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Sir Ganga Ram

Rai Bahadur Sir
Ganga Ram
CIE, MVO
Sir Ganga Ram.jpg
Native name Rai Bahadur Ganga Ram Agrawal
Born April 1851
Mangtanwala, Nankana Sahib District, Punjab, British India (now Pakistan)
Died 10 July 1927 (age 76)
London, England
Resting place Portion of cremains scattered in Ganges while the rest are stored in the Samadhi of Sir Ganga Ram in Lahore, Pakistan
Monuments Samadhi of Sir Ganga Ram near Ravi River, Taxali Gate, Lahore
Residence Lahore, British India
Other names Father of Modern Lahore
Alma mater Thomason College of Civil Engineering
Occupation Civil engineer
Known for General Post Office
Lahore Museum
Aitchison College
Mayo School of Arts
Sir Ganga Ram Hospital
Mayo Hospital
Sir Ganga Ram High School
Hailey College of Commerce
The Mall, Lahore
Home town Lahore
Relatives Ashwin Ram
Shreela Flather, Baroness Flather

Rai Bahadur The civil engineer and architect Sir Ganga Ram Agrawal CIE, MVO (April 1851 – 10 July 1927) was born in Mangtanwala, a village of Punjab Province in British India, in present-day Pakistan. He graduated from Thomason College of Civil Engineering (now IIT Roorkee) in 1873.

His father, Doulat Ram Agrawal was a junior Sub inspector at a Police Station in Mangtanwala. Later, he shifted to Amritsar and became a copy-writer of the Court. Here, Ganga Ram passed his matriculation examination from the Government High School and joined the Government College, Lahore in 1869. In 1871, he obtained a scholarship to the Thomason Civil Engineering College at Roorkee. He passed the final lower subbordinate examination with the gold medal in 1873. He was appointed Assistant Engineer and called to Delhi to help in the building of the Imperial Assemblage.

In 1873, after a brief Service in Punjab P.W.D devoted himself to practical farming. He obtained on lease from Government 50,000 acres (200 km²) of barren, unirrigated land in Montgomery District, and within three years converted that vast desert into smiling fields, irrigated by water lifted by a hydroelectric plant and running through a thousand miles of irrigation channels, all constructed at his own cost. This was the biggest private enterprise of the kind, unknown and unthought-of in the country before. Sir Ganga Ram earned millions most of which he gave to charity.


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