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Ismail Yusuf College

Ismail Yusuf College
Ismail Yusuf College.png
Ismail Yusuf College
Motto "सा विद्या या विमुक्तये"
Type Govt. College
Established 1930
Principal Dr. Pratima. S. Jadhav
Undergraduates Bsc, Bachelor of Commerce, BA
Location Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
19°08′00″N 72°51′14″E / 19.13334°N 72.854022°E / 19.13334; 72.854022Coordinates: 19°08′00″N 72°51′14″E / 19.13334°N 72.854022°E / 19.13334; 72.854022
Campus Urban, Jogeshwari, 54 acres (220,000 m2)
Nickname IY College
Affiliations UGC, NAAC, University of Mumbai
Website [1]

Ismail Yusuf College, is the fourth oldest college of Mumbai, India. "I Y college", as it is popularly known, is managed by Government of Maharashtra. It is the oldest college in North Mumbai. It was established in 1930 with a large donation from Sir Mohammed Yusuf Ismail,K.T. on Jogeshwari Hill. The foundation stone was laid by Sir Leslie Orme Wilson, Governor of Bombay in 1924. The vision of founding fathers shape up a temple of learning in the sandstone in the regal Persian style with arches and specious corridors, surrounded by the country's big abundantly bearded banyans and palms.

Founded in March 1924, the college started functioning in 1930. Though it was established as a first grade Government Arts College, over the years it grew into a full-fledged Arts, Science and Commerce College. In the early 1940s, it was the only college beyond Bandra that catered to the educational needs of the western suburbs of North Mumbai.

Ismail Yusuf College is an example of co-operation between private philanthropy and Government patronage. It has a long history and picturesque topography. It came into existence due to the munificence of its donor and the patronage of the Government. In January 1914, Sir Mohammed Ismail Yusuf offered to the then State of Bombay a donation of Rs.8 lakhs for the promotion of higher education of Muslim youths. The then Governor-in-Council accepted the donation and decided that it should be utilized for the establishment of a first grade Government Arts College at Andheri primarily for Muslims, but students belonging to other religious communities should also be admitted.

In the 1920s, the State of Bombay chose a site at the present day suburb of Jogeshwari for the construction of the college, which then was in the form of a tropical forest. Originally the campus was spread over 120 acres (0.49 km2) of land but today it has shrunk to about 54 acres (220,000 m2) due to encroachment by neighboring slum-dwellers and housing societies, construction of Western Express Highway bisecting the land under college control and the grant of land by the Government of Maharashtra to a private society for the establishment of an educational institution, now called Arvind Gandbhir High School.


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