
N. B. Bonarjee
Civil servant and politician educated in England as a child
Other names
Neil Bruniat Bonarjee
Place of birth
Date of arrival to Britain
Location(s)
SE21 7AA
United Kingdom Hertford College
OX1 3BW
United Kingdom
About
N. B. Bonarjee was born in 1901 in Lucknow. His grandfather had converted to Christianity in 1847, and his father had travelled to London in 1885 to compete unsuccessfully for the Indian Civil Service (ICS). In 1904 Bonarjee's family went to England. His father entered Lincoln's Inn and his mother became Honorary Secretary of the Indian Women's Education Association in London. In 1910 Bonarjee joined Dulwich Preparatory School and his parents returned to India leaving their children in the care of guardians. His elder brother and sister attended the University of Wales in Aberystwyth, but Bonarjee joined Hertford College, Oxford in 1919. He was a member of the college Rugby XV and took up ballroom dancing. He obtained his history degree in 1922 and then became a temporary schoolmaster at Dulwich for a year.
In 1924 he took the ICS exams and returned to India in 1924 (after twenty years in England) as an ICS man. He was initially posted in United Provinces and rose through the ranks to become District Magistrate in Meerut in the 1940s. He took up a number of key government posts and was Chief Minister of UP at Indian independence. After independence, he was Chief Commissioner of Bhopal, the last of the princely states, for a year.
In his autobiography, Under Two Masters, published in 1970, Bonarjee talks about the prejudices he faced as a child and his experiences upon returning to India after so many years in Britain.
W. C. Bonnerjee (father's first cousin), Liaquat Ali Khan (contemporaries at Oxford), K. P. S. Menon.
Under Two Masters (London: Oxford University Press, 1970)
Lahiri, Shompa, Indians in Britain: Anglo-Indian Encounters, Race and Identity, 1880–1939 (London: Frank Cass, 2000)
Mukherjee, Sumita, 'Mobility, Race and the Politicisation of Indian Students in Britain before the Second World War', History of Education 51.4 (2022), pp. 560–77
Mukherjee, Sumita, Nationalism, Education and Migrant Identities; The England-Returned (London: Routledge, 2010)
Wainwright, A. Martin, The 'Better Class' of Indians: Social Rank, Imperial Identity, and South Asians in Britain, 1858–1914 (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2008)
Mss Eur T81/2, Asian and African Studies Reading Room, British Library, St Pancras
Photo, Dulwich College Archive, London
Papers, Nehru Memorial Library, New Delhi
I know we were known as WOGs. Nobody said 'you're a bloody WOG' or anything...well they might have...but we were known as WOGs.
From Mss Eur T81/2, Asian and African Studies Reading Room, British Library, St Pancras
Image credit
© Remaking Britain: South Asian Connections and Networks, 1930s – present