Sir M. Visvesvaraya (1860-1962) : The Engineer
Sir M. Visvesvaraya (1860-1962) : The Engineer
Sir M. Visvesvaraya (1860-1962) : The Engineer
Visvesvaraya (1860-1962)
Bharata Ratna Sir M. Visvesvaraya, was without doubt one of the most influential
makers of modern India. He was a rare combination of intellect, integrity, discipline,
culture and vision – who will continue to inspire young professionals, centuries after
his time.
His beginnings were humble – he was born in 1861 to a Sanskrit scholar Srinivasa
Sastry and his wife Venkachamma in Chikkaballapur. After completing his early
education in Chikkaballapur, he came to Bangalore for higher education. This period
was fraught with hardship as he lost his father at the age of 15. Finances were
strained, and there was a time when his mother failed to dispatch the fees money in
time for an exam. The young Visvesvaraya showed his resilience when he walked 55
kilometers to his hometown and somehow managed to get enough money. He then
worked as a tutor to earn his way through college.
The Engineer
Another early innovation was the collector well that he implemented in Sukkur in
Sindh province (present day Pakistan). The project had multiple challenges – the area
was hot and arid, and they had to manage with minimum funding. An initial plan to
pump water from river Sindhu to a hill nearby, filter it and supply the water to the
town through pipes had been adopted by the municipality. However they did not have
enough money for the filters. Visveswaraya solved this ingeniously by digging wells in
the river bed itself close to the river bank to obtain spring water through percolation.
Thus filtering was achieved without having to install filters. To increase the supply of
water, a tunnel was driven from the bottom of the well under the flowing river. This
was a technique rarely seen in those days, but is now standard textbook material
under the heading “Collector Wells”.
reducing the risk of submerging surrounding land. The gates are automatic because
they open and close at the rise and fall of water in the reservoir. This was the first
time that thought was given to using reservoirs for flood control, not just irrigation
and power generation. Visvesvaraya used 48 cast iron automated gates at the
Krishnarjasagar Dam, incidentally manufactured at the Bhadravathi Iron and Steel
Works, a factory that he established.
The Statesman
When it came to large scale engineering projects, Sir MV was known to think beyond
engineering. He would take up these projects only if he was convinced that it was
feasible economically, and that it served a social purpose. As Dewan of Mysore State,
he was instrumental in galvanizing the state into progress. He established a number of
rural industries and set up basic education for small shop owners in the fields of book-
keeping and commerce. Agricultural schools were opened to help with modern
agricultural practices that reduced farmers’ overdependence on rain and good luck. A
number of industrial workshops and training institutes were set up. Public libraries
were established. The Kannada Sahitya Parishat was formed, and many books on
science were published in Kannada. The University College of Engineering (now known
as University Visvesvaraya College of Engineering) and Maharani’s College for Women
came into being. In fact, he established the Mysore University, as until then, all the
colleges in Mysore State were under the Madras University. Interestingly, he had a
tough fight on his hands to achieve this. His clinching argument was – “If Australia and
Canada could have universities of their own for a population of less than a million,
cannot Mysore with a population of not less than 6 million have a University of its
own?”
Pandit Nehru was well aware of Visvesvaraya’s extraordinary abilities both as engineer
and statesman. In fact, economist Vinod Vyasulu highlights the legacy that Nehru
inherited from Visvesvaraya, comparing his achievements in the princely state of
Mysore to those of Nehru on a larger canvas fifty years later. Nehru had keenly read
Visvesvaraya’s proposals for nation building that the latter had submitted to the
Congress members of Bombay legislature in 1936. As President of the Indian Economic
Association, and member of the Planning Commission, Visvesvaraya’s abilities were
utilized towards nation building. He presided over the first session of the Indian
Science Congress in 1923, and the Indian Economic Conference a year later. His 1934
book, “Planned Economy for India” talks about the importance of estimating national
income and achieving a society with a minimum level education, healthcare and
opportunities for productive work. And he saw Industrialization as a means to achieve
this.
The Visionary
Our country is such a bundle of contradictions that it is perhaps fitting that Gandhi
and Visvesvaraya, two of the most profound builders of Modern India had such
conflicting views on modernization, while holding each other in the highest regard.
While Gandhi’s motto was “Industrialize and Perish”, Visvesvaraya’s was –
“Industrialize or Perish”.
In a letter to Visveswaraya in the 1930’s, Gandhi wrote, “In spite of the strength of
my conviction, I have great regard for your fine abilities and love for the country and
that shall be unabated whether I have the good fortune to secure your cooperation
or face your honest opposition... I see that we hold perhaps diametrically opposite
views. My conviction based upon extensive experiences of village life is that in India,
at any rate for generations to come, we shall not be able to make much use of
mechanical power for solving the problem of the ever growing poverty of the
masses.”
To this end, he established the Bhadravati Iron and Steel Works, The Sandal Oil
Factory, the Soap Factory, the Metals Factory, the Chrome Tanning Factory. He was
also associated with the Tata Group of companies, helping them in the management
Tata Iron and Steel Company (TISCO). He stared the Bank of Mysore (Now State Bank
of Mysore) and The Mysore Chamber of Commerce. He provided a list of 36 industries
to be established in the country in industrial engineering and applied chemistry.
Legend has it that when on tour on official business, Sir MV carried a set of candles
bought with his personal money, and used them for personal work like reading etc in
the night after he was finished with official work. This may or may not be true, but it
indicates the high reputation he had for personal integrity.
This is a very brief glimpse into the life and works of this extraordinary man. There
are innumerable other ways in which he has shaped modern industrialized India, and
no “profile” can fully chronicle the far reaching and lasting nature of his
contributions. At the end of this reading if one is left with the feeling, “Wow, One
man did all this?”, then the chronicler’s mission is accomplished.