Sobha Singh (builder)

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File:Sir Sobha Singh (1890-1978).jpg
Sardar Sir Sobha Singh (1890-1978)

Sardar Bahadur Sir Sobha Singh OBE (1890 – 18 April 1978) was an Indian civil contractor, prominent builder and real estate developer of Delhi.[1] He is the father of Indian writer Khushwant Singh.

Early life[edit]

Sardar Bahadur Sobha Singh was born in 1890, in the village of Hadali in Khushab, Shahpur District – then part of British India (now Pakistan). He was the elder of the two sons of Sujan Singh and Lakshmi Devi, the younger one being Sardar Ujjal Singh,[2] who was a member of Parliament in India from the state of Punjab.

After a few years at school in Amritsar, he joined his father's business of civil construction dealing in the laying of railway tracks and the digging of tunnels.[citation needed]

Career[edit]

When Hardinge, the Viceroy of India, announced the plan to move the British Indian capital city to Delhi was along with the Coronation Durbar for King George V and the Queen Mary, would take place in Delhi in December 1911, Sujan Singh and 22-year-old Sobha Singh, who was then a contractor working on the Kalka-Shimla railroad, shifted base to Delhi as building contractors. Building contracts then being given out. Sujan Singh-Sobha Singh were accepted as senior-grade contractors. Plans for the new city were drawn immediately after the Coronation Durbar.

The foundation stones had been laid by the King and Queen. After this the architects, Edwin Lutyens and Herbert Baker wanted to change the site from where the foundation stones had been laid to Raisina hill and the village of Malcha. Sobha Singh had the foundation stones removed during the night and took them 11 km across the city and replanted them on the new site. The construction of the plans were taken up after World War I (1914–1918).

For the South Block and War Memorial Arch (now India Gate), Sir Sobha was the sole builder. He also worked on some parts of the Viceregal House (now Rashtrapati Bhavan) and Vijay Chowk.

The South Block in New Delhi for which Sobha Singh was the sole contractor.

Sir Sobha bought as much land in Delhi as he could. He bought several extensive sites at as little as Rs 2 per square yard, freehold. There were few other takers, and he came to be described as adhi dilli ka malik (the owner of half of Delhi).[3] He constructed many residential and commercial buildings, including the Connaught Place market complex,[4] as well as the Chelmsford, A.I.F.A.C.'s Hall, Broadcasting House (All India Radio), the National Museum, Dyal Singh College, T.B. Hospital, Modern School, Deaf and Dumb School, St. Columba's School, Red Cross Buildings and Baroda House. Outside Delhi, he built the High Court and Government Medical College at Nagpur and the Pasteur Institute at Kasauli.

Sir Sobha Singh was a person of modest education but his success as a builder made him one of the wealthiest persons of Delhi; also, a prominent member of the social elite. He also became the first Indian president of the New Delhi Municipal Council and held the post four times, in 1938, 1942, and 1945-46.[5] Appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 1938 Birthday Honours, he was subsequently appointed a member of the Council of States[6][citation needed] He was knighted in the 1944 Birthday Honours.[7] He also built Sujan Singh Park, near Khan Market New Delhi, New Delhi's first apartment complex, which only had bungalows till then, in 1945, designed by Walter Sykes George and named after his father.[8] Sir Sobha Singh died in Delhi on 18 April 1978.

Legacy[edit]

Sardar Bahadur Sir Sobha left a large part of his private estate to a charitable trust, the Sobha Singh Trust, which maintains homes and hospices for the terminally ill and aged all over the country, most recently it built, a dharamsala, within the Guru Teg Bahadur Hospital complex, in New Delhi in 2005[9]

He also presided over some institutions funded by it like the Deaf and Dumb School and the Modern School. Among his last grants was one for Bhagat Puran Singh's Pingalwara home for the destitute in Amritsar.

In 2006, India International Centre (IIC) organized the first Sir Sobha Singh Memorial Lectures, in which the inaugural lecture titled, "My father, the builder", was given by his son, writer Khushwant Singh.[10]

Testimony against Bhagat Singh[edit]

Sobha Singh's public image was marred by his sketchy testimony against Bhagat Singh.[11][12]

Personal life[edit]

The younger brother of Sir Sobha Singh, Sardar Ujjal Singh (1895–1983), later became a parliamentarian, and governor of Tamil Nadu (1966–71).[2][13]

Sir Sobha was married to Sardarni Vira Bai (Varyam Kaur, Lady Singh). They had four sons: Bhagwant Singh, Khushwant Singh (journalist and author), Brigadier Gurbux Singh and Daljit Singh, and a daughter, Mohinder Kaur, who was the mother-in-law of Rukhsana Sultana (her son Shavinder's wife) and grandmother of Indian film actress Amrita Singh.

References[edit]

  1. Lutyens' Legacy Forbes, 7 February 2007.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Welcome to Memorable relics
  3. Who built New Delhi? Archived 2008-09-07 at the Wayback Machine www.delhilive.com, 13 February 2008.
  4. Connaught Place
  5. Ex-Presidents New Delhi Municipal Council.
  6. "No. 34518". The London Gazette (Supplement). 7 June 1938. p. 3703.
  7. "No. 36544". The London Gazette (Supplement). 2 June 1944. p. 2566.
  8. "Making history with brick and mortar". Hindustan Times. 15 September 2011. Archived from the original on 5 December 2012.
  9. Caring for the care-givers Archived 2005-04-24 at the Wayback Machine Indian Express, 10 April 2005.
  10. Quraishi, Humra (23 July 2006). "Back to the glorious past". The Tribune.
  11. "How Bhagat Singh Was Sentenced". Outlook. Retrieved 19 December 2020.
  12. "Bhagat Singh vs Sobha Singh". The New Indian Express. Retrieved 19 December 2020.
  13. "Past Governors". Raj Bhavan, Chennai, Official website.

External links[edit]