Siddons Union Club
Siddons Union Club was established in the year 1884 at Mohammedan Anglo Oriental College, the present day Aligarh Muslim University.[1] The club was named after Henry George Impey Siddons. It was established as the students debating society. The Siddons Union Hall consisted of a debating hall, a library and a reading room.[2]
History
In 1884, the Siddons Union Club modeled after debating club at Cambridge began its activities at Strachey Hall.[3] Debates were held twice a month in English and once a month in Hindustani.
At the foundation an interchange of greetings between Cambridge Union Society took place. The following were the texts:
The President of the Siddons Union Club of the Mohammedan Anglo-Oriental College presents his compliments to the President of the Cambridge University Union Society, and begs" to inform him that the Cambridge University Union Society has given birth to a similar, though at present small, Society in the far East. He invites the sympathy of members of the ancient and flourishing society at Cambridge for the youthful club founded by men who, though different in race, are citizens of the same great empire. The creed of Allygurh is, that the relationship of Englishman and Indian should be that of brothers. He hopes that if any member of the C.U.U.S. should visit Allygurh he will experience a practical exemplification of that aim."
To this, the following reply was received :- "At the first private business meeting of this term, the following resolution was proposed by the President of the Society' (Mr W. Howard Stables, Trinity College), and seconded by Mr J. Austen Chamberlain, Trinity College, and carried with one dissentient :- That the Cambridge University Union Society desires to express its satisfaction that a Society based on the same principles as itself has been founded at Allygurh by one of its ex-Presidents; and as a means of displaying its sense of the brotherhood which exists between all subjects of our sovereign, and also of the close tie that binds the two Societies together, herein sends its heartfelt sympathy and congratulation to the President and members of that Society."[4]
On 1 January 1888, Sir John Edge, the first Vice Chancellor of the Allahabad University visited the College on the occasion of the anniversary of the Siddons Union Club.[5]
The Siddon Union Club chaired by Theodore Beck had organised a debate on 15 November 1884 over the motion of 'Spread of Female Education in India is to be desired but by home tuition and not by schools and colleges'. The motion was defeated by 3 votes.[6]
References
- ↑ Eram Agha (24 October 2014). "AMU: A students’ union with no party allegiance". The Times of India. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
- ↑ Calcutta University, Commission (1919). Calcutta University Commission - Report Volume XII (PDF) (Volume XII ed.). Calcutta University Commission. Retrieved 25 September 2015.
- ↑ Mary Elizabeth Devine, Carol Summerfield. International Dictionary of University Histories. Routledge. ISBN 1884964230.
- ↑ Syed Ahmad Khan; Lieut.-Colonel G. F. I. Graham. The Life and Work of Syed Ahmad Khan (PDF). Edinburgh and London: William Black-wood and Sons. Retrieved 25 September 2015.
- ↑ Muslim University, Aligarh. "AMU". AMU. AMU. Retrieved 21 September 2015.
- ↑ Aligarh Institute Gazette (1884). "The Siddons Union Club". Aligarh Institute Gazette XI (94).
|