Once a Happy Valley : Memoirs of an ICS Officer in Sindh, 1938-1948
by Pearce, Roger
Published by : Oxford University Press (Karachi) Physical details: xix,514 Pages 14x22 cm | HB ISBN:0195793951. Year: 2001Item type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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General Stacks | Non-fiction | 954.9180359092 P349O 2001 (Browse shelf) | Available | 14488 |
Browsing Garrison Public Library Multan Shelves , Shelving location: General Stacks , Collection code: Non-fiction Close shelf browser
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954.918025 S159S 1990 Sind Under the Mughuls : An Introduction to Translation of and Commentary on the Maẓhar-i Shāhjahānī of Yūsuf Mīrak, 1044/1634 | 954.918031 C769A 2021 Annexation and the Unhappy Valley : The Historical Anthropology of Sindh's Colonization | 954.918035092 P187S 1984 Shaikh Abdul Majeed Sindhi : Life and Achievements | 954.9180359092 P349O 2001 Once a Happy Valley : Memoirs of an ICS Officer in Sindh, 1938-1948 | 954.918052 K841T 2002 A Testament of Sindh : Ethnic and Religious Extremism a Perspective | 954.9182 K451M 2014 Multan--Daimabad | 954.9183 A516K 1986 Karachi |
Include Maps, Illustrations, Glossary and Index.
This book recounts the experiences of a British ICS officer on the Indian subcontinent during the last seven years before independence and the first eighteen months after the birth of Pakistan. It provides an invaluable record of British administration in Sindh and includes interesting information about the social activities of British officers and their families living on the subcontinent during the Raj.
This book is essentially a narrative of the experiences of a British ICS officer in the Indian subcontinent during the last seven years before independence and the first eighteen months after the birth of Pakistan, and provides an invaluable record of British administration in Sindh. The author's accounts of the conditions prevailing in rural Sindh in the middle of the twentieth century are based on memory as well as personal notes and letters, and include interesting details of the social activities of British officers and their families living in the subcontinent during the Raj. The story is traced through selection and training in the ICS to posting as Assistant Collector and Deputy Commissioner in Sindh, where the author found true friends among his Sindhi and Baloch neighbours. Finally, as Secretary of Agriculture, the author witnessed the birth of Pakistan-he personally met and shook hands with the founder of Pakistan, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, and Lord Mountbatten- but found himself a foreigner in a land he had considered home.
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