Quetta is the capital and largest city of what is now Baluchistan Province of Pakistan. In 1935 it was a major British cantonment city with 12,000 troops and a total population of around 70,000. At 3:03 AM on May 31st, an earthquake struck Quetta, reducing the city to rubble, destroying towns and villages to the south and leaving 30 to 60 thousa...
Created:
1935
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
Quetta is the capital and largest city of what is now Baluchistan Province of Pakistan. In 1935 it was a major British cantonment city with 12,000 troops and a total population of around 70,000. At 3:03 AM on May 31st, an earthquake struck Quetta, reducing the city to rubble, destroying towns and villages to the south and leaving 30 to 60 thousa...
Created:
1935
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
Quetta is the capital and largest city of what is now Baluchistan Province of Pakistan. In 1935 it was a major British cantonment city with 12,000 troops and a total population of around 70,000. At 3:03 AM on May 31st, an earthquake struck Quetta, reducing the city to rubble, destroying towns and villages to the south and leaving 30 to 60 thousa...
Created:
1935
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
Quetta is the capital and largest city of what is now Baluchistan Province of Pakistan. In 1935 it was a major British cantonment city with 12,000 troops and a total population of around 70,000. At 3:03 AM on May 31st, an earthquake struck Quetta, reducing the city to rubble, destroying towns and villages to the south and leaving 30 to 60 thousa...
Created:
1935
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
Quetta is the capital and largest city of what is now Baluchistan Province of Pakistan. In 1935 it was a major British cantonment city with 12,000 troops and a total population of around 70,000. At 3:03 AM on May 31st, an earthquake struck Quetta, reducing the city to rubble, destroying towns and villages to the south and leaving 30 to 60 thousa...
Created:
1935
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
Quetta is the capital and largest city of what is now Baluchistan Province of Pakistan. In 1935 it was a major British cantonment city with 12,000 troops and a total population of around 70,000. At 3:03 AM on May 31st, an earthquake struck Quetta, reducing the city to rubble, destroying towns and villages to the south and leaving 30 to 60 thousa...
Created:
1935
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
Quetta is the capital and largest city of what is now Baluchistan Province of Pakistan. In 1935 it was a major British cantonment city with 12,000 troops and a total population of around 70,000. At 3:03 AM on May 31st, an earthquake struck Quetta, reducing the city to rubble, destroying towns and villages to the south and leaving 30 to 60 thousa...
Created:
1935
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
Quetta is the capital and largest city of what is now Baluchistan Province of Pakistan. In 1935 it was a major British cantonment city with 12,000 troops and a total population of around 70,000. At 3:03 AM on May 31st, an earthquake struck Quetta, reducing the city to rubble, destroying towns and villages to the south and leaving 30 to 60 thousa...
Created:
1935
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
Quetta is the capital and largest city of what is now Baluchistan Province of Pakistan. In 1935 it was a major British cantonment city with 12,000 troops and a total population of around 70,000. At 3:03 AM on May 31st, an earthquake struck Quetta, reducing the city to rubble, destroying towns and villages to the south and leaving 30 to 60 thousa...
Created:
1935
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
Quetta is the capital and largest city of what is now Baluchistan Province of Pakistan. In 1935 it was a major British cantonment city with 12,000 troops and a total population of around 70,000. At 3:03 AM on May 31st, an earthquake struck Quetta, reducing the city to rubble, destroying towns and villages to the south and leaving 30 to 60 thousa...
Created:
1935
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
The Indian Posts & Telegraphs Department set up this telegraph workshop at Alipore, Calcutta in early 1855 as a repair workshop, and gradually it started production of Telegraph and Telecom equipment. This workshop supplied Telegraph/Telecom materials throughout India (including the territory of Burma prior to 1937). This is one of a set of 45 p...
Created:
1920 - 1929
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
The Indian Posts & Telegraphs Department set up this telegraph workshop at Alipore, Calcutta in early 1855 as a repair workshop, and gradually it started production of Telegraph and Telecom equipment. This workshop supplied Telegraph/Telecom materials throughout India (including the territory of Burma prior to 1937). This is one of a set of 45 p...
Created:
1920 - 1929
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
Quetta is the capital and largest city of what is now Baluchistan Province of Pakistan. In 1935 it was a major British cantonment city with 12,000 troops and a total population of around 70,000. At 3:03 AM on May 31st, an earthquake struck Quetta, reducing the city to rubble, destroying towns and villages to the south and leaving 30 to 60 thousa...
Created:
1935
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
Quetta is the capital and largest city of what is now Baluchistan Province of Pakistan. In 1935 it was a major British cantonment city with 12,000 troops and a total population of around 70,000. At 3:03 AM on May 31st, an earthquake struck Quetta, reducing the city to rubble, destroying towns and villages to the south and leaving 30 to 60 thousa...
Created:
1935
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
One of the forty-six photos mounted in album plus 7 loose photos. Views of temples and monuments in Calcutta, Goa, Sanchi, Karli, Ajanta, Udaipur, Chitor, Velur, Halibid, Arcot, Sravana Belgola, and the Seven Pagodas.
Created:
1890 - 1899
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
One of the forty-six photos mounted in album plus 7 loose photos. Views of temples and monuments in Calcutta, Goa, Sanchi, Karli, Ajanta, Udaipur, Chitor, Velur, Halibid, Arcot, Sravana Belgola, and the Seven Pagodas.
Created:
1890 - 1899
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
One of the forty-six photos mounted in album plus 7 loose photos. Views of temples and monuments in Calcutta, Goa, Sanchi, Karli, Ajanta, Udaipur, Chitor, Velur, Halibid, Arcot, Sravana Belgola, and the Seven Pagodas.
Created:
1890 - 1899
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
Quetta is the capital and largest city of what is now Baluchistan Province of Pakistan. In 1935 it was a major British cantonment city with 12,000 troops and a total population of around 70,000. At 3:03 AM on May 31st, an earthquake struck Quetta, reducing the city to rubble, destroying towns and villages to the south and leaving 30 to 60 thousa...
Created:
1935
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
The Sarda river forms the boundary between India and Nepal along what is now Nainital District of Uttaranchal and Pilibhit District of Uttar Pradesh. The Sarda canal was built between 1915 and 1926 to provide protective irrigation between the Ganges and Ghaghara basins in Pilibhit, Kheri, Sitapur, Shahjahanpur, Hardoi, Unnao, Barabanki, Rae Bari...
Created:
1900 - 1947
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
The Sarda canal was built between 1915 and 1926 to provide protective irrigation between the Ganges and Ghaghara basins in Pilibhit, Kheri, Sitapur, Shahjahanpur, Hardoi, Unnao, Barabanki, Rae Barielly, Faizabad, Pratapgarh, Sultanpur, Jaunpur, Azamgarh, Ghazipur, Allahabad, and Varanasi Districts of Uttar Pradesh. This photo seems to be at Nigo...
Created:
1900 - 1947
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
The Sarda river forms the boundary between India and Nepal along what is now Nainital District of Uttaranchal and Pilibhit District of Uttar Pradesh. The Sarda canal was built between 1915 and 1926 to provide protective irrigation between the Ganges and Ghaghara basins in Pilibhit, Kheri, Sitapur, Shahjhanpur, Hardoi, Unnao, Barabanki, Rae Barie...
Created:
1900 - 1947
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
One of the forty-six photos mounted in album plus 7 loose photos. Views of temples and monuments in Calcutta, Goa, Sanchi, Karli, Ajanta, Udaipur, Chitor, Velur, Halibid, Arcot, Sravana Belgola, and the Seven Pagodas.
Created:
1890 - 1899
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
One of the forty-six photos mounted in album plus 7 loose photos. Views of temples and monuments in Calcutta, Goa, Sanchi, Karli, Ajanta, Udaipur, Chitor, Velur, Halibid, Arcot, Sravana Belgola, and the Seven Pagodas.
Created:
1890 - 1899
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.
One of the forty-six photos mounted in album plus 7 loose photos. Views of temples and monuments in Calcutta, Goa, Sanchi, Karli, Ajanta, Udaipur, Chitor, Velur, Halibid, Arcot, Sravana Belgola, and the Seven Pagodas.
Created:
1890 - 1899
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Ames Library of South Asia.