and marble workera. wh0118 handiwork of\en finds its way to ~e
European cemetery, aud to fishermen or fish ourers, the desoondante of earli~
~t~ttlel'll, who form about 7 per oeut. of the total population I!Db~...d in oatchiog or
o11ting lioh. In Sion, whtoh yei rem.U01 to be urbanised. livee 11ome S~ per Ct'Oi.
of the whole J>OI•ulalion engftb'tld in liuld labour, out of whom 13 ~ oent. are
t~males; and aCtor ibem apptmr dyers of ooitoo, uumbering 60 p<>r ceul. of the
whole population of the iiiland llDj..'llgt'd in thai OOOUpatiun. Of alllhf' &00-11--
dout!<} ol111111t!ll 1 iho tl11hanuen of &wri, the tleld·workeni of Si•'U. lhe marbl~
outwr• of Sewri and lhe Rrulw~y operaliYIIII of Pare! ab(lw. the bigbtlOit ~~
of t.lepenileult, lllllnely, l·H, ll)\), 91, &ud 88, Nol~*-•tively, pet 100 ~~lual work.~
Railway ut 'l'r11111W11Y ol'erative1 antl aubordiual<'~ aN ~y di••"'-nrabl\l Ul
Worli, Jlyunll11, P11rel, Uuu.~rkha,\i, !l"d N~~gJllldl\, Ma~"<-'n auJ LI.'Wet _('vla.N..
'fhunl!"h liomllhg only ·113 I'"' oenl. of the loto.lrorulaliNl \l£ tht> i~t ...\,11..-lt a-'tW&I
llUIUh81'11 have iuol'til\llthl to.inlltl l~\11 by a, Hit. A• ill bul '"''""''· lh" mal" "\ll'k\'lll
furm \II) I'"' oonl. ot' Uu!l Mal, wltile d••t•u•lt•nll lll\llll l\1 au111lll "''"k"N i:lllh•
l''"l''"'liuu of US 111 100.
59
A few remarke are necessary upon the percentage of actual workers and
dependents in tbe twenty-four main orders ·of occupations laid down by the
Census Commissioner. Dealing, imprimis, with their relation to the total popu-
lation of the island, it appears that the proportion borne by the actual workers in
this case is highest in the following four orders:-Textile Fabrics and Dress (XII);
Earthwork and General L'abour (XXII) ; Personal, Household and Sanitary Service
{VI) ; Transport and Storage (XIX) ; for under these headings the workers form, .
respectively, 12 per cent., 8 per cent., 8 per cent., and 4 per c~nt. of the total popu-
lation of the island. The percentage of persons supported (both workers and
dependents) is also highest in the three firsf;.named classes ; for they form 20 per
.cent., 14 per cent. and 12 per cent. of the total population ''of the' island. The
fourth place, however, is yielded by order XIX to order XVIII, Commerce, which
·supports 8 por cent. of the total population. Actual workers and those who derive
their subsistence from order I, Administration, form respectively 1 and 3 per
cent. of the whole population ; under order XX, Learned and. Artistic prof~ssions,
the:r. approximate to 2 per cent. and 5 per cent. of the total. Among such pro-
fessions, one notes that medicine claims •27 per cent. of the population as. actual
workers, and •57 per cent. who are directly or indirectly supported by it. Persons
following Indefinite and Disreputable Occupations (order XXIII) form only ·90 per
.cent. of the total, while those supported, both workers and others, form ·96. lu
this connection it may be noted that the number of personA, dependent upon
public prostitution for a living, has risen from 1,524 in 1881 to 2,419 in the year
under report.
Imperial Table XVI deals with the occupations of two selected communities,
the Parsis and Prabhus. It will suffice perhaps to say that of the whole Parsi
community the actual workers form 31•20 per cent., the dependents 68·80 per cent. ;
while of the whole Prabhn populstion, 29·17 per oent. appear as workers, and 70·83
per cent. as dependents. Both communities affect private clerical work, rather
than any other line of livelihood : for 3 per cent. of the Parsis and 5 per cent. of
the Prabhus are returned as private clerks. But a commercial life is also in
favour with the Parsi community, which returns 3·16 per cent, of its total strength
as merchants. Among Prabhus, Government employ is almost as widely sought
as the· service of private firms and individuals, for 4 per cent. of the whole
Prabhn brotherhood are found to be clerks in the service of Government.
.61
1'ABLB showing the proportion borne by aotual workers ·and persons supported
nuder each Order to (a) total population of Isla.nd, (b) total population •
• in eaoh order. ·· · ·
...
I
Proportion to total Percentage of \owl
populetlon of the population of eech A..;etDge nm....
loland borne by order tome by ber of De-,
Order, peodenta·
.Actual
worken.
I Penons
IDpported~
.Aetna!
workers. ·I DepOildsnta.
upon 100'
workers.
... ......
I. Administration 1'71 3·52 49 51 106 :
IL Defence •47 •57 sa 17 20
-
III. Service of Native nnd
Foreign States ... ... ... - '
69 31 .45
...... ......
Draa 12'75 20·10 63 37 58
Cotton 11•07 16•98 65 36 53
.XUJ. Metals and Preoiona
,.
. Stones ... ... 1•.29 2•67 48 52 106
Iron nnd Steel ••• •49 •96 51 49 97
XIV. Glnsa1 Enrthen nod
Stone Wuro
XV, Wood, Cane and
... '19 :ao ' 48 52 108"
Loaves ... ... 1'49 . 3•15 47 53 111
XVI. Droge, Gums and
Dhes ...
XVII. Lent er, Horn and
... •20 ·.u 48 52 109
Bones, eto ... '96 1'7ll 55 45 80
XVIII, Commeree •••
XIX. Tmnsport nnu Stora11e
... 3•87
4•90
8'43
' 46 54 118
7'75 63 37 fl8
XX. Learned and Artiatio
Professions ... 2'42 5•93 41 ~9 145"
XXI. Sport ...
XXII. EBrth wnrk and
... ·o3 '05 52 48 94,
xxm.
Geneml Labour ...
Indefinite and Disre-
s·?a I 14'24 61 39 63·
-
putah!& ...
XXIV.. Jndopemlent
••• I
••• 1
,. •90
2•14
I •96
3•79
94 6 7
i I 57
,. 43 77
18 -- •
.
62
: .. ,.. •
: ~)
~ .;
'filE CHRISTIAN,POPUuTION; ''
•: ~ ' • ! . . .
Imperial Tables XVII and. XVIII deal with the distribution of the Chris-
tian population by sect and race, and by race and age.-· The two denominations.
most widely met with are the Anglican Communion and the Roman Ca~holio,.
members ofbothseets being found in every section of the island except Bhnleshvar,
Khara Talao and Knmbharwadn. Ofminorseoteone notes that COngregntionaliste
have decreased by 17, or: 47 per cent, since 1891; Presbyterians by 420, or 60
per cent., Salvationists by 36, or 67 per cent. ; while Baptiste show an increase of'
25,or 46 per cent., members of the Greek C.hurch an increase of 37, or 119 per cent.
and. Methodists an increase of 146, or 47 per oent. Roman Catholics number 3511·
le&s· than they did ten years ago,· and now stand to members of the Anglican.
Communion in the proportion of 1 : 2·36.
Turning to the subject of the extent to which Europeans, Eurasians or·
Native Christians severally affect this or that denomination, it appears that
Europeans form the bulk of the Anglican community ; for their males number 57
per cent. of the sect-numbers, as against 7 per cent. and :1 per cent. formed by
Eurasian males and male Native Christians; while their female population forma.
21 per cent. of the total, as against 6 per cent. and 3 per cent., who are respectively
females of the Eurasian and Native Christian communities. Generally speaking~
the great mass of the European and Eurasian population belongs to the Anglican
communion, wht1e the Native Christian affects Roman Catholicism, this being the
creed with which long years have made him most familiar, and which also appeals
perhaps more forcibly to his feelings. Of the whole Roman Catholic community,
56 per cent. are males and 29 per cent. are females ohhe Native Christian popula-
tion; the balance being made np of European males and females to the extent of 5
per oenl. and 2 per cent. respectively, and of Eurasian males and females to the ex-
tent of ro:ughly 2 per cent. in each oaea. Among those who returned themselves as
Baptiste, some 76 per cent. are agnin Europeans, 16 per cent. are Native Christians
and 11 per cont. are Eurasians: while in regard to those of the Methodist persua-
sion, the highest percentage of the whole community is borne by European males,
namely 86 per cent.; the second place is held by femnles of th~> Native Christian
diviaion, who form 29 per cent. ol the total ; and the third place by Europt'lln
females, who form 16 per ceul. A few Eurasiana of both $&Xes, and male eonvert8
oompoee the balance of the numbers belonging to this denomination. With regard,
to the Greek Chufl·h, Eurasians and Nativo Christians are DOD-8Xl$l&nt ; and the
mule Eurof'tllln element prodomiuates very greatly OTer the felhale..
The European oommunily hae to some extent increased, and the Arm~ai.IIJ
and Eul'lllliPnl lulve d~oreaa.,d, ain001 1891. European mtuee appt>ar lo bave n -
ln numbers to the eJCteut of 6•711 per oeut.; European lema!~ by 3•Tll ret eenl.
· 'l'he d~or1111ae among Etll'llaiaua of both aozt>a ia miU'ked; li.ll' tb., u•alt'8 nuw~
Mllllllll, anJ the fl'males 1197 leu than they did teD yeare agu. The ~t.U toiNuglh
ol tho olluuuuuity, howel'er, tB 00DIIid•'n1bly gl't'llter than in lS..~l, wh.-a onl_y 1,1~
EuraMiatll were rt~lurned, The deorea•o dul'iug the J~¥1 dt'l.'atle i11 llltnival,•ul to a
tlhuluuliou of ll:l per 001111, among malea 1111tt of 5!4 per oout. an1ung ft•n..lt'lll. Thill
Ia duttbtlu.. due In aome d~"" to a riaing d~alb.mt.,. \vhkh. """'~'l\'<\ iu 1:-l.l,li u
38 I"'' 1,000 fill m11l.,w, 1111<1 :1\ )lUI' 1,000 fill' femal\lll, NB• in 1~1,)1) "' ·U auJ ~l\
Jl•r l,(lOO, 11ud lu 1000 to 4\lllnd Ill per 1,000 IU..lh11 two 11\\-'\lili ""'l""'liwly. .\1
lb11 11m11 thu11, It I• by 110 ""''lllw imptlllll.\blu that lk•lh tho Kmui<\11 .\"'~"" all\\
·--· • r r· • .• • .~.
the European ii!CI'elise may be partly' spurious, and-may result msome ,m_ea~lt
from the inalusion· ot'Earaliians as Europeans in the schednlee. There i~r, i~ is be·
lieved, considerable objection among members of the former community to- calling-
themselves " Eurasians " ; and it· seems a re3sonable supposition that a certain
number may have entered themselves in their Household iichedules as "Ear()o--
poans ". This circumstance, coupled with an increased rate i>f mortality and &
finer discrimination between Eurasians and Native Christians, has probably effected
a reduction in numbers. Armenians also show a decrease of 22 per cent, amo11g
males and of 15 per cent. among females-a.result which iii perhaps mainly due to
emigration. In calculating the annual death-rate among various classes of the
population, Armenians are usually amalgamated by the Municipal Health Dep~
ment with the European community, in which the death-rate has during the last
few years been comparatively low. One is, 'herefore, inclined to regard""the present
decreaae merely as further proof of that desertion of the island by the Armenian
race which has been gradually taking place since·the m1ddle of the 19th centurj-.
Of the three communities, the Eurasian is that which is marked by
the highest proportion of females, 46 per cent. of its numbers belonging to·
the female sex, as against 37 per ,cent. among Armenians, and 28 per cent.
among Europeans. Among Native Christians, the women form about 35 per cent.
of the tota.l numbers of the community. Eurasian females appear to be most
numerous at the age-periods 0-12 and 15-30, when they form re~pectively
12 per •
cent. and 15 per cent. of the total community, bothJ males
'I .
and
,
females.
At the age-periods, 12-15 and 50 and over, they bear a very small proportion to
the total , but appear to be somewhat longer-lived than the mert, if one may so-
judge from the fact that, at the age of 50 and over, they form a higher percentage
of the total community than the mal¥ of that age-period. The eame phenome-
non confronts us inihe case of the Armenians, the age-period o£:1' 5_0.and over••
boing .the only one .in which the proportion borne by females to the total
community is higher than that borne by the maies. As is also the· case witli.
Europeans and Eurasians, Armenian males form the highest proportion of their:
whole community between the ages of 15 and 50, that is to say, the period during
which the business of life hBR to be transacted. Among Europeans and allied
races, the proportion borne by the female population to the total, may be praa.
tically said to never exoeod that borne by the males. At the age-period
0-12, each sex forms 6 per cent. of the whole commnnity; from 12 to 15
each .sex forms only 1 per cent. of the total ; for this is f.he period during which
home education is progressing. At the age-period 15-30 both sexes have
inoreaseJi in numbers, but the males are far more numerous than the females ;
and much the same inequality is visible at the age-period 30-50. After the age
of 50 the excess of males over females is far less noticeable ; and the numbers in
both sexes are smaller than at any other age-period, except that of 12-15. These-
results do not seemingly conflict with one's ordinary experience of European life
in this "country : and it is inevitable that there should be a smaller proportion of
males and females at the earlier and later stages of existence.
• At this poin_t our report ends, so far as the Imperial Tables are concerned ;
sud lt ~nly r·~mnms to notice in 8 fresh chapter· any lessons that may be
forthoommg from the Special Tables, 1-8 which deal with the structural
oharaoteristiOll of the Island. ' ·
'TABL'Bshowing the percentage borne by Europeans, Eurasians and Native
Chriatians of both eexe11 to the total population under certain denominations.
~·-- I
Euruian~. Nalln Obrlot.lau,
DenomiDalion,
IFom~••·lI
llaleo. Halu. I
Femalu,, Haleo. I Femaloa,
Tolal,
Angliona
•
... .. 57'54 21•64 7"21 . 8•58 8•74 8•29 100'00
B.. Oltholio ... ... 5•59 2•5!1 2•85 2•84 56•86 1!0•77 10Qo00
llalea. Femala, I
E aropeana .., ... ... ·- +
•
556 + 187 + 6'78 + 5•73
Armenlaua ••.
...
-... ...... ...... I
13 - 5 - lli'.U - 15'62
~~ 1t-ll I I~ I - Uudonr.j,__.u_-
__
OammuaiiJ.
l'i4 8G·tUI
1
9·
I I I · I I 11'1~
il:NT IN, 4-6ll ••, »S'tl
These tllbles, which deal exclusively with the structural details of the Town
and Island, 11nJ their relation to tho populntion, have been prepared at the apecinl
rcqneHt of the Municipal Corpomtion nnd the Bombay City Improvement Ti·ust.
Qn the supposition that the smaller the area for which-Jefmite information co.n be
obtained, the lighter will ·the labours of those two bodies be, the information collect·
ed by the census staff has been tabulated by Census Circles, the nrea and pcsition of
which nre shown in the mapM accompanying the notfs upon each section of the
islnnd. lL seems to me unlikely that the Hev~rnl circles .of cnch section, II! now
defined, will require alteration in the matter of their area or bound..ries for many
years to come, and consequently the scheme drawn up for the censua of 1901 will
probabfy prove useful as a model for future enquiries into the structural chBracter-
istics of the island, 11nd into the growth or decrease of overcrowding.
Before dealing separately with each of the thirty-two sections or censllll-
cbarges, a few general remarks upon the whole island mny not be considered out
of place. It may be noted that the Enumerators ba ve not in every case clearly
distinguished chala from dwelling-houses ; ~~nd that the numberR shown under the
former heading may, therefore, not be absolutely accurate for all areas. This,
however, is of importance only in the case. of Table 1, ~~nd doea not vitiate the.
general results. Secondly, in some cnses areas are sbJwn in the Tables to be void
of schools or dispensaries. This is apt to be misleading, if one does not re-
member that only euch bnililings as nre exclusively used as echools or dispensaries
were entered as auch in the House-List. Cases do occnr in the City, in which one
or two l'ooms in a dwelling-house are set" apart for euch purposes ; but the building
in such cases l:as been reckoned as a dwelling-house only. Thirdly, it is believed
that Enumerators have occasional~y omitted to ~nter, as :m extra storey, lofts, which
nre used II! lumbel.'rooma ; although, according to the orders issued, they were
expected to so record the111. FQI' this rtltlson, some buildings in the city have been
cutcgoriaed 118 containing one soorey less than they actually contain, if the loft be
taken int> account (vide Table 2). Scrutiny oi special Table No. 1 shows that
tl•c vurio111 chlaaea of struotlll'OII, spread o\·er tbl' face of the island, are by no me-.llls
cq11ally distributed throughout the seven wards; and tliat the character of that
areu• ia to eume extunt ucterminabl" from the prctsenoe or absence of this or that
kinu of builuing. Fur extllllple, A waru must runk abo,·e all other& aa a businese-
oormc, an•l11a an aMJA within which I he requirew~nts llf Western civili1111lion haVIl
been more wiuuly •atiatled ; for it oontllins m11ny more ofticea auJ. more ho:opitals
tl11111 11ny otbur wl\1"1}. B wnrtl 1 on the other hand, ia par t.c«llt"ll« the home of
the llullllmBn, 111 one ju<lget from the pr811ence of ST wasjids; anJ is :llso
witluly oooupied by tha naliVIl meroh11nt cowmunity, m..wudl au i\ ooni~ins
DJnruu lllllUIJcr or J:OJOwne, anJ ia the llllly II~ in &hu islauJ. whweiu ,\wt'Uicg-
buu•~•, wi'h gooowna or ak>re-l'OOWI on tha lowlll' tl,;ur.s, •t'lli'V in l~"
nuu,Lt.r.. C wunl ia numrkllblo fOl• oontniuinf a l&U)."'t nwub.tr of •lw..llivg-
I!UU""• lllOJ"'r nud •hojlll th&Ul llllY oth~r; 1\U,\ th" naturo of thtl P"pullltivn
OOlliJ',I hll( llllJ rttntiUjf IUCh buiJJi11g1 il Jiwly polU'tl~~ by \1111 Pft'-1.-.
iJI thu WIII'J Of 8. llin.Ju teW}llel, whil.•h ia thu }Ufll"' nuwb« ,\ioCO'""t•.J.
61
in any ward. The area whiCh .1pproximates most nearly to 0 ward as a native
resinenr.ial quarter is the E ward with its 3,660 dwelling-houses. The f<Jurth
ward, D, hns several claims to attention: Firstly it contains far m{)re bungalows
than any other, and therefore ronks pr&-eminently as the -residential quarter of an
European and well-to-do native population ; l!econdly, it is a ehal-eentre, for it .
contains almost as many ns E ward, which is the true home of the chal-inhabiting
population ; thirdly it contains a considerable Parsi popuhtion, for it can show
mot·e fire-temples than appear in other parts of the island : and, lastly, it is an area
of stables, both public and private, and built both for horses and cattle. The
varied nature of E ward is appal'ent from the fact that it contains more churches,
schools and dispensaries than BDY other, more god owns and small tiled shops, and
more chills, mills and workshops ; while its Mahommedan population is supplied
with as many maijjids as there are in B ward. F ward is an area of small riled huts,.
used as dwellings, and of small thatched shops ; while G ward is partly an
industrial locality, contuining only five fewer mills than E ward, and partly a
camping-ground for a poor population, whose thatched or "cadjan" dwelling-huts-
are mure than two thous11nd in number.
This last fact is in some degree respolll!iblc for a greater ground floor
population in G ward than in others. At the same time we may note that, starting
from tlto northern limits of the island, the population appears to reside at a greater
distance from the ground the further southward one travels. Thus, in wards-
G, F and E, the gl'ound-floor population is most numerous; D warJ contains-
the largest population resident on tlte first upper storey ; ()'' wai-,J,· the largest
number on the second, third and fourth upper storeys ; and A. ward the largest.
number of persons resident upon the fifth anJ sidh floors. On the other hand,
the sub-division of buildings into 11 multiplicity of rent-payers' holdings is far
moro widely practised in E ward than elsewhere ; while 0 ward is remarkable for
the pr~scncc of one building divided up into 451 ten9mentd (both occupied and
unoccupied). ·
In general, the oocup3ncy of sep1m1te bnildings by very large uumbers of
indh·iduals, is commoner in E wa.t•d than elsewhere ; although, even here, the
nt(\j ority of tho structures, as in all other parts of the island·, contain no more
th11n 20 individuals. Single clll!es of very densely-populat~d buildings naturally
OCCUI' in almost all pllrts : as for example in E, A, G, and B wards, which ~ontain.
houses occupied respectively by 691, 663, 587and. 492 persons : but the average
pop11lntion per inhabited building never rises. beyond 35, a.s in B waU"d, and is lower
th11n 20 in four out of the seven wards of the island. G ward shows the lol\·es~
average population p~r hou~e, namely, 15'08. Of ull wards of the island, E ward is.
that containing the greatest population ; and also inclndes the lru.:gest .numbet• of
persons sharing single rcom~ with between 10 and 19 others, and with more than
l!O others, As mnny ns 8,421 individtmls in this ward are discovered to be sharin"'
singl.e :ro·•~s witlt twenty or more otbt'l'll. S11ch being the general results {){ ou;
, enqumes, 1t only remains to add that the actually largest number of individuals in
a single room wns discovered in B wtu-d (Mandvi), where an apartment, 56i feet
long by 40 feet bread, in thu relll' of a house fncing Dongri Street, and lying to the
west o~ the Musjid Railway Station (G. I. P. Railway), was occupied by 54 Customs
kbalasts. Bhuleshwar ( C ward) contained a single room, occupiEd by 43 persons :
68
.
two roollll, one. in. Khn~a 'Ealao (0 wBrd.) Mill the oth. iu 2nd :Nngpu.O (E wiU'cl),
sbelter~.d 39 peri!O~~a> apiece; while iu Kumbwwada (0 WIU'd) lloiiii Umarkhlld:i
(B ward) were rooms containing respectively 86 and 84 inhtlbitante.
Th11 tenements of the i~lnnd, tha.t ia to say the holdiDjtB of individtml rent-
p11yers, h11ve be~n divided for the purp01e11 of enquiry into six main cl111sea,
(fommencing with those nf one room only e.nd rising to those which contllin six or
more rooms. As w111 confidently expected, the m111a o£ tho illland'a population, or
80 per cent. of the total, -resides in tenements o£ one room, the 11verage number of
occupants whereof lies bct1veen 4 ann 5. ·Tenements containing six rooms nr over
form only 1 \ler cent. of the tot11l number of teno:nenta of 1111 c11188Ca, 11nd 11re
occupied by only 4 per cent. of the whole popul11tion. These fucts point very
of
clearly to the high cost of living in ~he city and thu poverty the majority of
Bombay residents. Very instructive alao Bre the figures showing the percentage of
the. total population of 811Ch m11in religion, resident in Cllcll clasa of holding. So
far 118 one-roomed tenements are concerned, the Hindus atand easily first, wir h 89
_ per cent. of their numbers thus domiciled ; the MllhommAdans come next with 83
per cent. ; the Jains third with 7 5 per cent. ; the Jews fourth with 63 per cent. ;
the Christians fifth with 40 per cent.; and the Parsis last with only 27 per cent. of
their total numbers, renting aingle rooms. The order is practically revened .in the
ease of tenements of six rooms ; for the Christian and Parsi show the largest
proportion of their whole population, thus domiciled: the Jew COIDe& third in order,
the Jain fourth, the MllhCimmednn fifth, a11d tho Hindu last of all, 2 per cent. only of
tbe followers of Hinduism being inhabitants of the most commoilioll8 sype of
holding.
A final word ie nocenary on the subject of vacant tenements. It ia clearly
im}K'IIIible to BIIY precisely whether any three VIICIInt rooms in a house will ulti-
mat.e\y be let co rent-payers u thre! aeparate tenements of one room apiece, or
juintly aa 11 single tenement of thm~ rooms. But the clas,, to whioh three snch rooms
rightly belong, and co which, when let, they will appertain, .can be inferred with
tolerable exactnHI from (a) the nature of the building in which they ara sitnsted,
(1.) the cllloe ufthe occupied teuementto in the building, and (c) the character of
the people alrer&dy re.Went in the hnu•e-. Tbeae three factors ~ve been duly
eo111IJt'red in die claui&cation of unooonpied rooms, and m~~y be oc1111dered to ba~
maured tolerably accurate l'f'IUltl. The depopulatiug effecta of a P~' epideuuo
an Yiaible in the h1oge number of unocoupied tenemen'- of all cia m, namely,
119,487, or which the pal mlljority would under normal ciroumstancel be let lo
fullowora of the Hindu relljrion.
•
The Parsie do not bulk very wgely in the t.Otal population of the section :
~ut sach of them w; do reside there appear mostly, and notably in Circle 2, as
the occupants of one-roomed tenements. It is noteworthy that they appear nc>-
where in Circle 5. The Mualimin form_ too small a co~nnity for comment;:
but one cannot omit mention of the one solitary Jain; ·-who occupies a tbreeo:
roomed tenement in Circle 2. Circles 2 and 3 contain the largest number of,
Hinduij, 70 per cent. of which community lives in tenements of ·one room only..
Curiously enough, conditions of wealth and ease among_ the Hindu inhabitants.
of the South Fort are not graduated ; for after the larger number, who live _in
one-room, are set aside, the majority wffi be 'found to reside in· tenements of the,
highest class (i.e. six ro!Jms and over). The intermediate grades of occupancies, .
thst is to say, holdings of 2 rooms to 5 rooms, are in the possession of Christians
and Jews, the latter o( whom, like the Parsis, occupy no. six-roomed or larger
tcnP.IIIents, and app_ear in larger numbers in Circle 2 than many other portion
~~~·~ . . .
ll 48•76 I ..
.
a ao·u
I .
.
..
..
4: . '
15•87 . . • .
..
5 8•77 ..
. ~
19
. .
\
FORT NORTH.
By fnr the greater number of ~ucturea in this section are used 88 dwellin •
houses, cntegorised as clune (20), dwelling-houaea (990), houae1 with godowna !u
the lawer floors (23), •tiled huta (16), and thatched huts (1). OMla prop 1• ·
called·-· 1. c· 1 1 h
a.-.---r on y m ll'C e , w ere one of them is unfit for ho.bitGtion ier~ 80
Circles 4 and 5, and in Circle 6, whi~ lies near the bundo.r and aea, and con~in~
a large number of the poorer class of mhebit&nta, who eo.ru their living 11s I'
eto., among the sh'tppmg.
' C'trcle S, which ia bounded by Hornby Row, COO U!S,
Police
Cou~ Lane, Born ~aznr Street end Gunbow Street, and is a congested 1ocality,
colita~ns more dwellmg-housea proper than nny other circle; while Circlea 1 nnd ~
oontetn more condemned houses than nny other. Circlea ii and 6 compriae
perhapa the oldeat portion of the North Fort, and the original hazar which
supplied our anceators with their requirements ; end it is no earpriee, therefore to ·
.:find that Circle 6 c~ntai~ more shops than any other. The comparntively large
number of chow keys m C1~cle 8 is d~11 to the vicinity of the harbour, they being
used by customs and pollee subordinates. The predominance of the Pnrsi in this.
section is prc.ved by the presence of five :fire-temples.
The character of the structures in this section is shown by the tact that the
majority of the houeea oontnin four or three upper :floors ; an<l more of these will
be found in Circles S and 6 than in any other. Circle 6 containa 40 bailclinga
wit.b :five upper etoreya. The North Fort contains over one-third of the total
number of structures in the whole of A ward. •
The average population per inhabited house in the North Fort is
higher than in any other section of A ward, with the exception of Lower Colaba,
to which it cloaely approximates : and the last circle, 8, o£ the section contnina
a good mnny more persona per bouae than BDJ other oircla. Circle 7 stand• .
BeCOnd with au average of 89 pereona per house, the loweet avera,<>e heing found
in Circlet 1 and !1, which contain a considerable number of offices and ahope. The
population of Cirole 8 ia QOlllliderably greater than that of any other circle; and
thia rush or human beings towarda the neighbourhood of the bundlll'll baa te~~nlted
in thit Circle 8 being the only one in the eection which contains enmplet of
penona ahariug one room with over twenty othen.
Turning to the queation of tenementa, it appeara that the mlljority of the
builJinga, and notabl:y thuae in Circle 6, are not diviohd in&o moza than ten
IMipara&e holill~Ji~. Thora ia ono houae iD Cirola 4. divided up IIIDOllg 61 tu 'lO
reu&-payera, and another in the auma circle, which contains from 100 to 120 aepara~
~II 1 but &he ,houae-ownera. u Table 3 ahowa, do not. u a rule, let their
lndividm1l propertiea out in more thaD iwenty aepaMe holding~~. 'Ihe commercial
ohlll'lloter of tho "ction• u a whole, Ia perbafl' reap•lDaible for the £11cl that PlAD1
mora persona lift un the lit and 2nd alorey thau on the ~J.tl~ of blli1Ji08'-
0ircle • )I aha only area in wbioh the number ol ttround-tloor neiU~nt~ ex~la
tho numbur of thlllll l"li<lunl in Upjlllr 11018)'1. Sixth-tloor Nl\klrull w1ll ~ .Jir
oometl in 1very oirolo excep' Nu. 9, and bulk mure lal).oely iu tho tall builJingt
lyltlf w~•• ur the Frere RooJ Wa.u lu auy uthur par' ut tho ~~~AAillt\. The IIIWlOt
lu•••lity 11011llli111 a 8'"'"' 11Utuber of IHtlr•toN)' I'WiJI)lltl tbau a11y olh~r.
69
UPPER COLABA.
·same percentage of the latter live in the ihumblest and least spacious class of hold~
ing, tho tenement of one room. Tlle Mnhonunedans, who reside near the Du'i-ga,
also belong to the poorer cla~ses, and cannot afford to pay rent for any larger area
than one room. · · ··
The area of the circle is roughly 17•04 acres, while the remainder of the
·section covers 12'1:"15 acres. The total area of Upper Colaba is; there(or~, appr~x~
·imately 144•19 acres. ·. ·· · ·. :
18
70
LOWER COLABA.
Moat of the buildings in the secdon contain a ground-floor only; and the
largest numher of these will be found in Circles 3 and 7, the result being duo in
the former case to a number of on&storeyed baognlows and outhouses, and in the
latter to godowns, sheds and health camps. Circle No. 9, with its city of flats,.
naturally contains the m'ljority of the three and four-storeyed houaes in the section ;
though the big milla of Circle ll inevitably place it at the head of the areas con-
taining the largest proportion of six-storeyed huildin,"B. The Colaba viii..ge, it
may he remarked, contains mostly two and three-storeyed houses; and two of the
eircl11 computing it, VIZ., Noa. 4 and 6, share with Circle l! the honour of contain-
mg the only fiv111toreyed buildings in the section.
No. of Oirole. Area in Aoreo. !Area covered by roads, etc.j Total Area.
-- -
1 6·31
ll 15"60
a as·oa
4 29•95
5 12•28
6
7
17•67
'
.
33•06
s 21•60
9 44•07
FORT SOUTH.
With the exception of some 79 buildings, which rise to a third and fourth
storey, none of the structures in this section contain more than a ground-floor
and two npper floors, the largest number of this cliiBB being found in Circle 2.
Circle 4, which runa along Marine Street and includea part of the Elpbinstone
Circle, naturally shows the .largest number of houses with four upper floon. In the
majority of caaea probably the lower floors are Died as oflicea, the upper floors 111
dwelling-apartments. Owing presumably to the presence of a hotel and club, the
averoge number of persona per inhabited building ia higher in Circle 6 than in any
other. Circle No. 2, which also contains hotels and fair-sized dwellings, approxi-
mates most nearly to the former in this respect. Circle 4, on the other hand, is a
purely buainesa centre ; and, therefore, notwit.betandiog that it containa higher
atructorea than any other circle, showe an average population per inhabited bonae
of 10 only. Ouly one circle, No. 3, contains any instunce of pereom li\ing in a
room containing more than 20 persons. The Fort South and the !!:.planada ahow
the ~malleat population per inhabited holl!e of any of dle sections of A wad.
The character of the South Fort ia to 10me extent portrayed by the fact
that there are no builolin,..,. containing O\'er 40 tenements and that there are only
two iuatancee of builJioge containing over 20 and under 40 tenements. Nearly
every et.ructure in the eection contaiua under ten tenementL Moreo,·er, the number
of buil.Iin~ COlltainiog mure than 2U oooupuntl! is insignitiCl>Dt. The one
example \n Circle l) of a builJing with over 200 occupunte is apt to be mialeaJing,
if une JllolB not rmnfmUer that the Sailol'll' Home, "·hich counts as one "boWl<',"
ia incluuetl in that circle.
Looking at the ui&trihution of ·~·pulation by !loon, one muy !'l!lllllrC that
epproxiw 11 tely tho 1111011 numbtlr of people live on the gl"Oun.t, 6rat an,! ""'~11\1 floor
in Clr..Ja 1 ; tblll in I :irulca :1 ..nJ :1, more Hve on the grouod-tloor than m u~
aturuya · that in Circle 4 the popul..ti,lll livea woatly on Lhe ltlO<>DJ and &hW
lluor• :. buiJ,ling• i IUI\1 th~l In t 'irule a the gruunJ-tlwr 'a_uJ $~-onJ Sture)'
}uubour the bulk u( the ••••iuente. In .:unc1ul the lllll.lJcnt~ ol th~ &>nih Furt
BJ''""" tu J•rufur the gru~&nJ-IIOOl' anJ the lll>llOUJ alvNy, anJ nev\IJ' at~~...mJ more
tb.an fuur tli..:h11 of o1uir1 '" thelr N.Utlenoe.
'l'h01 Chri•diUI IIOI'UI11tlun ul tlut lltiOiil).ll livt'li uhidly in INHm"'''l', •i:s "*'
ruuwt 11~1 over 1 1111<1 \hie I• )11Arti••ul"tly the woe in l 'i•d,-. i 111"l a.. \~I ,~~v.w
"bu U<ll'Ujl)' lllot blllubl~•' o),,u oi· •·uu'Ill1~, •h · ·'• "ill be 1<•111"1 m l•r\'1., ;s..
• II UIIIJVII,Y
A.
PLAN SHOW)N
NOT£.:
5DUTH
The Par&is and Hindna form &he bulk of the 'sectional population, and will
be fonnd dwelling in every. one of the six. classes of tenement& ·The
percentage of the former race occupying tenementS on:rooms is Digher than
that 'in other c111B888 of holdings ; while among HindUs,· by far the larget
proportion live k one--roomed holdin,."'B. Here, again, :we find the character ~
Parai holdings varying to some degree by circles : for the }lBrcentsge of those
occupying only .2 rooms is highest in Circles 1, 3 and 4 i the percentage of those
in oll&'roomed tenements is higheat in Circle 'I : while in Circle 8 the larger pro- ·
portion of the raee lives in tenements of 5 rooms. With the single exception of
Circle 11 in which the larger percentage of Hindus oooupy tenements of .2 rooms;
the bnlk of the Hindu population lives in o~roomed holdings; this condition. of
things being especially noticcsble in Circles .2, 3, and 8 ; and the status of the ·
Hindu popnlation in .those circles is farther apparent from the fact that Hindu.
occupants of five-roomed and six-roomed tenements are absolutely non-existent.
The Christians and MubommedliDs of the section belong in the main to the poorer
classes, and nfl'ect the least roomy class of holding. The Jew is unknown in Circle&
1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 ; but appear& in small numbera in Circles 6, 'I and 8, and shows a
higher percentnge o!persons dwelling in four-r~omed oqcnpan.cies than in ,any
other class. · · ·
•
AlmA oli' FoRT, NoRTH.
No. of
Cirole,
Ij A* In I
.a...... , .Ale& covered by Boacla,etc~ . Total Ate&.
.
l 6•16
.
I. .6•66
'
1 ..
'!
3 5•86
". 8-i,
. .
;
II 5•77 ~
6 6·88
'I 6•16
..
8 20•75 ·;
.
61•28 73'()2 -
134•8\)
' ' .
76'
TBf: ESPLANADE•. ..,
·. · The cJ.II'eUing-houaea ~f this' section ore dh·ided into Bung1~owa (29), Ch.il~
(42), Houses (137), Tiled buts (109); Thntched dwelling& (69), and T~nta (166):
'l'he !~at named nre purely fair·wenther rcaidenoca in Mnrino Linea an4 on the
Cooperage,· nnd need not be ~ken into nccount in deciding upon the atructur111
chnl'acteri,tics of the section. With 'the exception of Circle 4 where we find th~ ,
tiled huts or thnLched ehcds of' the dock-hnnds and othur lnbouring.ohlsse••'
dwelling-houses of better style are fnirly equnlly distributed throughout the
section. Considering ita size, the section is well-supplied with bospituls, 11choola
.~nd theatres; 11nd tho aatisfuctory conclition of itts structurqa, as n whole, il
apparant from the fact .that it contains no h9usc " unfit fol' human habitation."
The presence of 25 chals in Circle 1 .seems a~ first eight strange ; Lut is due t 0
the fact of the Enumerntora hnving reckoned as ch&le the long lines of milt-rooms,
which were used during Febr1111ry, March nnd Aprilns refuge-cnmps, und were
situa~ between the R B, and C. L Railway and thepnrapetwoll facing RottenRo"'·
~el'l! were also a eertain number of d welliogs of the same ola~s ~ Marine Linea,
The overage number of persona to a building is not high for the section as
a whole ; this result being mainly due to the character of Circles 1 and 2, in the
former of which the average number per house is 5, and in the latter 12. The
presence of thl'ee buildings in Circle S, containing·-over 400 inhabitants, might
appr.ar etnrtling, without a ~efe1-ence to the map : but three clmla occupied by
111 unicipal "bigoria'' llre responsible for thu entry, 88 will be seen from uurvey of the
chief structur€e of this circle. Instances of persons sharing a room with 19 others
or more occur oDly in Circles S and 4 ; and so far as the former area ia concerned,
will be found probubly in the vicinity of the Crawford Markets. The bulk of
the eectioDIIl population li vea in rooms occupied by no more thou five persona.
The division of buildings into tenements can be passed over with the
remark that out of a total of 566 buildings in the eeotion, 551 are let out in leae
than ten eepnrate holJin.,aa. The size of the holdings, however, is instructive ; u
also their relation to the population. For whereas the majority of tenement& in
the section contain one room only, the percentage of population in this c1asa of
tenement ia not very much grenter than the percent&.ge of the population occup,.
ing tenementa of six rooms and O'VIll'. The average number of OCUipailt& per room
in one-roomed tenements is II, .. against S in tenements of the higbae• daaa. · The
1 trong Europenn antl well-to-do Pani element in Circles 1 and ll results in six--
roomed and larger tenements theltering a l&rger population than the emaller holdiuge
in thoa localitie& The atandard of oomfort enjoyed by the aix maiD religiopa in
this teotlon umy be infel'l'l'd from the fact that 68 per cent. of the Christian!!, ll6
per 011n'- of the Pa.roi•, aud 48 per cent. of tho Jowa live iQ tt•uemeuta of aix .ffl
more room• 1 wherooa 116 pv Otlllt. of the Mllhomedana, 419 per eent.. of tho J&m~
and 90 per oent, of th6 Hin..lua live in the tmalleet •peoiea of h~ding.
loa. "'
AUA 01' Til. EuUIIAI!a.
NOTE.
Bt.OCI< ARE BOUNOC: r'fEW COLOR
SEC u UNO B E.. OLOR
COLABA V\LLAGE - - -
....
..
.. ·,
•• ty ~(·
B.WARD---
DONGRI SECTION
PLAN SHOWING CIRCLES /Jt. BLOCKS FOR THE CENSUS OF 1901
SCALE 400 f'f.ET TO l INCr4
NOTE.
l·I R CL F.& ARE BOUNDED BY GREEN COLQf'
SHT IO N IS BOUNDED BY RE.D COLOR
...,
f·I.P.RAIL AY
- &GALE+OOFEt.TTOIINGH -
NoTE
-PLAN-
- - SHEWINS CIRGLES&BLOGJ<S FOR THE CENSUS OF 1901 ----
--z- ;C~Lt4-oonu-,:~-mc:H=:-· =r
RO
a t;lr
X
0
0
0
~:~JJ ~
"
0
t-
I(
...00 ...0
I)
0
a:
-
0
>
z
IJ
w
tt
c
""a::
....
">ell Cll
c
0 Lol
w c
l"l
% z.
I
l
.::1
0 0
10 '!I
...
....: ~')
z
......
~
0
;:
0
I tt u
w
I u fl)
ilI ,..
c A R N A C B A s I N
M 0 D
""
OoMERKHARI S EOTION
NoTE
CIRC:Lts ARUIOUNDlD 8 , G"EDI
CfiAKLA. .
The same area, Circle 4, again comes to the front in the matter of popul&-
tion-by-rooms ; for together with Circles 5 aDd 9, it affords the only oxample in
the section of more than 20 occupants of one room. No very great stress, however,
need be laid upon this &ct; for in every portion of the ar.ction s popolation of five
or less to one room is usual, and is a condition of affairs more prevalent in Circle 4
than in auy other. The fact will appear more clear by a reference to the table
dealing with the number of tenements per house. Notwithstanding that 77 per
oeul of the soetional population lives in tenements of one room, the average number
~ ~occupants per room is lees than four for the whole section; while, if one takes the
CU'Cles Bepanite~y, one finds the average rising slightly above four in only one circle,
~o. ~· Speakmg genemlly, one may say that the population of this section which
lives In ten~~ta containing. auy more than 2 rooms i.J wholly insignificant, and
that the maJority of the buildings in the section contain no more than ten separate
tenements apiece.
. The Mahommedan community forms the bulk of the Chakla popnlstion, 1llld
hves for the most part in the humblest class of holding Circle 3 bemg" th n1
• hich , eo yone
mw Mabommednn occupants of 4-roomed and 5-roomed tenements form any
10
78
appreciable percentage of the tot11l, The entire absence of Jewaln Chaklll is worth
passing notice, aa also the absence of Hindus and Jaina from Circle 8, which
includes one big' mosque and lies bard by two others of some importllnco. The
comparatively small number of J aina in Chakla liPOID• to prefer tho poorer olaaa of
holding, and Circle 1 affords an example of seven J'aina in a Bingle room. The
same is the caee with the Hindus, 85 per cent. of whom occupy tenements of one
room only. Like the Jew, the Christiana find little attraction in the Chaltla section
and appear nowhere in Circles 1, 5, 6, 7, and 8. They occupy two tenements in
Circle 4, one of one room and one of 3 rooms, the former of which contains 17
occupBnta, the latter 6.
.
No. af Oirdor. A.-ill-. Ana ocmnod b7 roaclo, ala. Tolaluee.
1 ,.2,
J 4·30
-
a ,.,1)
I
&·15
' .
6 &·68
e •17 I
1•80
'
• lJ•30 ..
• 6·85
----- --
ta·~
&1'08
&1•114
-
IJeoliOD
79
MANDVI.
Though the area of Circle 2 is considerably less than the area of Circle 9, it
contains only 35 houses less than the latter, and is perhaps the most structnrally-
crowued of all the Mandvi circles. Moreover, the bulk of its houses have two,
three and four storeys, which have sprung up above the primeval hut-settlements of
a fishing-populntion. Houses with as many as :five upper floors will be found in
every portion of Mandvi, but especi:llly in Circles 4, 5, 6 and 9 ; and one example
of n hnilding with seven upper floors will be found in Circle 10, the top-most storey
being in the occupation of four individuals. The great mass of the Maud vi popu- ·
lntion lives on the 1st or 2nd storey, ground-floor residents being fewer here than
in auy other pnrt of B ward, Chakla alone excepted : and this fact is specially
noticenble iu Kolsa Mohalla and the Jain area.
The average number of occupants per inhabited house for the whole section
docs not rise nbovc 34 ; but very considemble variation is noticed in the average
number by circles. For example, one leaps from 17 per building in Circles 3 and
8. to 55 per building in Circle 4 nnd 77 per building in Circle 11. This last-named
ctrcle shares '~it~ ?ircle 9 the honour of containing one house occupied by between
250 nnd 300 mdmJuals. About two-thirds of the dwellings in the whole section
however, contain no more than 20 occupants. In Kolivadi, not quite half th;
ho~ses. contain ~0 occupants or less ; but the balance is made up of buildings
sbctto~mg from sixty to one hundred and fifty individuals. With the single
exception of Circle 6, instances of over ten and under twenty persons occupying
one r~o~ n_r~ ubiquitous ; nnd Circles 3, 4, 6, 7, 11 and 12 contain a population
of 29~ mdlV!dunls, who each share a room with 20 others, or more. Circle 3
contnms one ro~m, 56k feet long X 40 feet broad, occupied by 54 persons, the
largest number m any one room throughout the island.
80
A comparatively small number' of houses only nrc let out in more th~n ten
tenements ; and generally speaking, the totalnumber of separate holdingA ito a
building does not amount to over ten, although cases do occur in Circles 10, 11
and 12 of buildings being divided up among 60 to 100 rent-payers. It is Jlote-
wortby, however, thnt Mandvi heads the list of the B ward sections, in the matter
of buildings let out in over 50 separate holdings. One-roomed-tenements far
outnumber those of any other class and are inhabited by 78 per cent. of tho total
sectional population : and, comparing their distribution by circles, it nppe!U'11 th~>t
this smallest class of holding is more in f~>vour with the population of Circle 2
( Kolivadi ) and of Circle 10 than with the population of any other portion of the
section. The hulk of the population in the tormer area follqws the Hindu religion,
and in the latter the Jain and Hindu creeds. The Mo~lem population of Circle I 0
bas been occasionally described as of low-class and obstructive temper : but, if one
may judge by their relation to tenements only, the conditions under which th~y
live belong to a higher scale thnn those of the Hindus and J ains. Thirty per cent.
only of them live in the humblest class of tenement, the remainder dwelling for
the most part in 2-roomed, 4-roomed, 5-roomed and even 6-roomed tenements.
If one disre!!llrds
0
the actual numbers under each relicrion,
0
resident in )[anuvi, and
classifies the population according to the size of their occupancies, it appears that
the Hindu population is the least comfortably situated, the Jains stand next in
order, the Parsis third, the MahommeJaus fourth, and the Jews fifth; while the
Christiana entertain the highe>t standard of comfort.
AREA OF MANDVI.
-- ------- - - ·
Area in acres. Af'tla eon red by roada, e\o. Tot.tarea.
No. uf Cucle. / .
' -- --------
I ltt!6
I 3'78
a !\·~w
• 37~
!•143
6
e ~·Sl
1 ··~If)
II »·1d
II ):11~
Ill {h\ti
II u·H
IV ~ll'tl~
- . - . - .
-------- --
·~;4·\i.,i
ll}I'IJO ~v·7tl
,d\lli•JU.
81
UMABKliADl
This section contains more buildings than any other section of B ward ;
.and besides conlaining the largest number of dwelling-houses proper, it easily
heads the Jist of the B-ward areas, which contain the largest number of chals.
Whereas Mandvi can show only 3 specimens of this class ·of building, Umarkhadi
(l()Dnta 92 out of which 63 are situated in Circle 10, between the Jail nnd the
Baboola T~nk Road. Circle 10 is indeed a chal-area ; but the whole section is an
eminently residential locality; and ita 900 dwelling-houses proper are fairly equally
-distributed throughout each circle. Buildings with two upper floors are more
numerous than those of any other class, and are more often met with in Circles 7
and 8 than in any other ; and the latter circle aleo contains the largest numbe~
of houi!CII with three upper storeys. ·In Circle 9, on the other hand, the character
-of the structures is wholly different; for out of the 167 buildings in that circle, 103
are buildings with a ground fioor-only. Now the bulk of the population in Circle
10 are Hindus, whence one may perhaps infer that this community bas a stronger
prcrlilection for chal-life tbnn any other : while in Circle 9 the bulk of the popula-
tion follows the faith of Islam. A peruBlll of the sectional figures, dealing with
the distribution of the population by floors, shows that most of the Umarkhadi
residents live on tlie ground-floor or first. storey ; that' this is specially the case in
·Circle 10 ; but tb.1t in Circle 1 and Circle. 8 more per!!Ons live on the 2nd and 3rd
storeys than on the .ground-floor. If one turn to the top-most storeys, one finds
Umarkhadi easily at the head of the list of B-ward section's"; with 42 occupants of
sixth storeys, and 14 occup.mts of seventh storeys. Regarding the population per
house, it is worth noting that the Umarkhadi section shows the highest average ·
)Jer occupied house of any single portion of the island, namely, 42 ; and taking the
circlee separately, we find this average increased to 49 per house in. Circle 4, 52
per house in Circle 1 antl 53 per house in Circle 10. The last named area also
includes one case of 492 indi!iduals resident in one house, which is the third
··highest- number (or tbe-whole island : the " house " in· question is the Umarkhadi
Jail, wbose warders; prisoners and others make up this somewhat alarming •
totaL On the other hand, one of the cbals in this circle contains between ·
300 and 350 occupants,·and two contain. 200 to 250. In the matter ·of occupancy
of rooms again, it appears that the actual number of persons sharfug one room
with 19 or more others is five times greater than the number so 'domiciled in
Mandvi and Dongri ; and that the majority of these co-sharers are resident in
Circles 8 and 9.
. . Houees divided into more than 5(1 separate holdings at•A totally unknown
m Ctrcles 2, 5 and 6 ; 'll·hile the total number of tenements of the six main-classes
taken together is highest in Circles 4 and 8. The cbaracte; of the section and the
status of its inhabitants is dimly portrayed by the fact that the percentage of
tenements containing 3. room~ or more to the total number of tenements is
~~~ al~ost inappreciable quantity, and that S6 per cent. of the whole population
hves tn tenements of Gn.e ro:.m only. The Mahommedans form the most nu-
merous comm~ty in the section, and will be found occupying every class of
.ten~~ent, from those of one room to those of six rooms and over. The majority,
811· .
being poor, live in the humble~t clast ; and so· far 11s six-roomed holdings 11r11
concerned, Circle 8 is the only one in which the Moslem community ao resident
numbers over 150. The Christian community is non-existent in Circles 1, 3 and 1 ~
but genemli81ltion from the figures of other circlea shows that ita members will bft
found in every clllss of tenement except the 5-roomed ; but that tho majority live
in one=roomcd holdings. The Jews and J ains approximnte to one IJ.Dother in
numbers ; but wherelll! the former do not appear at all in Circlesl, 3 and li and are
pmctically non-existent in Circles 2 and 6, the J nina appear in every cirole except
No. li. On the whole the Jain appears less prosperous than the Jew, or r11ther,
perhaps, one should say tb,at the Jew is educated to a higher standard of comfort
than the Jain, judging by the fact that the percentage of his numbers occupying
more roomy abodee ia higher than the percentage of Jain& occupying other thnn
one-roomed tenements. •
ABBA OP UJL\lli[HADL
Tota!IHL
I
1 6-60
I ··40
a a· so •
---
• 18-GO --- -- -
•
A 1'19 -
I 8·1·
11·10
'
I 18•15
• 18•110
•
10 14•11
-·-
----- -
~~~
tOI·al
•11..-Joa. 88•011
•
- I- - ·--
-
83
DONGRI.
The four circles of Dongri iliffer considerably, so far as the character of the
buildings in them is concerned. Circles 1 and 2 may be called the residential
quarter proper, bein.~ full oC chals and dwellin~-hous~a ; Circle 3, which lie&
wholly below Nowroji Hill, is marked by a good number of small huts and shops ;
while Circle 4, which contains fewer dwelling-houses and chals than the others;
is chiefly remarkable for its hallock stable.; (253 ), and, being a seaside circle, for
its chowkeys. Circle 2 is the only one which contains condemned dwellings,
numbering in all 5. Buildings with a groundfloor only naturally appear in
greater numbers in Circles 8 and 4, for the abov,e reasons ; and are indeed so
numerous that Dongri easily heads the list of the B ward sections for the highest
number of ground-floor dwellings. So far as ·upper-storeyed buildings are
concerned, Dongri is less well furnished than any other .portion of B ward ; and
of the number actually existing, those with two upper floors appear to be more
common than those with one or with three or more. Only four instances occur o{
fiv&-storeyed houses, as o.gabst 87 in Mandvi and 91 in Chakla. The buildings
are on the whole less capacious than those of other sections of B ward. Some 19
ciases o.re discoverable of houses comprising from 40 to 70 separate holdings ; but
in most co.aes 40 is the highest limit, and the bulk of the buildings · contain 10
holdings or less. It is perhaps unnecess~ry to remark that most of the Dongri
population lives on the ground and first floor ; and that out of a total population
of 25,000 and over, some 330 persons only live higher up than the third storey.
Moreover, it is the only section in B wo.rd which contains noulxampll!. of persons
inhabiting the sixth storey.
The average population per inhabited building is highest in ·circle 2, ·which
cuntains the largest number of buildings sheltering from 60 to 200 individuals.
Circle 4., which we have already chal'acterised as an area of stables, contains
more separate houses, but ai the. snme time a smaller population than any other
portion of the section ; and consequently shows an average population per inhabited
house of only 10. So fnr as house-population is concerned, it is the least crowded
area of IIIIY in the whole of B ward.
Dongri is a section of humble tenements ; IIUd the number of those
composed of six rooms or more s.mounts to only 8 for the whole section. Ninety-
five per cent. of the population bve to be content with on&-roomed holdings, in
each of which dwell on the average 5 persons. The Hindus, as has been elsewhere
remarked, largely predominate : fo1• the rest, there are some 2,000 Mahomedans;
and 11 few hundred Ch1istians, Jains and Jews. Most of the Christians live in
Circle 4 and occupy the humblest clasR of holding ; while the 12, who reside in.
Circle 2, are equally distributed among one-roomed, four-roomed, and six-roomed
tenements. The Parsi is wbc:>lly unknown in Circles 1 and 3 : and in Circles 2
and 4 the few representatives of this race follow the example of the Mahommedan,
Jain and Jew, by occupying single rooms. _
AREA oF DoNGRI .
No. of Circle.
1
Area in acraa.
7•64
I Area covered by roacla, ato.
I Tow a...._
ll . 22'04
8 16•83
4 57-lO
!ieotlon 103·71 I 181•76 285•47
84
THE MARKET.
This section, as ita name implies, cllmprises a good number of shops, half of
which are crowded round the Cloth Market in Circle B, and of godowns. Dwelling•
houses proper appear in every circle, but are more numeroua in Circle 8 thnn
in any other. Chats, on the other hand, appear nowhere except in Oirclea 2
and 7, and are nearly four times as common in the former circle, which
• I
be it remarked, comprises the major portion of that vile area, Pathakw11di.
The section is remarkable for the absence of bnildings exclusively uaed
as ilharmashalas and dispensaries, but is well to the fore in th~ matter of
Hindu temples, one of whic~ is the temple of- Mumbadevi, tutelary goddess
of the Island of Bombay. Buildings of one, two, -tbree und four upper
storeys are of common occurrence and sevemlly approximate in numbers tO those
with only a ground-floor. The largest number of four-storeyed and fivo-~toreyed
buildings in the section will be seen by walking up Sheik .Memon Street and
wandering through the streets that lie on the eastern aide of that thoroughfare.
In <rn'Cle 2 ground-floor buildings ami those with one or two upper flool'6 are
equally. nnmero~s. The section, as a whole, contains more buildings 11·ilh four,
five and six upper floor& than :my other section of C ward, nnd also contains the
largest numb~r of bui\Jings of all kinds. Likewise, the Market is the only area in
C ward wbich contains buildings subdivided into o;er 100 separate tenements ;
and one of these. situated in Circle 5, is split np into 451 sepnrate holdings.
Bnildinl!S of o>er 50 and under 60 tenements occur in eyery circle, except 1, 4 and
8 ; while Circle 7 contains the only example in the set:tion of houses let out in
over 60 and under 70 occupancies. It is worth notice that a larger number of the
market population liver. upon the let floor, th:m upon the ground-floor and upper
atoreys ; and that tbe section contains more residents in fifth and suth storey.
than any other III!Ction of C ward. Commencing from the street-"ievel, one finds
tba-population increase u one reaches the 1st floor ; but the higher one ascends
after that point, the smaller does the population become ; and this is a pheno-
menon alao noticeable in Bhulesbvar, KumbhariVBda and Khara 'falao. In Dh•>bi
Talao and Fanaewadi, on the other band, the population decreases consistently,
u one ri~e• from the ground-level Cirol01 4 and 8 oonlain the only people in tba
lllotiou 1\'h.) reaide on the .Uth storey.
Moat or tbo atrncturee in the eecti011 contain no more than ilO resi-
dent. • bua one notil'tlli that Circle B oontaine the large.ot number of buildings wich
over 60 anJ unJor 80 oocupanta, and with 100 to 150 OCCI!pwlts, and with 150 to
!00 oceuJ'IUlla. lu Circle• 3 and 4, buil<linge cont:Uning mon Ulan aixt)· n:siJon~
are unknown ; while Circle 1 eontaiiUl the one aolitnry example of a bouse wich
onr S:,O oooUJI.lnte. The 1\verage popular..ioD per inhabitt'd building ia ~b.lu in
CiruLt 1 anJ lo\\'DII In Circltt 8, and 1tand1 at tho figure of ll4 fur \he eecuoo Ill a
11'bulo. Cun•hluraLh onr hulf tho popul&~loiou of the ee,.ctilln Jives in l\lQIIII
ront11illinll no 1uure than 6 iudivldual1. Cin·le 9 oontlliu1 far tho~ !all-~ DWilber
oiJ"'noua, ,.,.iJonl iu ruuu11 occupied b1 over 10 and ullller W iu,liviJuala i ~
a lao 1h•r~• wlll1 Cin•lu1 1, 6, and 8, t.he doubtful hooout of brbo1U'iug a JlOI"'Iawa
wbiuh live~ In rouml ooouJ•lrd by !() "Jl'II'IOlll and o-ver. Thot wl\iQI'ity of thi. due
•J•I"'Ilf In Clrulo~ 1, wh111.. uvururowdlot: aeen~» ttl'llller thi\D in othlll' p>ftillnl d lhe
.-etion.
-MARKETBECTIO
PLAN &HOWING OIRCLEB lc BLOO
--NOT£-
..
®
85
!
Tenements of the highest class, that is to say, those cdmposed of six or
more rooms, are slightly more numerous in Circles 5 and 8 tlwj elsewhere. But
the character of the sec,ion is portrnyed by the fact that or an clnsses of holdings,
81 per cent. contain one room only ; and these are occupied by ths majority of the
popullltion under each
main reli,~on. I notice, however~ that in Circles 7 and 8
there are a good many Parsis, whose means enable them to rent two rooms; and
that both here, and in Circles 5 and 6, are a few J ains, resident in the. roomiest-
claBB of tenement. The Muslimin are more numerous in Circles 3 and 8 than in.
other parts of the section ;-and, next to tlie Jains, they show the highest percentage
clpopula.tion in the column headed" six rooms and over"; Yet these are mere
exceptio~ ; the individuals who rent a single room are ubiquitous, and are
followers of each of the six main religions of the island.
-
No. of Circle. Area iD aorea. Area """'red by roads, etc. · Total area.
I :1·
'
-
1
ll
ll"ll4
8•60
..
I I
3 8•06
' 4•54
.
II 14•53 -
..
6 7"67
1
-.
I'
.
14"48
-
I•
I! 5•08 I '
······--
•
I
Section. 74•10 '
14•91 89•11
n
.
88\
DHOBI TAI.AQI.
This aecli~n
includes more dwelnng. houaoa proper than any other area o1
C ward ; but wit't the exception o£ Kharn Tlllao, fewer chl!.la, Of ita dwellin •
h~us;a, 26 are un~t for human habitation. The larger number o£ its chala ~~~
lV~thin the area bo!JDded by the Hindu burning-ground on Queen'a Road and the
Gttgaum Itoad : whereas Circles 1 and 7 contain the greatest number of dwellin
~uses pr.oper. The maiority of the sbopa, 111 one might expect, an found in tfe
c~cl~ lymg oft" that grMt artm:y, the Kalbadevi Road; while judging from the
s~tuation of the fire.temples, the Parsi element is strongest in the three southern
Clrcles, 1, 2 and 4. Dhobi Talao also contains more stables than any other secliOU>
of C ward ; nnd c.he majority of these will be fopnd in and around Sonapur.
most ).l6l't bas to be content with living in single rooms. Such also is the case
with the Mahommed'aus, the Jaina, and the Hindus; of whom .the last-:Damed are
more numerous than any other class. 'l'he Parsis are scattered all over the section
aud the size of their holdings appears to vary by circles ; for while in Circles 2;
4 and 6Lthe larger number Of them liVe in the humble OD&-rOOmed tenement, iJi
Circle 1 and Circle '1 tbey affect a two-roomed holding, in Circle S 8. three-roomed
holding, and in Circle 5 the most spacious class of tenement. There are only 'i
Jews, resident in Dhobi Talao, who appear in Circles 4. and 5.
,
No, of Oirolo, Area in acres. Area covered b;y roads, etc. Total .Area,
. ..
1 13'74 . .
2' 11'14
. I ' .'
.
8 18•80
I·
4 4•92
t
I
I
5 8•20 .
. I
;
6 10•62 '
7 13;00
-------.-,
Ito. at liuele.
I
I
I
5o·n
~U·ltl
a__ , 111·11~
- ~d;il-~ 8s·$$ -- ---
1i";~a __ -
fl9
BIIT1LESHVAR. · ,.
'
· TI.ia section stands sccon•l f1.1r the whole of C. ward in respect of the
number of ita chala, the mnjorityi>f which will he found in Cil•cles 2, 81 and ll, or
1n ot.her words between the Kallmdcvi Road and Cawasji P11to! 'l'imk: Road, Of
•hnpt there lll'e also ' good number, to be fonn:f mostly· in Circles 4: o.n<l !!, iQ ·
which arena there are, besides, over 500 d \\'elling.houses proper, Cirele 3 contains
the smallest number of residences or the \;Ltter class ; while the structural character
of the section, as a whole, is to some ox tent discernible from the nbsen~e of cndj:m-
J"oofed huts or small tiled buts used as dwellings. Th.e section · conta.ins more
Hindu temples than any other portion or the ward, and shares with fnnaswadi
4nd KumbharwndO. the honour of containing. the only .buildings used ex~lutively
111 dbrmash~las in tho ward. Son:e further light l~ thrown upon the str~;~ctural
cba.rncter of the section by obser\'ing that houses with two and thl-ee upper f!()ors
Jlre fnr more numerous than any other kind ; and tb11t the last.-n;Lmed l)ul k wore
lnrgcly th11n in any' other section or this ward. Tbe larges~ nu!P'ber of lvftier
buildings appe11r.i in Circles 4 Bl\d II, wl\e1'eaa Circle' 9 contai~ l'athcr 01~re
ground-floo1· tlwcllings thlln any other: Circl~s 1, 5 and 6 each contain ol).e
.enmple of a house with six u~pcr fluors.
Ten separate tenements or less seems to be the usual allowance per builc! ing
in this section ; and with a few sc11ttercd exceptions, met with in Circles 1, 2 and
·6, it is unusual to find 11 building subdivided into more th:m 5ll 1 holt:liri,O"S, Circles
4 nnd 5 comprise the largest number of houses let out in 10 sep~rnte tenemencs or
less, Circh 6 cont11ins the higheR~ number of those comprising 31 to 40 occupancies,
-while Ch·cle 8 shows the largest number of those subdivided into 40 or 5()
holdings.
The charooter of the populntion is very different to thnt of Dhabi Talno 01:
Fan~~&wadi ; for here, in Bh!lleshvar, tho Chrietinn dis:~.ppears, the Parsis decreaaa
Inrl(ely in numben, the J ains show an increase, and the .Mahommedan ond HindU:
predominate together. '.rho Hindus show actually the largeat number ?f individunb;
domiciled in tenements, containing from 3 to 1!. rooms; but theso. form but a
stWLll pere~?ntage of the total Hindu population, which,. with the Mnhommed~n U'l!t1
Jain communities, li\"es for the most part in single-roomed. holdings, anJ thu~
brings about the general sectional res:Jlt, namely, that of aU classes of tenements,_
86 per cent. contain one room only, and are inhabited by 81 P:r cent. of !Jie whola,
population, irrespective of caste nnd creed.
'
AREA or BRULEsnvu,
Tutal area.
, lio. al Corcle., Ana ia ACl'CO.
1 9"!0
•
3
•
,,
d
UMBHARWADA SECTI
CIRCLES & BLOCKS FOR THE CENS
1 1 T NoRTHJ L-r--~
L..,.,R---A-:=----:N~ F\ 0
"'ORTHBROOK
C.AROILN 7 8
c! GOO'Z.AR. 8Tf\£ET
z
@
ct ..........~
- DUNCAN X L.ANE.
®
Sou H
D!l
00 FE.ET TO AN INCH
!).J .;
m11k"BHAii win!.
Thid Hection is the chal~nrca par e.crell~c~ of C ward. It con wins, in'
all, 98, which with 6!!i dwelling-houses propel' constitu~a practically thll_- w~olc.:
of the buildings in the section.. _.Seve~ of these are ~lit for ~umnn .hab1tatw~~··:
The cblils ~re scnttcmd all over the section, though a sbghtly h1gher number wuL
he found in Circles 3 and 4 thnn in Circles! and 2,__ D1velling-houses,. on the other
hand are macl1 less numerous in Circles 3.and 4 than in 1 and 2; "h<mcc c.ne muy .
e11y thnt the two halvea of the section, roughly dil·~c.ied by Northbrook Street, va1'y
considerably in structuml character. The house ~VIth godowns o~ the lo"'~r Hoor.s.,
which is associated in one's mind with Jlfandv1 or the Market, IS non-existent Jn
Kumbharwada. The majority of the cMis,. it appears, do not contnin more t!.J-.u.
one· upper storey, fo1· Circlt>s 1 ancl 2 cont~in the largest nurubrr of L.ui~dings w}d1..
two or moro upper floDrs, nnd coinp:i~.e 35 out of the .total 4! buildiDg<~ with
four Rtoreys, nnd. 4 0111 of the '! hoUSCS. With ;• fifth" Upp~l' floor. Qf 1111 Crossell-
of bu.ildin~;s those with two upper floors arc the must numerous : and the section.
is the only one in C ward uhich contnins no six-storeyed house. The bulk oftht:.
houRCs, especially those in Circles 1 nn:i 2, contain no mure than ten separate·
tenements: Circle 2 comprises a filil' numher ofbuildillgs sub.ih·ided into b•twccn
20 BDd 30 OCCll)JIIDCics·! but uny Jnrger Dt:mber than 40 tenements in a. building
is rather the exception 1hnn the _1·ule.. The three houbcs sU:bdiYidcu into over 6()-,
nncl under 70 tenements will be i:>und in Circles 2 l!:Pd 4.
The mnjority of the Kumbb ..rwada populntiQ.n resides on the ground nna
first floOI', Jllld only .in .Circle 2 does the second-storey popul.ntion ex.cecd tim£
oil thq. grcund. · It is,' however, worth rewnrk that the second-storey residents ol .
the Section llS a, whole outnumbet• tht: corresponding populntion of 11ll Dther G :
ward sections except Bhuleshvnr. So far as tho population by rooms is concern.cJ .-· ·
it nppenrs that most people, aspecinlly in Circle 2, live in rooms oecupied l)y i10.t-.
more th11n 5 individunls. Cnses o£ O\"er 10 nnd under 20 persons in one room are .
commonest in Circle 2, while Circles 3 nnd 4 contnin the greater number of'. those
"·ho rcsjue in. rooms cccupied by over 20 persons. There is one case of u.
room contuining 36 person~, which is the fourth highest number for the whole ioland ..
The average population per occupied house is high, rising from 26 in Circle 1 to 5(}.
in Circle 4, while for the whole section the averaae stands at 38, which ie the third
highest figure under this head for the whole isla~d. There are two buildin!lll in
Cirolt! 8 contnining between 350 and 400 occupants. Out d a total populnti;;;, of
2_7,223, only. 214 indh·iduals, of whom the majority are Hindus, are in sufficiently
comfortnble Circumstances to nfford the cost of tenements contaiJlir.,., !Six rooms or
more. In Circle 1 nre a few Par$is, in Circle 3 nre a few Jains dowered with u. ·
larger share of this world's goods, nnd living in a higher standnrd 'of comfort : but
the mns~ of t?e ~umbhnrwndn populntion is terribly poor. There is not a single
comnmntty, ut winch the rnst majority dues not li\"e in holdinus of a sincrle room ·
nnd t.hlf percentage, of the total populntion, so domiciled ie hicrhcr in this sectio~ ·
thnn 1n nny c.tl1er part of C wnrd. ·. · · · "'
Ania OF KuMnHABWADA.
No. of Circle., A.;.. in Aares. . I' Area COTCred b;r roads, etc. Total Area.
..
1 10'41 '
ll 10•2;)
II 5·11~
4 i'f.il:'
tiuction. ... . a;i·iu
.
]~·36 I 46•(16
02.
KHARA TALAO •.
No sooner dp we cross Duncnn Road nnd travel custwnr.t to .Pnt•el lload tbo.n
.ch41s for ~hl! time being vnnish ; their place being taken by dwclllng-hnuaca proper,
-and to aomo extellt n1Ao by shops. Circle No. 1, which comprises the Nlill Bazgo.r,
n11turally conta]ns tbe lnrgeet number nf tho lntter ; while Circll'!l S, 4 o.n.t li eeverally
·COntain more flwclling·h<-olll!s tho.n CirciOR 1 nnd ll. Nine mr.Pji·ls, which iA o.lo.rgnr
number thnn will be f,mnd in 11ny ot11"r C-ward section, te•tify to tho prodominllnee
·Of the MoslelD ckment in this' section. · Mot'l!over, it is tho only section of the ward
. which contninll no achool of o.ny kind who.ttver. The section cl)ntnins less bulld-
inga thlln ony other portion of 0 ward, n:1mely, 709 only, out of which those with
two nnd thrre upper iloors are more numero11e than any other kind, and aro fairly
.equo.!ly nistrihuted thr->oghuut t11c section; Circle 2 is conspicuous by the nbsenr.e
of nny building with a fifth or sixth storey. Pmcticnlly spe.•king, nonP. of the
houses in the section are let ont in more thnn liO tenements; but thet'l! i• one house
in Cirele S with between 50 and 60 tenements in it, one in Circle 5 which contaiua
between SO and 1110, nnd one in Cil'ole 6 which eontains b -tween 200 nnJ 220.
Nenrly two-tbirds of th'! 1o1nl number of houses in tho scctim contain no motu
tbnn 10 ~parate holdings.
The larger propur&ionof Lhn popnlo.tion li\."eS upon tl•o first upper storey;
and the ground-floor popui:Ltion of Khara Talno is smalicr thnn tl1nt of any other
t~ection of C ward,' Circlt!ll 3, 4 :md 5 contlliu the bnlk of tha btter elliS&, aml
als:> more fifth-storey residents th:m the other two circles,
Notwithstanding that the residents of the seciiou, llS a general rule, share
t~ingle rooms with no more than four others, instances of rooms containing over
20 occupants ore, nufortuuately, many, nnd nre more nume•ous in Kham Tll111o
thnn in any other section of C ward. They occur in Circles 3, 4 and 5 only :utd
t10where else, one of the rooms in question being oe~upied by 39 persons, which is
the third higl1est number for the whole island. The perusal of the tables Jeferriug
to the population by buildings shoW. that nbout ho.lf the total number contain ~0
occupants or le~s, but that there are two c.1ses in Circles 1 11nol. ~ of houses occu-
pieJ by 200 to 250 persons,. and one C.'\Bil of"' hvu<e in Circle 5 occu~ied. by. 300
to 350 pel'8on,_ The nvcrnge population per inhabited huuse is 39, wh1ch 1s htgb.:r
than thl\t of any othdr section of C wnnl, nud is the secro~d highest fignr:e re~rdecl
for the whule iijliiDd. By circles, thfl ~~ovcrnge per building i,; highest m Cucl~ 1
nn<l lowest in Circle 4. Out of tho totllol population of the sec:tion, 8-l r~ C>!n':..
are midont in sin~..lll-roome.l tenements ,• unl the P~~or~s sho•v the smnllui ~ I*"
Ct'ntllb'B or the numbers unJcr the m~~oin religiuns, which lh-e nllder tb~ljl) l'U 1-
tionl. Tho l\111hommodans 11re fiu- more numl.'rollB th:m any other c:I:\SS, IID<i ha''
n·loptod this olaws of hoMing to the f!>:lont of S l pt'r Ct'nt.. of. the num~: oDI~
In Circlca II unJ 5 Jooa MY nJ>prccial.te numl>er of th~m hv. tn &he rooanest ol:•*"
4lf tenAment. Cirele 1 ia the ""'" in "·hich the~e single rooms are most nuLDtll'Oil9 ;
and Clrola 6 ia tha• in which thov 11ro 1.-.. eommon. ~~olth••ugh, o\"llll in thw aNIIIo
r:£
&h")' IIJDount tu 8~ pol' cvnt, of the tvt.,l number teneiUOUt'-, ~
•
PLAN 8HOWINQ CIRCLE& k BLOCKS FOR THE CENSUS OF 1801.
- ICALE...OOFEE.T TO liNCH
I SECTION
.MOWING CIRCLES It BLOCKS F'OR TH£ CEN8U8 OF 1901. - - -
1!1 •
93
KHETWADI•.
This section contains three. main classes of buildings, bungalows, dwelling-
lwuses propel' and chals.. The last-named appear in every portion of the sec~on,
but are a trifle more numerous in Circles 5 and 8 than in any other. Btmgalowe,
on the other han~, which constitute the home of Europeane or well-to-do Parsis,.
hardly appear at 11ll iii the eaat of the section, and are far more common in Circle 1
thlln in any other. Dwelling-houses of the native pattern are ubiquitous ; and large
11umbers of them will be foUJld in the neighbourhood of Falklarnl Road and
Kbetwndi Back Road. Shops, both those properly so-called and those of -the tiled
-or zinc·roofed but cl1188, are fairly common : mills und workshops appeaJ," every-
where while ~tables both for horses and bullocks exist in every circle. The
' .
section also boasts of three native theatres; situated between Grant Road . and
Khetw~di Back rooo. Although Khetwadi comprises more buildings wit~ a third
and fourth upper storey than any other liection of D ward, most , of its houses
contain no more than a ground-floor or ground-floor and one upper floor. The
areas which contain most houses with a second, third or fourth upper floor, are
naturally those in the eastern portio"n of the section, which in ch!lracter approxi-
mates more nearly tv the true native quarter. Circle 6 contains three. out of the
fonr houses in ~he section with a fifth upper-storey ; while Circle 8 contains more
buildings of all sorts than any one other · circle. Most ·of the buildings in the
section contain no more than ten separate tenements ; and this is a condition of
things existing throughout the whole of D ward. Inetances of buildings shared by
more than forty perijons are few and far between, and appEar tnther in Khetwadi
than in other sections ; and for this result the area lying between lOth Khetwadi
Lane and Ardeehir Dady Street is mainly responsible;
Of the total population of the section, about one-half resides for the above
reason upon tho gronnd-fioor, and more than half the remainder upon the fi~
upper storey. The number of persone resident in Khetwadi is higher than the
Dumber resident in other sections of D ward ; and this fact probably accounts for a
larger population upon every floor, and ensures Khetwadi being the only section ·in
the ward with any appreciable quantity of fourth-floor residents. The circles -with
the largest population are Circles 5 and 8 ; while Circle 6 has the. honour ~f
sheltering the only fifth~floor residents in the section. Circles 4, 5 and 6, however,
are far more favourably circumstanced than others in the matter of room-popula-
tion ; for they are wholly free from instanr.es of over 20 persons inhabiting one
apartmellt, which "'ill be found in greater numbers in Circles land 2 than in any
m
other. More than half the persons li\'ing the section share rooms with no more
than four others ; while not quite one-fonrth live in rooms occupied by :between
fiv~ ~nd ~en individuals together. There are several cases of densely-populated
bulldmgs 1n tho section, that is to say, buildings with two or three hundred inbabit-
~ts i a~d the.se will ~e . fo~d in Circles 5, 6 and 8, where the average popula-
tion per mhabtted butldmg 1s on the whole higher than in any other circle.. The·
. ~vernge is lowest in Circle 4, namely, 11 per house ; but for the section as a whole
1t stands at 26, which is very much higher than the average in any other part of D
W1ll"d: 'l'he result, however, is natuml : for Khetwadi approximates in character f.o
. -- . ......w
.the City proper far mo).'S nearly. th:m .localities like Chowpatty or alkeshwat: r
" . I
. .
Circlea 7 and 8 contain a larger twJroentage of one-roomed tenements than
other parts of the aoction ; while the highest clase, namely, those or six room• and
~. 11re moat noticeable In Oirclea 1, 8 and li. The population, whiah occupioa.
them, belongs in Oirolea 1 and 8 to the Chriltian ruligion for the moat part ; and
in Circle 5 to the Zoroastrian. There Ia not a v111t difference between the total
numbtrs of the Mabommedans and Pareie in Khetwlldi : but the number of the
latter, who are sUfficiently well-to..(lo to afford the cost of remdonoe in tenemonte or
1ix or more rooms, ie very much greater then the oorreapouding number In the
Mnsalman community, which reside• almo~t wholly in tenement• of one room.
There are only a few Jllins in Khetwadi, and most of them belong to the poorer
o11188 ; while tho_ Hindu population, as in most other pn.rts of the island, adheres
firmly to the one-roomed holding, particularly in Circle 8, where nearly 100 per
cent. of their numbers are thus domiciled.
r·
AREA OF KHBTWADI.
-- -----
.No. of OirOie.
. A-illAoNI. cOftlld bJ ro~, elo • Tolol Ana.
.
117'95 .
!
II ll8'01
8 U•ll
19•10
'
~ 10•85
I 9•70
1 ti•Dl
8 1-&·~8 \ .
I
- -- '
I
iN-& 110-&.l
UI·Otl
tloullllll.
I
I ,
CHOWPATTY.
The six mills, of which the largest is in .Charni Road, are perhaps the :111osJ;
noteworthy structures in this section, which contains fewer bungalows ancl ahnosf;
fewer dwelling-houses tban any other section in the ward. . It oontains ~ fair
number of purely native shops, and of small tiled or cadjan huts.. Circles 4 and ~
contain more dwelling-houses and also more chals than any other, whereas
bungalows appear in rather increased numbers in Circle~ 1 and 2. Taking
buildings of all classes together, the largest number will be found in Circle 4, and
the smallest number in Circle J. . The secrion is less built over than any other
portion of the wnrd, and contliins only 855 buildings, of which the greater numbei-
possess only 11 ground floor. Two instances only, one in Circle 3 and one in Circle
4, exist of buildings with a fourth upper storey. The sub-division of buil«iings into-
11 multiplicity of holdings is far less marked here than in other portions of the ward:
and Chowpatty is the only section thereof, in which the sub-division of buildings into
more than forty tenemeBts is absolutely' unknown. Roughly speaking, teu tene-
ments or leHs to one building is the in'l'llriable rule in this section, there being cnly
47 buildings which comprise more than ten; The distribution of the population by
floors natumlly depends upon the character of the structures, as portrayed in table-
2 ; and we need only remark that in respect of the ground-floor and first-storey
population, Ohowpatty contains less numbers than any other section; and that in
respect of second-storey nnd third-storey residents, it contains a smaller populatio:n.
than any other locality of D ward, except Walkeshwar. It likewise harbours a much
smaller population resident in rooms shared by over live and underi •I
ten,
,
over ten and
under twenty, or by twenty or more persons. Circles 2, 5 and 6 are the three-
which together contribute a population of 64, living in single rooms shared by
twenty individuals or more. The average population per house never rises higher-
than ftfteeu in any one circle, and drops to ten in Circles 1 and 5 ; while for the
aection as a whole it etands at 11·88, which is not very much greater than the-
a\'et·age in Walkeshwar.
• Jains and Jews number so few in Chowpatty, that comment is scarcely·
rcqull'ed upon the number and size of their holdings. Christians and Mahommedan•
are found. in approximately equal strength, the_ former chiefly in Circle 4, the·
ll1tter in 0ll'cle 1 ; and of both communities the major portion rentY tenements of
t~e smallest description. Parsis, on the other 'hand, who bulk 'more largely in.
OU'Clea 1 and 6 than elsewhere, ltave a much stronger predilection for the roomier
olaSBee .of ~eml'nLs : for the peroentage of their total numbel', occupying three
rooms ts a httle greater, and the percentage domiciled in bungalows or fairly com-
mo.dious housea is ~ery much greater, than the percentage formed by those who rent.
aatngle room. H1ndus are somewhat more numerous in Cireles 2 and 4 than else-
where, and fully maintain their reputation as the most ubiquitous holders of. one-
roomed tenements in the island.
ADA OP CHOWPA.Tl'Y.
No. of Cirola.\ \ A.. OOftred by Bo ad a, eto I T ot aI A -.
1 17'40
2 15·70
8 7'54
4 14'93
..
5 8'81
6
Section. - 21•04
85·42 26•35 111'7i
-
96
GIRGAUM.
With tho single exception of Chowpntty, Girgoum ~ntalne lo11 buildlnga
of all kinds togather than any other aoction of the ward ; and tho Dllljority of its
structures have either a ground-floor only or 11 ground-floor with ono or two uppor
storeys, the numbers of each of these three olassea boinp; approximately equal. A
rath~r larger Dumber of ground-floor buildings will be found in Circle 1 than in any
other; and the sm~.e relllllrk applies to Circle 6 in the matter of building• with ono
· uppor floor. The section contains more buildings with two uppor fluor• than any
other section of D ward, There ie only one solitary house In tho eoction, eituated
in Circle 6, which is sub-divided into more than fifty rent-payers' holdinge. Circle•
land 6 contain more separate buildings thrm any ether; but nuarly tho whole of
these are severally divided up among ten rent payers or lese.
Of the whole Girgaum population of 14,500 odd, tnore than half are domi·
ciled upon the ,:(round-floor: and tho number of these in each circle ie greater than
the number living off the ground. Circle 8, indeed, is the only one in which the
:fil'st-atorey population approximates at all closely to the number& resident upon the
ground-floor. Of the few persons who reside on the fourth uppor storey, Circlea 2
and 6 contain the larger proportion ; and in the l11tter area will be found two
persons resident up five flights of stairs. 'l'bese coupled with eleven in Khetwadi
are the only fifth-storey residents in the ward. Moat of the rooms in tho section
are not inhabited by more than five individuals ; though cases occur in Circles 1,
2, 4 and 5, of persons sharing rooms with 20 or more otheno. Scattered caaes will
likewise be found in Circles 1, 2, 3 and 6 of building& occupied jointly by over 100
persollR; but the a'l'ernge population.per inhabited house, namely, 17, ia very much
lower than in Khetwadi The average natumlly varies by circles, rising to 26 and
21 per house respectively in Circles 3 and ll, and dropping to 11 per houae in Circle
1. One must remember in this connection that at the hour when the record woe
prepared, rrom one-third to one-fourth of the housea in Girgamn were empty; and
that similar enquiries during the monsoon or at a time when plague WIIB not
epidemic, would prohably necessitate considerable lllteration of theae figures and
aTOrnges. The Bllme remark ia applicable also '<! Chowpatty, one-fourth of lhe
honsel in which section were wholly unoccupied at the time of the census.
The Bene- Israel community lias only 9 of ita members resident in Girgaum,
and ia wholly unknown in Circle& 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5; the Christian ia absent from
Circle 1 ; and the Jain ia unknown in Circle 4. The !Xlpula\ion of the aect.ion ia
eiiOlltially llinJu, and of poor cla11; for only in Circle& 4 and 7 doea one discover
any apprl'Ciable.percentllb"ll of their numbers, domi~ in ai:c-roomoo tenemenca or
bungalow1. Of all communities, the Paraia, who are non-iswnt in Cirol•• 3 anJ
4, live in oomparativelylall,"llr numbcn in the better clua of tenewenta: but they
atft!Ct tho II!Ctional reault but &lightly. At leut 70 per cent.. of the wlwle Girgaum
f'OjlUlatloJD ia un11hle to rent tenemenla oomprieing more than o_D• room.
A11u or OuwAVlL
Cuolo. .... Ia ...... I ~,,.. oonN41111-III. olo. I Tl>lal . _
I Bi·~ I
•
3
II·~'
tw·ltl
11'113
•
'
a
II
~·(JI)
1V•711
1 lli'7U -·--
.-,;;Jtluu. O~·u-- ·sv-\s-· -- liftl\)
--GIR.GAUM SECTION--
.,......-: PLAN &MOWING OIRGLE.&. BLOCK& F'ORTHECI.NaUS OF 1901--
- ICALE+DOrEr.TTDliNCH - -
-NOTE-
----DWARO - -
•
WALKESHWARSECTION
-
.
PLANS SHOWING CIRCLES & BLOCKS FOF\ THE CE.NSUS 0Fl901.-
-NOTE-
C R.(.~t~ ARt. BOUH0[0 BY GillEN
..._.....
II p_,.
s 3
0 ·''•,,
''~
J I
I I
!J-r:
·. WALKESHWAE
' >
• I ;, .: :
. : · This fCction is chiefly rem11rkable for containing more thnn ·halfthe· total
number of bunglllo.,·s in 0 ward, and a larger number of dwellinJ;-l:~uscs thar: a~y.
"ther IP.ctiun of the ward, . The greater proportion of bungalows wlll be .fouurl 1n
lJircle 7. and £he .amallci!t number in Circle 4, Of dwelling-houses, ns distinct ft·um
bung.1lowe, Circle 6 contains a larger nnmbQr than any other, which would -h;we ·
been further increased, had not all the buildings within the rompound of Go~em
ment Honse been collectively associated under one number. Most of the Hmdn
temples naturally appear also in this circle, which contains th~ site of the historic
Shri Gnndi and the olcl temple of the Snnd-god. Smnll tiled or zinc-roofeJ
dwelling huts appear ill Circles 1 anrl 6, wb.ile "C..'"ldja," huts are met.
"·ith all o\·er the section, and particularly in Circle 3 .. Speaking generally, the
section may be said to consis~ of houses aurl bungalows of b3ttm· cltLss, and the
s.tablcs attached to the s:~me. Remembering t4o outl\•anl nppea~:mce of the
soction 1 one is not surpr!serl to· find that the section, though contnining actua~ly
more buildings than t.he 1•eat, yet shows ·a compnmtively larger number With
ground-floor or ground-floor and one upper floor. only, nnd fur fewer buildh1ga
with third and fourth floors, than other recognised divisions of the ward. J;>rncti-
cnlly the whole of its three-storeyed houses together with its solitary f9ur-storeyed
house, appear in Circle 6. BuildingR with two upper storeys arc also more
numerous in this circle thim in ~ny o1her, notably CirclJs' 4 ~nd · 5, where thP.re
are only 3 nnd 2 respectively of this class. Like Chowpntty, the £action is v.oid of
th•e-storayed buildings. As most of the circles comprise only private houses and
bungalows, rented by well-to-do Nath·cs and Europeans, the "tenement-building"
is mBrkedly absent. Circle 6, indeed, the historical ancl religious importance of
which is boun~ to attract a large .number of Hindus of nll cL'lsses, is the only one
in which l10uses let out to over forty separate rent-payere occur; and it shares
with Khetwmli and Girgaum the doubtful honour of having one bouse sub-divided
into between 80 and 100 distinct holdings. On this account the number of persons
resident upon tho second and :third storeys i~ higher in Circle 6 than in other parts
of the section, the population of which lives for the most pr~rt in ground-floor
bung.~lows or woll.built hc.uses .,r one upper storey. It is rerhaps unnecessary to
add thnt practically few of the houses in the ser.tion contain more than 20 persons ;
and thnt tho aYerngo population per inhabited building is lower in Walkeshwar,
not •mly than in D wal'd, ht;~t than anywhere else in the island.. It st!lnds at 8 for
the section, ns a whole ; while in Circle 4 it decreases to 5. Circle 1 is marked by
the highe~t avera1go, namely 1 14 ·.27 1 per inhabited house.
• . . Wnlkeshwar ia remarkable as being the one and only se~tion of tl1e island
m whtch tho perccnt~~ge borne by Christians domiciled in tenements of six rooms
' .
~nd o\"llrl exceeds the percenta.,rTO borne by any other community, both in that and ·
m ~ther .cl~saes of teneme.nts. Another noteworthy fact is thr~t out· ot' the six
manu reltgaons of t~e sectton, the Hindu is the only onP. in' w hieh the' percentage
borne by those of .•ts mrmbors ~esident in single ·rooms exceeds the percentn,.,<Fe
bo~ne by those of 1ts follouers m any other class. The "Pnrsis who live under the
•
" '
.ContlitiODB of grcntc&tcomfurt, forl)lli7 JIPT CcDt, or.ti\1eir toto.l. r.umbcn in tbc ICCtic
the Mabommetlo.ns 7b, the Jo.inw 65, and tho Jews 70. The two urene, in which t
percJnlagc of population <1 welling in single rooms is highest, are Circles land
;the result in the lattc'l' aue being mninly brought nbout hy the t•r~acnce ol
Jarge body 'or nnth·e aeJ'VRnh; 'and in the: fonnor by the. porirer popul11tinn reside
od~ tho '\\·ostern sii:lc of. the Gnmtlc1·hhoroughfnro •.. Tho :Jew, it mny bo notctl
uon-3xlsteni in Circles 1, 2, 4, 5 nnd G; "\\·bile! 'he· .Jain i1 wholly unkno1vn
•Circles 4 nnd 5, Wn.lkrshwnr is undoubteJly tbo cmia within which n oomfortll
.style of ilxiatcnce mo~ 'll'idcly p1·evnils,
- -
~o. of Cirolo. Area in .Acres.. Area covered b7 Bo:1.d1, ate. Tot3l.Area.
1 63·65
!! t)')·3i .
U.J'7:il
i l
'I
ll I
I
'
4 17-(ltl I
''
~ 5NO II
I
75·~0
tl I
~1'07
II •
' I'
PLAN SHOWING CIRCLES & BLOCKS FOR THE CENSUS OF'\90\. - - - "'
NoTE.
CII,&LE& AR£80UMDEO BY GRI&N
5£CTION 18 BOUMDE.D BV RED
J
.,
'
MAH.i\t..AKSitMI:
KAMATHIPURA.
Save for one solitary bungalow in Circle. I, Kamathipura is void of this class
of building. Itastmctures are mostlydwelJing-houses of the,poorer ~pe; and 35 of'
them are declared totally unfit for h111111U1 habitation. . Circle 2 contains a fa<r largm:
number of dwelling-houses than the other two; while Circle 1 comp~s 32 out of
the 43 cbals in the section. 'fhe number of houses with a ground-floor and two
uppP.r floors is higher than thaL. of any other class in the section; and the larger
proportion of these two-storeyed bouses appears in Circle 2, which comprises abou~
thret' times as many hollBeB as exist in either Circle 1 or Circle 3. The structural
chamctcr of the section is roughly as follows :-ground•lloor dwellings to east nnd
west, divided in the centre by a collection of upper-sloreyed dwellings, one of which ·
has five upper floors. Sub:-division of houses into a multiplicity of tenements is not ·
common ; for most of them cuntain no more than ten separate holdin,as, wht1e the-
number let out to inore than thirty rent-plyers is comparatively .trifling. A~out half
the total population of the section resides upon the ground-floor ; while J!econd and
third-floor residents are more numerous than in any othe1: section of the '"ard except
Byculla, it
is worth remark that notwithstanding that Circles 1 and 3 contain less,
upper-storeyed dwellings than Circle 2, yet the second and third-storey population
of those circles is not very much smnller than the· corresponding popnlation of
Circle -2. The numbers of those residing in rooms occnpied by 20 perso_ns or more-
is very much higher in Ciroles 1 and 3, than in Circle 2, where there are only _50;
persona 80 domiciled ; and the same remark .is applicable to the co.se of those who
shnro rooms with over 10 and under 20 other individuals. ,,rrhe, av:ernge populo.tioD.:
per house varies from 19 in Circle 2 to 47 in Circle 3, whiclJ. contains one building
occupied by 590 persons, and two occnpied l•y between 250 and 300 individuals"'
The aycrnge for the whole section 1s not very high, and compares favourably · w.ith·
nll other parts of the wnrd except Tarwadi and Mnzagon, · · ·
The p11pulation of Kamnthipura is poor, and in consequencEl lives alruostr
entirely in one-roomed tenements. In Circle~ 1 and 3, 88 and 92 per cent. respect-
ively of the population live in this smallest class of holding ; and the percentage of
the total population borne by those who occupy tenements of more than. two rooms-
is pmoticnlly negligible. Hindus and Mnhommedans are most numerous in each,
circle, and with very few exceptions live in tenements of one-room ~and "the same i&
the 011se with the Christians and Jews of the section. A few Jains in Circle 1 seem
1omewhnt better. off, f1•om the fnct of their occupying tenements o( 2 and 3 rooms-
in that ~ocru.ity.. For the BBction, as a whole, Pa1·sia show the highes~ percentage of.
population lD SIX-roomed tenements, Jews in five-roomed tenements, Christians in
fonr-roomed tenements, Pars is ogo.in in tlmements of 3 rooms, J nins in tliose oi ~
rooms, and Hindus in tenements of 1 room. Under each main religion, howevt>l',
the number of those occupying and sharing tenements of one room is far in excess, ·
of the number in nny other class of holding. .
TARDEO•.
One-ruutue•l tenement• are far oonunoner than th<l86 of a J'(lOIUie'l' clais, al.l!l
are lnhaLhtl\1 by 1!8 por cent. of the totlll 100tiun"\ pop~tl!Won. 1'1111 . av~
JIIIUII"'r uf OCOIIJIIIIIII per fOOU\ in thia OIIIU ot' ttlllllU\en\ i1 higher ~1\ Ill 0~
tootiono uf E Wllt<l, thla reauh belug chir.lly \raCOIIblo \o U. 1" 1~ lli.\UI~ra ol
Jl"l'llons who inh"l~t oue room uuly iu Cii'CIIlt S and " Cl'Nk 1 thvwa th~ h~h.,.,
Jl"fOOiit.lj,"' uf pupultlll\\11 ill tWu-1'\ll\UI~IJ tlll\\llll<llll'l bll\ \he ll\,111\h<\N i~bi~
• •
C E.NSUS OF 1901.
0
<(
0 @ I~
r
'o
/<(
-J
~
E L
4
L A s R 0
0
----
2.
0
N
T
R
G ---1/
7,r -- I,I
I I •
' I
No. of Olrole. Area iD Aoreo, Aree oovered by roacbo, etc. Total Area.
1 37'20
I :' '
;'
.ll
8
ll3·30
2~·56
l
:
4 39•67
.
- -
Soctlon, 129•73 98•95 228•68
i04
1st NAGPADA.
. . The total number of buildings in this section is s~allcr than in any othel"
sectiOn of E ward. The mnjo1ity of them are dwelling-houHes, which 11re more
numerous to th.e south of Pirkhan J,ane, coupled with 39 obals, which are
equally distributed to the north and sooth of that thoroughfare. There are nc.
thatched .huts in the section, and only six bungalows, of which 5 appear in
Circle 1. The loftier style of structure appears only in Qircle 2 ; for example,
houses with a fourth, fifth or sixth upper storey are non-existent in Circle 1 ~
while the numbers of those with a first, second or third upper floor are higher
in Circle 2 than in the former. Pirkhan Lane, indeed, may be held to divide the
section into tw·~ portions, each of a different structural type, ground-floor dwell-
ings having the monopoly of Circle 1, and upper-storeyed buildings the monopoly
of Circle 2. Subdivision of buildings into ten &eparate holdings or less is the
general practice in this section ; and with the exception of one house in Circle 1,.
which is let out to over 140 rent-payers conjointly, the majority of the buildin~ts
subdivided into over 10 and under 80 tenements will be discovered in Circle 2.
Bycolla is the only other section of the ward which can show a boose rented out
in over 140 tenements. The population is fairly equally distributed over the
ground, first and second floors ; but being about treble 118 numerous in Circle 2~
as it is in Circle 1, the number of upper-storey residents is naturally larger in
that area ; and it is the one and only locality in the whole of E ward, which
offers an instance of people residing on the sixth floor. A little more than hnlf'
of the total sectional population lives in rooms shared by not more than 5-
penons : the remainder share single apartments with from 5 to 9 others, and 106
individ;i'als in Circle 1 live in rooms each occupied by over 20 persons. The
average population per occupied house is, however, higher in this section than in
nny olher division of E ward, namely 50 ; and this figure increases to 58 in the
case o£ Circle ll, where the actual number of houses containing over 100 occupants-
is, comparatively with the rest of the section, very high.
Of tenements of all kinds, 94 per cent. are those of the humblest class ;
and theae are inhabited by 98 per cent. of the total sectional popul~&lion. These
percentages Gre ali~htly augmented in Circle 2, which contains a very poor popu-
lation, llnd a very small uumbor 1\£ tenements of better class. The mllBS 0:lhe
population belong• to the Hindu religion ; while the· :Mahommedans, who w11l be
found mo•tly in Circle 9, form roughly one-&.'tth of the total. Christians, ~upy
ing for the moat part one-roomed lenements, are discoverable in boili nrcles >
while tho Jowe, of whom there are 861' only, bulk more largely in '~single-~
bcldiuga of Circle J. Tbf average number of occupants per room r111es from 8 lD
•u
Circle 1 4 in Circle II, 11nd atanda at 4·44 fnr the lleQtiNl u a whale.
11.., of Oi,.lo.
..--... 2 ~ NAGPADA
WING CtRCLE.B 8( BL
CENSUS or 1901.
~u/LNoRTH
0
': ..
..,
105
2nd NAGPADA.
Dwelling-houBP.B form the bulk of the buildings in .thi~ section? the
tony bein.,. to some extent relieved by a few poor shops and SIX chal~, sttuat·
mono ., d •
ed in Circle 1. Carious)y enough, there ~ a slight reversion, here an m
Bycalla to the type of building so common in portions of B ward, namely,
the dw;IJ.ing-house with godowns on the lower floors. Otherwise the section .is
not stracturslly remarkable, and is ' absulutely devoid of temples, workshop!!,
-dispensaries and hospitals. T~e majority of i~ bai.ldings. contain tW:o or three
upper storeys, these being especmlly numeJ;ous m Ctrcles 2. and 3. Ctrcle 1 . has
00 four-storeyed houses, and Circles 3 and 4 contain the few five-stor~yed . houses
in the section. Few in number as these latter are, ~hey are more ·'!otlceable than
in any-t5t'her section of the ward, Three and four-storeyed houses, also, are much
more common in 2nd Nagpada tha.n in other parts of E ward. Houses sub-divided·
into ovm· 50 rent-payers' holdings are rare ; but so far as they do exist, will
he found to inct·eaae slightly in numbers, as one moves from east to west. The
larger number of buildings containing ten tenements or less, appem· in Circles 2
and 3 which severally shelter a greater second and third-storey population than
any other circle. So far as the room-population is concerned, it is satisfactot·y
to note that rooms containing 5 or fewer persons shelter the bulk of the sectional
population, and that, olthough the section is less populous than Ta.rdeo, . and
approximately equal in numbers to Tarvadi, yet the numbers of people sharing
rooms with only font• others is greater in 2nd Nagpada than in those two sections.
At the snme time the population resident ii~ r.>oms shared by 20 or more persons
is illl·ge in Circle 2, u.nd, regarding the section en bloc, is about ten times RS large
as the corresponding population in 1st Nagpada. Circle' 1 is re·markable for the
presence of a building containing 443 persons, and for. showing a 'considerably
larger population per inhabited house than any other circle. The average, which ·
stands at 39 for the whole section, rises to 68 pel' house in Circle 1, which is,
grenter than the average of any other circle of E ward, except the seventh. circle
of Byculla. Togethel' with Khnra Talao, 2nd Nngpada shares the .honour of con-
.tniuing the seconcl largest a''et•uge population per. house for r.he whole island. The
.highest uverage, a• we have already remarked, belongs to U markhadi, •
Here, as in 1st Nagpada, one room is the limit of size of nearly ev~ry te.ne-
ment in the section: and in these single rooms live 93 -per cent. of the Mahommedan
population,'Which predominates in the section. It is worth remnrk, however, that
the Mahommeda.ns are the only people in 2nd Nagpada who can lay claim to the
occnpation of tenements with six rooms or more. There are 42 of them thus domi-
~iled~ namely, 6 in Circ!e ll and 37 in Circle 8. The Parsi is ab$olutely unknown
In Ctrcles 2 and 8, and practically non-existent in Circle 4 : the few members of
this race in Circle 1 are mostly poor, and affect the humblest class of holding. The
.Jew eP.ems to hnve a greater preference for. Musalman localities than either the
Christian, Jain or Parsi; and will be found in small numbers in two three and four-
. ~omed hol~i~ge in the second oircle ofthis section, and in one-ro~med tenements
m the remammg area.
-----.------.:.A~R~If~A~OF 211D N.t.OPA.DA.
No, of Circle., A,,... in.J.or... ., .boa oo,;,:ve;;;red:.....;::..:by=ro::.:a::da:::,::elo.~I---T-o-W-A.rea----,,..--:
-
1
l)
5•ll6
6•38
.
8 4'()8
4 2•94
t5ootion. 11!'71
1'1
15·2~ a4·ou
106
BYCULLA.
· With t~e single e~oe~tion ofMazngon, which cover~ a wider area of ground,
~youlla oontluns more buildtngs than any of.her section of E ward, and although
tis b~galows are less numerous than thoAe of l'arwadi and Mazagon, and ita
~welling-hous~s proper fall Phort of the number in the latter section, yet ita small
tiled huts and 1ts oh&ls. are many, and point to the presence of a poor and indna-
trial population. Circle 3, whioh mns from J aoob's Circle along ltipon Road to
Sankli :Street, contains 119 oMls, the largest number existent in any of the oirolea;
and Circle 4, which lie~ hard by, contains the nex~ highest number, viz.,
60. The small Circle 2 contains th11 majority of the bungalows in the aoction,
and Circles 1 and 8 \he larger number of dwelling-houses proper. The last-
named areas a.lso con~ribute the bulk of the small tiled huts, and Circle 4, to-
gether with Circle 6, provides inost of the '' Cadjan" huts of the Paction. Eight
mills (in Circles 1, :-s and 8) and eighteen fac~ories (in Circles 1, 2 and 4) provide
a livelihood for a large number of the lower classes ; while stables are
numerous, particularly in the neighbourhood of Bell~is Road, beloved of the
Arab horse-dealer. Seven houses and one of the ch&ls in Circle 3 sre declared
unfit for human habitation. The number of buildings with a ground-ftoor only is
larger than in any other section of the ward, except Mazap;on ; those with one
upper floor are more numerous than in any other area, except Kamathipura;
while structures, with five upper storeys, are completely non-exis~ent, as in Tardeo
and Mazagon, Kamathipura is the only other section in the word, contnining a
larger number of two-storeyed buildings. The ground-ftoor dwelling naturally
predominates in every circle, especially in Circle 1 ; while Circles 1, 2, 3 and 4
are the only ones, which contain structures with four upper floors. Those with
one, two and 1hree upper storays are more common in Circle 3 than in any other.
WhetUVo turn to tho au b-division of the stmcturt's into ren\-payers' holdings, the
populous character of the section is borne in upon our minds; for Bycuila easily
heads the list of all the E ward sections, for the highest number of buildinb"B let
out in a muhiplioity of tenements; nndit is the only sootion, besides let Nagpada,
wbiph oft't~rs an instance of a building sub-divided into over 140 \enements. Thia
building will be found in Circle 8, not far from the Parel Road. CiroiH 3, 4, ~
and 8 o.,ocnin b.Jiwetlll them tho l11rger number of muhipl&oteuement buildings :
w bile of thoiiU whioh coutnin ten or !ewer holdinge, Cirole 1 sbowa the highest
numbt'lr, The populati~>n of Byoulla appears in peater numbers upon the ground-
lluor, }'l'rtioultuly iu Cirolee 1 and 8; while aeoond-atorey, third..torey, roorth-
atoruy and evun tinh-atoruy rtJsideula are moal numt~roue in Cirolea 8 and 4..
Cirolo 6 hu lhe emalle•t proportion of lhe third-floor popnl~tion, and no foufdl.
atortty pupul11tioo whaleveo·.
In lh" mallor of tho diltributiun ol populatiN• by 'I'\1Qme, 1\y•·ulla also
t).,aurvtta "'"'" lbau }>Uaing 1111en&i<'ll. Though tho tmmb.Jra ol' th1111o>, who share
oua romn witb fuur ot.llllfll or w••r, are pater th~m in
r.. any oth"r pan oC £
Wllfd, tmtloliiiUIIDI ruugbly to s~.ooo cml ot' the 11>1111 pot•lllatioo oC M,OOl\ ~.... ~·
uumU..r of th1111tt, wbu 11l1111'\l rut>lllt wilh llwt lO au1l e~ owt iO lllhon, ""
bitrh, atul bil!lutr than lhll OUI'I'\>Ijlllll<lilli 111UIIbel' hi olhe.f flU"' of tho "'""''-
Tho~e, who live under the most crtJ'Wded condition, will be found in every circle
except No.7, in which also those who share rooms with over 10 and under 2(}
others are less numerous than in other circles. Circle 3 has the numeric'"ly
greatest population. There are five very densely· populated buildings ·in the
section: one of them in Circle 1 has 405 inmates, one in Circle 2, 548 inmates, one
"in Circle 4, 530 inmates, .and one in Circle 6, 551 inmates. In general, one would
award the palm for thickly inhabit.ed buildings to Circle~ 3, 4 and 7, ·in the
lasf;.named of which the average population per building is higher than eleewhere,
namely, 78. Circle 8 stands second with an average of 55 per house, and Circle 4
third with an average of 50 per house. For the !lection en bloc, the average
rests at 44, a number second only to that of 1st Nagpada.
It is, perhaps, unnecessary to remark that the vast majority of the section's
tenements contain only one room ; and that 91 per cent. of the population affects
this humblest species of holding. They are actually more numerous in Circles 1
and 8, than in other circles, while the average number of occupants per room in
this class of holding is highest in Circles 1 and 5. It is worth remark that Circle
6 is wholly devoid of four-roomed, five-roomed, or six-roomed tenements, and
that such holdings. are practically unknown in Circle 7. The Christian element
predominates in Circle 2, and lives for the most part in tenements of the highest
class, viz., those containing six or more rooms. In Circle 1 and Circle 3 the
Hindu and Mahommedau together form the bulk of the population, and live practi-
cally wholly in tenements of one room : and this type of holding is occupied by 96
to 98 per cent._~f_l!iudu.J!opnlario~, w~ich predominates in Circles 4, 5, 6, 7 and
8. The I'ar81 IS wuolly unknown lD Crrcle 6 ; but the.,Jain and the Jew con-
tribute their quota to the population of all circles. None of these three com-
munities, however, are numerous, there being roughly 400 members only of each
in the section ; and suoh of them; as do live in Byoulla, appear to helong mostly
tu the class which finds its means will not suffice for the renting of anything more
capacious or wholesome than one room.
AREA OF BYCULLA•.
1 187'80
-
ll 41"14
8 il7•63
•
-
'5 35•90
·6'28
6 50•07.
-.
7 15'85 •
8 48•35
TARWADI.
This section contains more bungalows than any other section exoe t
Tardeo ; and, excepting Byoulla, more oh41s than any other section of wur~ E
It ia, however,_ a~ a mill·aec~on ~t it chiefly ens:ages the attention, there boin~
13 of these but~dmgs, ~ agn~nst 8 tn _Byoulla and 4 1n Mazagon, Like Kamathipura
and Mazagon tt conta~ dtspensan~s, and also ~our hospitals, as well as a large
number of stablea. With one exceptton, all the mtlls are situated in Circle s . and
on: thia account, probably, there are a larger number of oh41s there than ~ the
other two circles. Bungalows and dwelling-houses, on the other hand 1 bulk
rather more largely in Circle 2 than elsewhere ; and the same remark i.£ appli·
cable in the case of small tiled huts of the poorer class. " Cadjan " huta are
equally common in Circles 1 and 3, bnt appear no where in Circle 2. The
larger number of bnildinge in the section are provided with a ground-Boor
only, and are very nearly as numerous as buildings of the same class in Bycnlla.
They ara fairly equally distributed throughout the section, but are a trifle
more numerous in Circle 3 than elsewhere. Of buildings with three upper
floors, the section contains a. smaller number than any other section of E ward,
and also fewer buildings with two upper tloors than any other section,
except Tardeo. Houses sub-divided into more than 40 separate tenements
ar3 rare ; and there is no instaDce forthcoming of a building m!lde up of
over 100 holdings. Taking each of the three oircles separately, it uppeara that
nearly all their structures contain no more than 10 separate holdmgs; while
Circle 1 is singular in containing nearly all the structures, which are severally let
one to more than 60 rent-payers. Scrutiny of Table 4 shows that the bulk of the
population in each of \he three oirolee lives upon the ground-floor, and that
seoond-t~torey, third-etorey, and fourth-storey residents are practically confined
entirely to Circle 1, while the population resident upon the firsi upper Boor ia
Je88 numerous in Circle l! than in ~he rest Notwithstanding ~ha~ 'he population
of Tarwad.i is, with the exception of 1st NBocrpada, 11maller than tha' oi other parts
of the ward, ~he number of its population living in rooms shared by l!O or more
penon& ia only 11xcel.'ded by the number so domiciled in Byculla ; and the bulk of
theee, uiWlely 1,300 out of a tolal1,700, are to be found in Circle l, which ia also
mnrlioo by \he highet~i average population per inhabited building in the section.
Tbia avorug~, however, atuuds a~ a very low figure for l'irole ll, and hel}18 the
100 titm, 111 a whole, to .bow the emallet~t population per inhabited building of any
..,o&ion r.( E ward, namely 20'87. Rtlj.."'IU'iling the al'tualnuwbenl oooupyiog any
aiu.;lo building, Cirolllll 1 and a ataud eas.ily tirst Oil the litit; aud th~ former
4l01lla.haa ou11 buildinw. oooupied by 688 iudividuala. This figure is only eelip1ed,
lor I( warll, io \he oue of a buildiog in 'fard110.
~11111 ol" &be rotidetatl iD ~~~oh oirole live iu tenemeulll ot a aing!e fl.llllllo
w!Ji,·b uon»lihlle alnullll the only ol11111 ot' holdillg iu tho~ ''"'tiou.. Cirol<' 1 ill.
how«>VtJr, l'"u\tlillr iu owniu~r a }Op11l111iou of oY\ll 1,600 rt'SiJ\)Ill iD .th• .~m...t
ulilllll ,.f ltJiltUat~nll 11hUe, il "' exoh•d• the IJIIIM Qfthe }"Opulatillu, ''will be
lll"OII IIIII IbUlle wt1o CMII'Up)' '"uem~ul» uf ~ IOODII 01' &11~\1~ 1\•rm I ~h..-~
w~
I
"Jr r.
s
109'
-oentage of the total population of the section than any other class, and • higher
pero~mtage than appears in other portion of the ward. These oocnpiers of six-
roomed tenements, who bUlk more largely in Circle 1 than ·elsewhere, belong
almost entirely to the Christian religion and Parsi race. Hindus, on the other·
hand, who are far more numerous than the followers of other religions, live almost
·entirely in holdings of one room ; and the same conditions prevail amongst the·
Mahommedans, who are slightly more numerous in Circle 2 than elsewhere. A.
few Jains will be found oconpying tenements of one or two rooms in each of the
three circles; while the wealthier members of the Jew community, which numbers
only 434: for the whole section, are chiefly resident in six-roomed tenements in
Circles 1 and ~.
ABBA oP.TARWADI.
•
:No, of Olrolo., Aroo iD Aoros. Moo covered by roads, etc. Total Area.
----~----~----~~--
1 120•09.
:! 117•88
8 209·09
Seotion.
'
479•68
~~~~~-----·--~-------------1_ ____________
110 .
MAZAGON.·
.LDIII aoohon oonta1n1 not only more dwelling·hciuaea proper, bul aiiiO-
more " oadjan" huts than will be found )11 other sections of E ward. The Conner·
m 4 .
. llilllie is more numero111 Circles t and than in the rest · while the latter i•
oonfined almost entjrely to Circle 6, which also conlaina a comparatively large
number of shopa. Qbals are here and there discoverable in every circle, exoept .
No. 2. Mills, on the other hand, have been erected only in Circle 6. StructurM
possessed of five upper floors, are nowhere discoverable ; and, with the exception
of a few houses with one or two upper floors, the structures of the aeolion are·
confined to a ground-floor only." There are only ten honees in the section sub-
divided into more than 40 tenements, and half of this number belong to Circle 6.
Practically all the houses in each circle nontain no larger number of separate
holdings thau 10. Considering the height of the buildings in Mazagon, one is
not surprised t~ find that the bulk of the population lives upon the ground-floor,
that third-floor rpsidents number only about 5001 and that a fourth-storey popula-
tion appears only in Circles 1, 2 and 3. Its numbers are approximately equal to
the number of fourth-floor residents in Kamathipura, which oWns the smallest
population of 1his class in the section. A little more than half the total popnl..
lion of the section occupies rooms shared by no more than 6 persons ; and of the
circle-population, that resident in Circles 1, 2 and 3 contains a comparatively larger
proportion of persons so resident. The number of lboee living in rooms occupied
by 20 or more persons is approximately the same as in Kamathipora, and is
somewhat larger in Circles 3 and 4 than in the rest. When compared with other
parte of the ward, the houses of Mazagon do not appear to be unduly crowded ;.
there is one house in Cirole 1, containing 453 inmates, and six in Circle 5 with
over 250 occupants. But for the section 1111 bloe, the average number of occupants
to a houae comes to 20 only, while in Circles 2 aud 4, this avera,ue decreases
respectively, lo IS and 18.
Of the total number of IQnements of all kinds, 90 per cent. are tenements
of a singl11 room, these being specially noticeable in Circles 1 and 5 ; and they
aro inhabited by some 83 per cent. of the whole lln::agon population. Tenements
of the higheat class are more numerous in Circles 2 and 4 than elsewhl're, but
are not rented bv more than 4 per oenl of the total sectional population. The
mujurity ofthei; occupants aro Christians, Parais being the ooly otb.er communiiy
tllllt can be ~aid to affect auoh holdings to any e:xtent. Jews and Jaina are
O<>napicuouely nb•Nit both in those and in live·roomed tenements ; and there aro
only 10 Mahomt>dnue, or ·26 per cent. of the whole Muealman popula&ion.. who
live in the roomieMt de-cription of holding. The Hindna aro numerous lD all
air.,)na, partioulurl~· in Cirde 5 ; and reeide pta(•tioal~v entirely in h~di~. of
one room, • Cirule 9 com priaes the area iu whioh is reeidoot the largt'f pn•pl)tllOil
of lhul8 oooupying leDt'Uilllltl of 8 better cliUIII. •
• AUA (lf M.\Ull\>11,_ _ - - - - - - - .. - -··· .
PAREL.
The most noteworthy features of this section 'are its 391 chafe, ~nd il!i-
46 mills anci factories. The chalS are distributed t!uougnout the section, the
largest number being found in Circle 4, whlch comprises a smaller area than a~y
other circle, except No. 1. Circle 9, aiPo, which is very .little larger, _co~tains
almost 88 many. The mills appear in C"JrCles 2, 3 and 8 ; and the ~aotones In a~
portions of lhe section, except Circles 1, 4, 9, '-·hich are par- ezcellente tne re&l-
dential quarters of a poor population. Dwelling-houses are also fairly num~rous, •
and bulk rather more largely in Circle 6 ; while.ehops of the poorer aort will be-
found in every circle except No. 2. Though the total number of buildings in.
Pare! is smaller than the number in Sewri, yet structures with 1, 2 and 3
upper storeys are more numerous in -the former, and appear in comparatively:
large numbers in Circles 3, 6 and 9. Ten out of the 15 structures wjth a. third.
upper Boor are situated in Jhe two small Circles 1 and· -l. In tlie matter. at
sub-division of houses into numerous holdings, Parel stands easily first among __
the three sections oC F ward, for it alone provides instances of houses Iet out in
more than 70 tenements, while it contains many more Lhan Sewri and Sion of the-
ciDSs comprising 30, 40, 50 and 60 holdings apiece. . :Buildings divided up
among 40 to 70 rent-payers are found in all areas, except Circles 1,_5 arid 9,
while Circles 1, 3 and 4 comprise the majority of those let out severa!ly to· over-
70 rent-payers. Circles 6 and 8 are those which contuin structures held -jointly
by the ama.llest collection of rent-payers. _The bulk pf the ~arel population
na.turally resides upon the ground-floor ; hut Circle 4 comprises a fair_ number-
of first storey residents, and Circle 1 eontains a larger second-Boor and. third-
floor population thao aoy other. The number· of these is very small in Circle 5.
As follows naturally from the nature of the section and· the height of its
siructures, Pa.rel owns a larger population, living off the ground, than other sections
ofF ward. When oom ared with Byculla.and Tarwadi, two other mill-centres,
the number of ~hose wh share single rooms with 6ver 20 others is -not unduly
high, and is even less than the corresponding- number in Sion : and, if one
glances at each circle in rn, it does not appear lba.t these most crowded condi-
tions are affected to any large Axtent by the population of Circles 1 and 4.. On
lhe other hand, the average population per inha.bited house rises to the somewhat
alarming £gore ·of 79 in Circle 1, and of 57 in Circle 4; while Circle 7 shows
an average of 59. There are two houses in Circles 2 and 3 with between 300
and 350 occupants, one house in Circle 1 occupied by between 350 and 40~
individua.ls, and one in Circle % ooutaining 460. For th~ section en bloc Lhe-
a~erage number of inhabitants to a building stands at 31, r!hich is a. considerably
h1gher figure than obta.ins in either Sew1i or Sion.
. -
Ninety per cent. of the Pare! population occupies Jnements of one room,
tbe_ ave1-age number of occupants per room in this class l:king 4. Such comfort,
~ IB afforded by tenements of 6 rooms or more,, is prac~cally unknown in all
cllCles e:roept No 5, where some 1 pel oent. of the circle population occupies this-
class of holding. These more fortunate residents are Christians and Parsis : -
I he ooly &Wo communities in the section which can be held loioccupy these better
\
112
class holdings to any appreciable extent. Exoept in Oirole 9, where there aro only
iwo followers of Islam, the Mahommedan appears in every part of Parel u the
oocupier of a one-ro.nned holding ; and ilia same atyle of tenement is adopted by
the Jew, who, be iL noted, is non-existent in Cirolss 4, 5 and 7. There are 17
well-to-do Jains, resident in Circle _9 ; but the oommunity, aa a whole, is no better
off than the Hindu population, who swarm to the extent of 94 per oent. of their
total numbers, in small one-roomed tenements. Circle 9 is the only one in which
exists an appreciable number of Hindus oooupying tenements of 4, 6 or 6 rooma.
AREA or P AB.BL.
1 1'45
3ll·97
'
5
e llll"IIO
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8oolloo.
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OF 1801
NORTH
SouTH
llS
SEWRI.
Chals are not uncommon in this section; a larger number of~ them being
found in Circles 2 and 4 than elsewhere. The last named area also contains 7.
out of the 8 bungalows of the section : and is dotted with a good number of small
"cadjan" dwelling-buts, which combine with 142 dwelling-houses proper to .
render the circle more crowded with buildings· of all kinds iliau any other.
The mills and workshops of Sewri are situated for the most pari in Circles 1 and
2 • a~d this faot is doubtless responsible for the prevalence of chals in the latter
' Few buildings in the section contain any more than a ground floor; and"
area.
only one example will be found, iu Circle 1, of a'buP,din~ with three upper· -
storeys. Of the three sections composing the 1" ward, Sewri is. the one wnich
contflius the smallest numbe~ of upper-storeyed buildings. Similarly, tho
section compares favourably with the other two in the ¥J.atLer of the sub.q.ivision
of buildings: for·there are but two examples of multiple-tenement buildings and
tb.ese, situated in Circle 1, contain no greatec number than 70. In every circle, ·
p11rticularly in Circles 3 and 5, ten tenements is tbe limit of sub-division of nearly
every building. A larger first-storey and second-storey population will be
found .in Circle 4 than in\ the rest o£ the section, while Circle 1' shelters
• the thirty-eight individuals; 1 who alone reside upon the third upper storey.
Turning to the subject ·of room-population, it appears that in Circle 5 alone
the number of those, resi~ent in rooms occupied by over· 5 and und11r 10
parsons, iY larger than the number of those who share rooms with four. or
fewer others. Circle II is conspicuous ~y the complete absence of persons sharing
single rooms with twenty others or IJiore ; and .the latg~r n~mber of this latter
clnss will be found in Circles 1 and 4.\ House-populations are small, Circle 1 being
the only area in whicb. one can find ~n instance of more than 150 occupants of
one house; while the average popu!Jtion P.er inhabit.ed building,·which nowhere
rises above 18 (Circle 2), decreases in pircles 3 and 5 to 8 and 6 respectively.
Tenements containing more than r-o rooms are so few, that they scarcely~
oall for comment. The few that do existte in the possession of 21 Christians
81 HiuduH and 12 Parsis. Nearly the ~hd of the population of Sewri belongs t; ·
the Hindu religion, and bulkH ao large!~ one-roomed tenements, that we find
tb.is c\nss of holding forming 93-per ,at. of 'all tenements of all classes,. and
sheltering 91 per cent. o.f the total seotilal popula'tion. It appears that. no single-
member of the Bene-Israel community .~sides in Sewri.
AREA 0~ SEWBI.
1 lno·aa I
II 119•04
3 66•94
ol lUl"ll
5 60•11i!
SQu"on, '(f7"77 ll7""10 441>•47
...
;114
• SION.
, In dealing with this section, it should be noted that Cirole 8 is the aite of
the great Da.da.r Health Camp, whioh, being merely a collection of temporary
.structures, vacated during·the monsoon, has not been taken into account when
preparing the speci~l tables for the section. Ther" are only two mille in ·the
section, one in Circle 1 and the other in Circle 5. The last-nnmed comprises the
o0ld settlement of Vadala, while Cirole 4 contains that historically-interesting spot,
Naigaon. Buildings with more than two upper floors are found to the number of
4 only in CirCles 3 and 5 ; and the charaoter of the buildings in the section is beet
understood by remembering that out of a total of 2,400 odd, 2,100 and over contain
.a ground-floor only. Multiplicity o£ tenewente in a building is also rare, there
being only one ·building in the section, belonging to Circle 11, which contaiDB
lletween 60 and 70, and only 14 which are sub-divided into more than 20 holdings.
The refugee-population of Circle 8 is, of course, purely a ground-floor population.
A perusal of Table 6 shows that the population living in rooms occupied by 5
persons or less, as also those in rooms occupied by over 5 and under 10 individuals,
:I
is smaller than the corresponding p~pulatiau in Pare! but that those who share
rooms with between 10 and Ul others, and those who shMe rooms with 20 or more,
others are more numerous than in Pare!. The last-named cbss of the population
.appears in all circles except No. 11, and No. 8; and their actual number is higher
in Circles 5 and 7 than elsewhere. The one building in Circle 7, which conlaios
{)Ver 350 inhabitants, need occasion no surprise: it. is the Matun,ooa Leper Asylum,
which is l'hown on the sectional map a~ tho south ciorner of the circle. The
average population per inhabited bnildin~ is hlgher in Circle 3 than elsewhere,
namely 21 ; and lower in Circle !!, namely, ? ; while for the secSion, as a whole,
'he avera,171l is a little lower than that ob~ning in Sewri.
One-roomed tenements are, as usn~; the style of holding occupied by the
majority of the populat.lon. There are only 51 tenements of the highesl class,
{)CCUpied by 1,031 individuals or 4·59 per ueul of the loW Sion population ; and
~ey are scattered in small numbers all over the section. Sion ooutains Ute sites
{)( aome of the earliesl Hindu aeLtlem$t& ; and to this day the gre~ tnass of ita
population are Hind as, resident in the Clllly class of holding, whioh accords "ith
$heir ~eanty earnings. In Oirolesl and ;\ reside a fair number of Mabommedans of
poor olnee : while in CirolealS, 5 and llliYil moal of the Christian populanon, also
poor and rarely reeideut in any but the am~lest claaa of ten~enl. The Je~ appears
uowhere iu C."irolee .a, II, 6, 7 or 10; and Ill one of these, Cirol11 'l, there l8 also no
Jain etemeut whatever. These area• bQlong by prescriptiYil right &o the Hindu.
.A IUit. OP ~\JON.
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aiC1'10N IS BOUNDID
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-stoN eE:CTION
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- -- ~
115
MAIDM.. ••
We b&ve now arrived at the last ward of the island, which is made up of
the !Iahim and Worli sections. These two differ somewhat in character; for
1rlahim approximacee more clos.,ly to Sion, and is a section of health camps and
-cadjan-huts; while ~orli, th~gh itco~tainsa~airnnm~ofche IaUer, is~ a~
exteot a mill-area, With a constderable mdustnal population. The bulk of me bnild-
.ingB in :Mahim belong to the '' dwelling-honse" and "~jan-but" classes, which
appear in every circle : while the chals number U4 and are fairly equai.ly
distributed all over the section. The two well-known Koliwadas oC the section are
situated in Circles 6 and 7. Stmctures with a ground-floor only, or with gronnd-:tloor
.and one upper storey, appear in every circle, the formar class being far the more
numerous: dwellings with a third upper storey are practically unknown, while those
with two upper storeys are found nowhere in Circles 8, 7 and 8. The larger nnm:ber
-of such houses belongs to Circle 5, which together with Circle 6 contains about
-one-third of the total number of bnildings in the &Action. · The esseitliial
difference between Mahim and Worli is apparent from Table 8, which shows
:Mahim to be almost void of bnildings sub-divided into a .multiplicity of
.tenements; where1111 Worli hae a comparatively· large number. · In :Mahim,
.as in tiion, the people nearly all live upon the ground-floor ; ·and only in Circles
4 and ~ will be found an exiguous population resident upon the third upper-flooL
'Thera appear to ue one or two instances of overcrowding i.n the section ; for
.although 13,000 out of the total 24,000 occupy rooms containing no mor~ than
opersons, yet there is not a single circle except No. 1, which does· not contain
.a certain proportion of population in rooms occupied by 20 or more individuals.
The larger number of these appear in Circle 8, which contains a higher population
than any olher circle in the section. Properly speaking1 }llock ,15 of Circle ~
should be out off, and amalgamated in the map with the 8th cpocle of Sion; for it is
mainly a health camp area, and shareS" the overflow with the Sion section on the
other side of the Railway line.: and actually, the figures recorded against Circle 8
.in the special tables refer to the area comprised in Blocks 1 to 14. There are no
very dense}y populated buildings in Mahim, the average population per house for
tho whole section being 10 only.
In every circle, tenements of one room only btilk more largelf ·than those
• ·Of any other claBB. In Circles 4 and 5, there is an appreciable number wiih t
rooms; while Circle 6 contains the highest proportion of six-roomed tenemente
. '
which only number 120 for the whole section. This is probably due to
sn European or well-to-do Christian element in that quarter. The Parsil
exist under fairly comfortable conditions in this section: Circles 2
and 3
shelter a certain number of the poorest ; but, taking the oontmnnity e11 maue, the
largest proportion to the total is borne by those resident in tenements of 6 rooms
and over. Circle 6 a.ontains the largest proportion 4f Hindus, living in-the roomies1
-oliiBB of holding: but it goes .without _.ying that their numbers are trivial m•-oDIJio
:parison wi!h.Jhe u.aoo followers. of Hinduism, who.dwelLin..siDgla rooms .
AREA OF MAHIIL
)lo. ul OUolo.l
CONCLUSION..
firRt to last has proved him~elf to be a thoughtful, intelligent, and most industrious
lilly.
• S.M. EDWARDES,.LC.S,