Historty
of Chintadripet
In
the beginnings of the City of Madras go back to the earliest
stages of English commercial enterprise in India. The English
East India Company was started
in 1600. The growth of these suburbs indicates a period of
great prosperity in the cotton trade, which was the chief
investment of the Company.
The Dubashes and chief merchants of the Company engaged in
the supply of cotton goods to the Company rose to great prosperity.
Sunkurama had a large garden in the bend of the Cooum river
south of Periamet which was taken over in 1735 for a new weavers'
village known as Chintadripettah ( In olden day it was called
as chinna thari pettai ).
By
that time Sunkurama had fallen into disgrace and was succeeded
by his colleague Thambu Chetty as the chief merchant. Government
resolved in October 1734 to erect a weaving town in the site
of Sunkurama's garden and to permit only spinners, weavers,
washers, painters and the necessary attendants of the temple
to settle in the village. A cowl was granted on these terms
and Bemala Audiappa Narayana helped in the peopling of the
village, which grew to contain nearly two hundred and fifty
families within two years after its foundation.
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