Madhyamgram
Madhyamgram মধ্যমগ্রাম | |
---|---|
Kolkata Metropolitan | |
Madhyamgram Crossing (Chowmatha) on Jessore Road | |
Madhyamgram Location in West Bengal, India | |
Coordinates: 22°42′N 88°27′E / 22.70°N 88.45°ECoordinates: 22°42′N 88°27′E / 22.70°N 88.45°E | |
Country | India |
State | West Bengal |
District | Number of wards = 28 |
Government | |
• Municipality Chairman | Mr. Rathin Ghosh[1] |
Elevation | 15 m (49 ft) |
Population (2014[Approx]) | |
• Total | 175,670 |
• Rank | 298 |
Languages | |
• Official | Bengali, English |
Time zone | IST (UTC+5:30) |
PIN | 700129/700130 |
Telephone code | 91 33 |
Vehicle registration | WB 26 |
Lok Sabha constituency | Barasat |
Vidhan Sabha constituency | Madhyamgram |
Madhyamgram is neighborhood in Kolkata, within the Indian state of West Bengal, and in the urban Metropolitan City Kolkata, having a Calcutta (Kolkata) postal code and telephone zone (33). It is under the jurisdiction of the Barasat sadar subdivision,[2] within the limit of Madhyamgram police stations, and under the local jurisdiction of Madhyamgram Municipality. It is a part of the area covered by Kolkata Metropolitan Development Authority.[3]
History
Madhyamgram was in the Kingdom of Raja Protapaditya Roy, one of the twelve feudal provinces of Bengal, and Ruler of Jessore during the Mughal regime.
On December 20, 1757 Mirzafar, the Nawab of Bengal, presented twenty-four parganas to the East India Company as dowry which also included Madhyamgram, under Anwarpur Pargana, adjacent to Barasat.
The first railway line from Madhyamgram to Duttapukur was commissioned in 1882, and the station was called Chandipur. Madhyamgram was then named as Majher Gaon, probably because the area was situated between Badu (Chakradharpur Mouza) and Sajirhat (Guchuria Mouza).
The present narrow Noai Canal, now acting as a dividing border line between New Barrackpore and Madhyamgram, stretching from the South of Ganganagar to Sajirhat in the West used to be a wide river, once called Labanyabati, which through colloquial transformation became the Noai River, and after years of silt depositions, turned into Noai Canal.
At that time, Anwarpur Pargana was famous for its tobacco trade and a special sweet-smelling blended tobacco was manufactured in Madhyamgram.
Madhyamgram was also a big paddy growing area, and the Labanya River was a medium of navigation for the exportation of those products. Madhyamgram was also famous for its fine embroidery works that attracted appreciation from Delhi and Mumbai. Many Muslim families maintained a livelihood through those works.
Climate
The climate is tropical, like the rest of the Gangetic West Bengal. The hallmark season is the Monsoon—which occurs from early June to mid September. The weather remains dry during the winter (mid-November to mid-February) and humid during summer.
Temperature: 41 °C in May (max) and 8.3 °C in January (min)
Demographics
As of the 2001 Indian census,[4] Madhyamgram had a population of 198,964. Males constitute 51% of the population and females 49%. Madhyamgram has an average literacy rate of 76%, higher than the national average of 59.5%: male literacy is 80%, and female literacy is 71%. In Madhyamgram, 10% of the population is under 6 years of age.
Economy
There is a major textile mill and a rubber factory in this area.
Transport
The neighbourhood is characterized by its close proximity to an airport (around 15 minutes). Madhyamgram also has good transportation facilities, with Road mode and the local railway section. There are bus routes from Madhyamgram to various parts of Kolkata, and to many other towns and villages.
The primary station is Madhyamgram railway station. Taxi services are one of the most popular forms of transportion to reach nearby towns like Sodepur, New Barrackpur and Barasat. Battery operated toto vans are also used for short distances. A railway connection links Madhyamgram to major areas and to the rest of Kolkata.
Other regular transport services, like private and governmental public transport buses, taxis, and rented car services are also available in Madhyamgram.
Private Buslines
- 79B Bagbazar – Barasat
- 79D Babughat – Madhyamgram
- 93 Bagbazar – Kharibari
- L238 Howrah Station – Barasat
DN Series of lines
- DN2 Barasat – Dakshineshwar Via Belghoria
- DN8 Barasat Checkpost – Salt Lake Karunamoyee (via Nagerbazar)
- DN9/1 Barasat – Dakshineshwar (via Dum Dum Station)
- DN16/1 Barasat – Dhamakhali
- DN17 Babughat – Barasat
- DN18 Shyambazar – Baduria
- DN43 Barasat Checkpost – Dakshineshwar
- DN44 Dakshineshwar – Bongaon
- DN47 Barasat Checkpost – Salt Lake Karunamoyee (via New Town)
STA Buslines
- Barasat – Baruipur
- Barasat Champadali – Garia Bus Stand
- Jagannathpur – Garia Bus Stand
- Barasat – Botanical Garden
- Barasat – Kamalpur
- Esplanade — Kalyani
- Basirhat – Gadiara
WBSTC Franchisee Bus Routes
- Dhulagarh – Barasat
CSTC Buslines
- AC10 Howrah Station – Nilgunge
CTC Buslines
- C8 Barasat – Joka via New Town, Gariahat, Tollygunge
- C14/1 Madhyamgram – Tollygunge via Ganganagar
- C43 Habra – Garia
- D1 Tollygunge – Chakdaha
- D8 Barasat – Baduria
- D11 Esplanade – Baduria
- E17 Barasat – Digha
- E19 Habra – Digha
- E20 Habra – Durgapur
- E25 Esplanade — Habra (via Nagarukhra)
- E36 Nabanna/Santragachi – Habra
- E38 Esplanade – Mayapur
- E41 Habra – Asansol
- ACT3 Barasat – Santragachi
- ACT4 Barasat – Salt Lake Karunamoyee
- ACT5 Barasat – Digha
MH Series of lines (WBHIDCO Tata Marcopolo AC Bus Routes)
- MH2 Barasat – Exide via New Town, Karunamoyee
- MH4 Barasat – Exide
- MH10 Barasat – Rashbehari via Ultadanga
NUVO Bus Transit Buslines
Bus Routes without Numbers
- Esplanade – Nagarukhra
- Barasat – Dakshineshwar
- Barasat – Matapara
- Chakla – R.G. Kar Hospital
Education and culture
Madhyamgram has a number of secondary and higher secondary schools and two graduate colleges, namely the Vivekananda College and the Acharya Prafulla Chandra College. The latter, though territorially in the New Barrackpur municipality, has a close relationship with Madhyamgram, especially in student composition. The two most well-known schools are Madhyamgram High School and Madhyamgram Girls High School. There's also Acharya Prafulla Chandra Girls High School and Acharya Prafulla Chandra Boys High School. The Acharya Prafulla Chandra Vidyayatan has become one of the best schools in Madhyamgram. The popular English medium schools are Julien Day School in Ganganagar, Sudhir Memorial Institute near Doltala and St. Judes Higher Secondary School at Basu Nagar. The engineering college Camellia Institute of Technology and the management college Camellia School Of Business Management are also located here.
Notable People
Shri Jahar Dasgupta-painter.
Sports
Madhyamgram High School has won the Subroto Cup, an all-India inter-school soccer competition, seven times, which includes a hat-trick (in the years 1981, 1982, and 1983).[5]
References
- ↑ Official District Administration site Archived January 15, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ District-wise list of statutory towns, Archived March 19, 2005, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ "Base Map of Kolkata Metropolitan area". Kolkata Metropolitan Development Authority. Retrieved 2007-09-03.
- ↑ "Census of India 2001: Data from the 2001 Census, including cities, villages and towns (Provisional)". Census Commission of India. Archived from the original on 2004-06-16. Retrieved 2008-11-01.
- ↑ Marmar Mukhopadhyay (21 July 2005). Total Quality Management in Education. SAGE Publications. p. 157. ISBN 978-0-7619-3368-7.
External links
- Kolkata/Northern fringes travel guide from Wikivoyage