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| Jagannath College founded as Dhaka
Brahma School in 1858 by Dinanath Sen, Prabhaticharan Roy, Anathbandhu
Mallik and Brajasundar Kaitra. Kishorilal Chowdhury, the zamindar
of Baliadi, took over the school in 1872 and renamed it as Jagannath
School after his father. In 1884, it was raised to a second grade college.
Law was one of the first courses introduced in the college.
A common management committee administered the school and college
until 1887, when the school section was separated to form an independent
school named Kishore Jubilee School. It is now known as K L Jubilee
School. The administration of the college was transferred to a
board of trustees in 1907. In the following year, it became a
first grade college.
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Jagannath College, Dhaka |
The college started with only 48 students and in five
years, the roll raised to 396. In 1910, Raja Manmath Roy Chowdhury, the
zamindar of Santosh, tangail
affiliated the Pramath-Manmath College of Tangail with Jagannath College.
By this time Jagannath College became known as the best-equipped private
college in dhaka.
It goes to the credit of Jagannath College along with dhaka
college that the university
of dhaka started in 1921 mainly with students graduated from
these two colleges. But with the establishment of Dhaka University, the
college had to stop admission in Degree courses and was renamed Jagannath
Intermediate College. This status was changed after 28 years in 1949,
when it reopened Degree classes. The college was taken over by the government
in 1968, but neither the students nor the teachers were happy with its
new status of a government college. The college regained its old private
and autonomous status within a year.
Jagannath College opened honours and masters programmes
in 1975. That year the government once again took over the college and
upgraded it into a postgraduate college. In 1982, the college closed its
programmes of intermediate level. Because of a rapid growth of the number
of students seeking admission in its degree programmes the college introduced
evening shifts in 1992. In 1999, the college had honours courses in 18
subjects and masters courses in 20 subjects. It had about 35,000 students,
of whom about 17% were female. The number of teachers in the college was
350, of whom 180 were for the day shift and 170 for the evening shift.
Around 75% of the teachers were female.
The teachers and students of the college took active
part in the language
movement of the early 1950s, the mass movements of the 1960s
and the war
of liberation of the country in 1971. The college produced
tens of thousands graduates. Many of them have become famous at home and
abroad. The college has been upgraded to full-fledged university in September
2005.
[S M Mahfuzur Rahman]
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