Each provincial government has a forest depart-
ment under a conservator of forests.
ment under a conservator of forests.
Cambridge History of India - v4 - Indian Empire
Manual, p.
100 sq.
; Baden Powell, op.
cit.
II, 705-22.
2 H. of C. Papers, 1887, vol. 2; Baden Powell, op. cit. 1, 340–9; Panjab Sett. Manual, p. 254;
Moral and Mat. Prog. Rep. 1882-3, pp. 117-19.
3 Baden Powell, op. cit. 1, 349-60; Report of Famine Commission, 1880; Imp. Gaz. IV, 24.
## p. 283 (#321) ############################################
IRRIGATION
283
a
rights it was hoped to shorten the settlement operations periodically
undertaken in each district, a hope which has been realised. The
introduction of more scientific methods of cadastral survey has greatly
promoted progress in this direction, while all transfers of right are
promptly attested and registered, correct record being thereby facili-
tated. As the result of the policy adopted, the three provinces now
possess up-to-date land records probably unrivalled in the world, and
containing detailed information about each one of several millions of
fields and holdings and many thousands of villages; while the usual
duration of settlement operations in a district has been reduced from
six years to little more than three.
The importance of irrigation is indicated by the fact that the total
area of crops irrigated by state canals in the Panjab and the United
Provinces increased from seven and a half million acres in the first
years of the present century to nearly eleven million acres in 1917-18,
while the entire capital cost of the works in the latter year was approxi-
mately twenty-two millions sterling. The greatest progress has been
in the Panjab where the area irrigated quadrupled during the forty
years ending 1918. It was in 1866, when Lord Lawrence, as viceroy,
inaugurated the policy of financing productive public works from
loan funds, that the modern development of irrigation began. The
first-fruits were the Sirhind Canal in the cis-Satlej-Panjab, which,
originally proposed in 1841, was sanctioned in 1870 and opened in
1882, with a total length, inclusive of branches and distributaries, of
3700 miles; the Lower Ganges Canal in the southern part of the Doab
of the North-Western Provinces, sanctioned in 1872 and completed
in 1878, and the Agra Canal, opened in 1874, which provides irriga-
tion on the west of the Jumna. Between 1870 and 1876 the Upper
Bari Doab Canal, and fifteen years later the Western Jumna Canal
were greatly improved and extended.
But the colony canals of the Panjab have been the most striking
irrigational development of the period under review. Their primary
object was not to serve areas already cultivated, but to make possible
the colonisation and development of the immense areas of waste
crown land which existed in the province within recent years and on
which large numbers of colonists selected from congested districts
have since been settled on specific terms as lessees of the state. The
encouraging results of two experiments made on non-perennial canals
in the 'eighties led to more ambitious schemes. In 1890 work began
on a perennial canal, with a head weir from the river Chenab,
designed to irrigate the waste tract-termed Bar-lying between it
and the Ravi. Now known as the Lower Chenab Canal, it has proved
1 Imp. Gaz. II, 331; Statistical Abstract relating to British India, 1917-18, p. 150.
Imp. Gaz. IV, 329; H. of C. Papers, 1866, vol. Lii; 1867, vol. i.
• Triennial Review of Irrigation, 1918-21, Calcutta, 1922, pt , chap. v.
• Idem, pt m, chap. vi.
## p. 284 (#322) ############################################
284 ADMINISTRATION IN U. P. , C. P. , AND PANJAB
to be one of the most successful irrigation systems in India, if not in
the world. Its total length is nearly 2700 miles. Colonisation began
in 1892, with the aid of a defective "inundation" canal, but the new
canal was not complete until 1899. By 1901 the population of the
tract had increased from practically nil to 800,000, while the area
now annually irrigated exceeds two million acres. The yearly net
revenue from the canal is nearly 40 per cent. of its capital cost of more
than two millions sterling. The headquarters of the colony are at
Lyallpur, one of the most flourishing towns in Upper India. The
second Colony Canal, the Lower Jehlam, in the tract between the
rivers Jehíım and Chenab, though sanctioned in 1888 was not begun
until 1898 and was opened in 1902. Its results have been satisfactory.
At the beginning of the century a project was on foot for the irrigation
of the lower portion of the Bari Doab from the river Satlej. Meanwhile
a commission’ was appointed in 1901 for the formulation, after full
enquiry into past results and existing needs, of a definite irrigation
policy for India as a whole. It reported in 1903. It found in the
Panjab one of the few tracts in which there was scope for the execution
of large productive schemes, which would both be financially re-
munerative and also augment the food supply of the country. It
supported the proposal to irrigate the lower part of the Bari Doab
while recommending the examination of an alternative scheme,
suggested by Sir James Wilson, a distinguished civil servant, and
Col. Jacob, an eminent irrigation officer, which substituted for a canal
from the Satlej a chain of canals which would successively convey the
water of the river Jehlam across the intervening Chenab and Ravi
rivers to the lower Bari Doab. This scheme, now known as the Triple
Projects and comprising the Upper Jehlam, Upper Chenab and
Lower Bari Doab canals, was ultimately approved. Its construction,
which cost seven millions sterling, took ten years, from 1905 to 1915.
The first two canals supply water to the third while irrigating extensive
areas in the tracts through which they pass. The total length of the
canals with distributaries is 3400 miles and the area irrigated nearly
two million acres. Colonisation was still in progress in 1918.
In the United Provinces the Betwa Canal, a protective work for
insecure districts in Bundelkhand, was opened in 1885 and proved its
value in the later famines. The Irrigation Commission recommended
other protective but non-remunerative works, of which the Ken Canal,
also in Bundelkhand, was opened in 1908. Up to 1907 there were no
state irrigation works in the Central Provinces. Until 1896 a com-
plete failure of rain had been unknown, but in the following famine
years the tract suffered severely. The commission, holding that pro-
tective irrigation was necessary, recommended the construction of
i Triennial Review, p. 137.
: Imp. Gaz. II, 351 sq. ; Triennial Review, pp. 109-10; Report of Indian Irrigation Commission,
3 Triennial Review, pp. 131 599.
Calcutta, 1903.
## p. 285 (#323) ############################################
FAMINES
285
small canals, and also of reservoirs for the storage of local rainfall and
of the comparatively precarious river supply. Up to 19181 several of
the latter had been completed, the most notable being the Ramtek
tank in the Nagpur district with a capacity of 4000 million cubic feet,
while three fairly large canals were still under construction. In 1918
several large new schemes for the Panjab and the United Provinces
were being considered. Some of these have since matured, the most
noteworthy being the Satlej valley project, with an estimated capital
cost of nine and a half millions sterling.
As a result of the extensive development which has been sketched
above irrigation had by 1918 become an important branch of district
administration. Local work is in the hands of officers of the irrigation
branch of the provincial public works department, but the collector
is intimately concerned with its success and is generally consulted in
all important developments. Moreover, he and his superiors, as land-
revenue officers, have a preponderant voice in the determination of
the rates charged for the consumption of canal water, while he is also
responsible for the collection of the resulting demand, though its
actual assessment at harvest time is usually made by irrigation officers.
In 1917-18 net revenue from state canals in the Panjab was 1. 8 millions
sterling, in the United Provinces £580,000, while in the Central
Provinces there was none. 3
Modern famine policy has been treated in another chapter, but a
few facts may be added here. In 1860-1 severe famine affected an
area of 50,000 square miles containing a population of twenty millions.
It comprised the south-eastern Panjab and the west of the present
United Provinces. The policy of relief on public works, initiated in
1837-8, was retained and expanded, while poorhouses for the gra-
tuitous relief of the incapable were opened for the first time. Remis-
sions of revenue were comparatively small but considerable advances
were made. Gratuitous relief appears to have been liberal: in the
Hissar district of the Panjab, for example, its recipients were treble
the number of persons on relief works. The same tract was again
severely attacked in 1868-9 by a famine which was far more wide-
spread than the last. Distress was extreme, mortality great, and the
destruction of cattle immense, while a heavy influx of starving multi-
tudes from the feudatory states, which were without famine organisa-
tion, greatly aggravated the situation and in fact broke down the
relief system. In the United Provinces the state spent nearly Rs. 30
lakhs in addition to heavy expenditure in the Panjab. In 1896–7 the
same areas again suffered from intense famine, and the Central
Provinces were for the first time affected. But on this occasion the
1 Triennial Review, p. 128.
2 Idem, p. 170.
3 Statistical Abstract, 1917-18, p. 150.
Imp. Gaz. II, 485; Rep. of Fam. Comm. 1880, p. 12; Adm. Rep. Unil. Provs. 1911-12, p. 12;
H. of C. Papers, 1862, vol. XL.
s Gazelleer of Hisar District, 1892, p. 23.
• Imp. Gaz. 111, 487; Rep. of Fam. Comm. 1880, p. 12; Adm. Rep. Unit. Prous. 1911-12,
p. 22.
## p. 286 (#324) ############################################
286 ADMINISTRATION IN U. P. , C. P. , AND PANJAB
organisation, as testified by the subsequent Famine Commission of
1898,- was far more efficient than it had been previously, while the
agricultural population generally showed a power, hitherto unknown,
of meeting the disaster. In the Panjab Hissar was again the most dis-
tressed district, and it accounted for more than one-half of the total
number relieved in that province, at one time as many as 15 per cent.
of its total population being in receipt of relief. Rs. 167 lakhs were
spent in the United Provinces and Rs. 23 lakhs in the Panjab in addi-
tion to heavy suspensions and remissions of land-revenue. Once more
in 1899–1900 the south-eastern Panjab and the Central Provinces
were very severely attacked. Distress was more intense than in 1896-7
and cattle mortality, owing to a complete failure of fodder, enormous. 3
In the Panjab the death-rates of the affected districts rose considerably
but mortality from actual starvation was prevented. Relief operations
in that province cost Rs. 48 lakhs, most of which was incurred in the
Hissar district. The great development of irrigation and of communi-
cations which has been achieved in recent years, the elaboration of
a complete famine organisation, not only in British territory but also
in the feudatory states, and, last but not least, the growth of general
economic prosperity have gone far to vanquish one of India's direct
and most persistent scourges.
The forests of India are of the first importance, not only for their
natural products but also through their influence on climate, rainfall,
and water supply. As has been truly said they are "the headworks
of Nature's irrigation scheme in India". Under native rule unchecked
destruction and wasteful misuse did untold damage. Up to 1855
British attempts at management were sporadic and dominated by
considerations of revenue, but in that year Lord Dalhousie inaugurated
a policy of scientific conservation and regulated exploitation. An
inspector-general of forests was appointed nine years later, but it was
not until 1869 that an organised forest department with a staff of
trained officers came into existence. Indian forest lands are the
property of the state, though generally more or less burdened with
public or private customary rights of user, largely grazing, in favour
of village communities or individuals; a fcature which mainly decides
the degree of conservation which can be applied. Those classed as
reserved” are important for purposes of scientific forestry. Forests
are “protected” with a view to later reservation or in order to increase
their direct utility to the agricultural population; while in “unclassed”
forests very few, if any, restrictions are enforced. The first legal basis
for forest administration was the Indian Forest Act of 1865, which
was replaced by the existing Act VII of 1878. It prescribes, inter alia,
1 Rep. of Fam. Comm. 1898.
* Adm. Rep. Unit. Provs. 1911-12, p. 23; Adm. Rep. Panjab, 1911-12, p. 24.
; Adm. Rep. Panjab, 1911-12, p. 25;
• Imp. Gaz. m, 107sq. ; Moral and Mat. Prog. Rep. 1882–3, pp. 202 sqq. ; H. of C. Papers,
1871, vol. LII.
66
9
## p. 287 (#325) ############################################
FORESTS
287
a procedure for the adjudication and record of public and private
rights in forest lands and for their extinction in the reserves, if necessary,
by compensation or exchange; the entire operation being known as
a forest settlement.
Each provincial government has a forest depart-
ment under a conservator of forests. For executive purposes there are
deputy-conservators, or district forest officers, each in charge of a
division, corresponding to a civil district, with an assistant and a
subordinate staff. The collector is not concerned with technical forest
work, but the deputy-conservator is under his control in all matters
which directly concern the people, such as grazing in forests, levy of
fees, and supply of forest produce. The collector, or a specially deputed
officer, carries out forest settlement operations, often a lengthy and
intricate business. Up to 1921 the Government of India controlled
forest administration through its inspector-general. The main objects
of the department are scientific improvement and regeneration of the
forests, and, as subsidiary measures, protection from fire and from
illicit grazing. Produce of various kinds is commercially extracted in
accordance with prescribed working plans, which regulate this as well
as other branches of forest technique. The United Provinces and the
Panjab are not of great importance as measured by the proportion of
forest to total area, which is 7 per cent. in each. In the Central
Provinces, however, the figure is 20 per cent. , the forest area consisting
of 20,000 square miles of “reserves " 1 Former large areas of unclassed
forest in the Panjab plains have been entirely colonised in recent
years. The reserves in all three provinces are chiefly in the hills.
Smuggled importation from feudatory states together with the wide
prevalence of illicit distillation of alcohol, facilitated by the abundance
of suitable material supplied by the cultivated sugar-cane and by the
wild mahua tree (Bassia latifolia), long hindered progress in excise
administration. But by 1918 much had been accomplished through
restriction of supply to supervised distilleries and by improving the
quality of the preventive establishment. ? An excise law, applying to
the North-Western Provinces, was passed in 1856, which provided
for central distilleries. But in view of their previous failure, it was not
until 1863 that they generally displaced the system of farms and out-
stills in the North-Western Provinces, though in Oudh they had been
introduced in 1861. A duty was levied on all spirituous liquor pro-
duced, and the right of vend at specified shops was leased separately.
By 1870 it became clear that the change had been too extensive, and
in 1873 illicit traffic was found to be very prevalent. Again there was
a reversion to farms and out-stills in many districts. Matters remained
thus in the United and the Central Provinces until the early years of
this century, farms and out-stills prevailing in one-third and nearly
1 Statistical Abstract, 1917-18, p. 157.
• Imp. Gaz. II, 235; Parl. Papers, LXII, 609 sqq. ; Moral and Mal. Prog. Rep. , 1882-3, pp.
170-1; Papers relating to Excise administration in India, Government of India Gazette,
i March, 1890.
## p. 288 (#326) ############################################
288 ADMINISTRATION IN U. P. , C. P. , AND PANJAB
three-fourths of their respective areas. Throughout the Panjab, where
previously there had been no excise restrictions, the farming system
was in force for some years after annexation, but in 1863 it was en-
tirely replaced by central distilleries, with separate licences for sale at
specified shops. Under this system, which continued for nearly forty
years, taxation was substantially increased, so that by 1890 illicit
traffic was more rife than in the rest of India. In the early years of
this century central distilleries gave place throughout the province to
a few private distilleries of modern type located at selected places.
Under direct official supervision and in mutual competition, they
supplied spirituous liquor, after payment of duty, and at prices liable
to government control, to local vendors, who were separately licensed
for specified shops. The system was known as the “free supply"
system. Only in two small areas, peculiarly situated, were out-stills
allowed.
With the passing of an Excise Act in 1896 matters had developed
thus far when in 1905 the government referred the whole question of
excise administration in India to a committee for review and for
advice. In doing so it declared definitely that, while refusing to inter-
fere with the moderate use of alcohol, its settled policy was to minimise
temptation for the abstainer and to discourage excess among others;
and that no considerations of revenue could be allowed to hamper
this policy. It held that the most effective means of pursuing this
was as high a taxation of liquor as was possible without stimulating
illicit production and resort to harmful substitutes. While recognising
that uniformity of method was impossible, it regarded the continuance
of extensive farm and out-still areas, of crude distillery systems, and
of low rates of taxation as defects to be remedied as soon as possible.
After a lengthy enquiry the committee in 1906 submitted with its
report detailed recommendations for the future course of excise ad-
ministration, most of which, with some modifications, are now in
force. 2 In each of the three provinces spirituous liquor is made in
private licensed distilleries under official supervision. After payment
of duty it is supplied to local licensed vendors under officially con-
trolled arrangements and at regulated prices. Out-still areas have
been reduced to a minimum in the United and the Central Provinces,
and entirely abolished in the Panjab. Separate licences, containing
many desirable prohibitions and restrictions, for the retail vend of
liquor at specified shops are issued on fees which are generally deter-
mined by auction. The duty is enhanced from time to time with the
object of increasing the proportion borne by its yield to that of vend
fees; but the risk of stimulating illicit distillation hampers the process.
On all foreign liquor, spirituous or fermented, import duty is levied,
* Report of the Excise Committee, 1905-6, and Government of India Resolutions
thereon, in Parl. Papers, 1907, LVIII, 645 599.
• Provincial Excise Administration Reports for 1907-8 and subsequent years.
## p. 289 (#327) ############################################
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
289
2
and sale is controlled by licences; while the production of beer, mainly
for European consumption, is also subject to excise regulations. The
general Excise Act has been replaced by separate provincial enact-
ments.
Opium was extensively grown in the Panjab before its annexation,
but its cultivation, manufacture and sale were soon brought under
control. 1 The first was gradually restricted and is now prohibited
except in a few small hill tracts, very little opium being at present
locally produced. For public consumption opium manufactured by
government agency is issued at a monopoly price to vendors licensed,
on fees usually determined by auction, to sell at specified shops. In
the United and the Central Provinces the supply is confined to such
government opium.
In 1893 a commission investigated the production, sale and con-
sumption of drugs made from the hemp plant (Cannabis sativa). ? It
did not recommend prohibition, but control and restriction. The
control is enforced by a system of licences for sale similar to liquor
licences. Cultivation has been greatly restricted, most of the supply
being imported from Central Asia.
Local excise administration is one of the more important duties of
the collector. The work has grown greatly in volume and complexity
in the present century; the total net revenue of the three provinces
in 1917–18 being 2. 2 millions sterling.
Important developments connected with agriculture, with rural
indebtedness, and with the closely allied subject of co-operation have
taken place within recent years. As has been already stated the
provincial departments of land records and agriculture, instituted in
1880, had little concern with technical agriculture. In 1901, as a first
step towards its more scientific organisation, the Indian Government
appointed an inspector-general of agriculture with a small staff of
experts. During the next few years the subject of agriculture was
separated from land records and provincial departments in:stituted,
each under a director with a small staff, subsequently increased by
the addition of trained officers. The fundamental object of these
departments is the development, by experiment and research, of
improved agricultural methods and implements, of better qualities
of seed, and of effective means of coping with crop diseases and insect
pests. With the growth of the departments many experimental stations
and demonstration farms had been established by 1915 and were
doing satisfactory work. Several cultural and manurial problems
had been dealt with, greatly improved varieties of seed for important
crops had been produced, and the introduction of better implements
had begun. For the provision of sound agricultural training on
Imp. Gaz. IV, 245; Report of Opium Commission, 1893, H. of C. Papers, 1895, vol. xlu.
* Report of Indian Heinp Drugs Commission, 1893, and Government of India Resolu-
tion thereon of 21 March, 1895.
• Annual Reports of Provincial Agricultural Departments.
GHIVI
19
1
## p. 290 (#328) ############################################
290 ADMINISTRATION IN U. P. , C. P. , AND PANJAB
scientific lines, an essential feature of the entire scheme, provincial
agricultural colleges, with research institutes attached, have been
estaulished; while a central college at Pusa in Bihar provides more
advanced instruction. The three provinces have taken their full share
in the progress, their colleges being located at Cawnpore, Nagpur,
and Lyallpur respectively. The last, situated in the Chenab colony,
is now a leading centre of research, experiment and instruction.
Though the modern movement was started not in response to popular
demand, but on the initiative of the government, the agricultural
department has succeeded to a surprising degree in securing the con-
fidence of the rural classes. The collector, though having no control of
its technical operations in his district, is closely concerned with it on
its administrative side and with its general results.
Debt is an inevitable adjunct of peasant agriculture, but under an
unhealthy system of credit, where numerous illiterate and often
thriftless rural borrowers are in the toils of literate and astute money-
lenders, it is apt to become both a fruitful economic evil and a political
danger. The grant of freely transferable proprietary rights to the
peasantry of the Panjab and of the United Provinces, combined with
a novel moderation in the fiscal demands of the state, put at its dis-
posal a volume of credit which grew with the value of land and of its
produce. In the period 1875-1900 indebtedness increased rapidly,
and with it the sale and mortgage of agricultural land. In the Panjab
the evil had attained alarming proportions by the latter year. After
very prolonged investigation and discussion a remedy was sought in
legislation. The Panjab Alienation of Land Act of 1900, while not
affecting transfers of land between members of the agricultural tribes
of the province, narrowly restricts such transfers where the transferees
are members of other classes, which include most of the professional
money-lenders. The undue restriction of credit, the general fall in
land values, the widespread evasion which some anticipated as
necessary results of the measure, have not occurred. Credit is being
placed on a more healthy basis by the co-operative movement noticed
below; the rise of land values, though not necessarily beneficial to the
rural population, has continued steadily, while the peasant himself
now regards the act as an indispensable factor of his economic
security. Its proper administration is one of the important duties of
the deputy-commissioner. Similar legislation has not been found to be
necessary in the United Provinces except in Bundelkhand, where it
was introduced in 1903. 2
It is, however, rural co-operation combined with improved agri-
cultural practice, which is proving itself to be the most effective means
of raising the economic condition of the peasantry. The subject is one
which deserves a much closer study than is possible here. After a
Adm. Rep. Panjab, 1911-12, p. 49, and other extensive literature.
; Adm. Rep. Unit. Provs. 1911-12, p. 20.
## p. 291 (#329) ############################################
CO-OPERATIVE SOCIETIES
291
preliminary period of investigation, with practical experiments in
various parts of India, a Co-operative Credit Societies Act was passed
in 1904, which provided legal facilities for the formation and working
of such societies. In the light of subsequent experience it was replaced
by the Co-operative Societies Act of 1912, an improved measure of
wider scope, which, in addition to credit societies, provided for societies
co-operative in the purchase of seed and implements, the marketing
of produce, and in other activities. A rural credit society is broadly
of the German Raiffeisen type, though with certain differences. Its
membership is confined to a small specified area, and its function is
to lend among its members for approved objects connected with
agriculture, including reasonable domestic consumption, funds raised
on their joint and several unlimited liability. A small entrance fee is
charged, and in the Panjab and the United Provinces, but not in the
Central Provinces, each member contributes in addition a small
amount of share capital. Deposits are received from both members
and non-members, and further capital is borrowed from other societies
or from central banks, which form an integral part of the system and
are in touch with the external money market. A committee of mem-
bers constitutes the managing body, and as no paid staff is employed,
working expenses are at a minimum; but borrowers are charged a
rate of interest, which, though much less than that usually taken by
money-lenders from single borrowers, allows of the accumulation of
a reserve fund. The whole of the above resources are employed as
working capital; and an immense alleviation of rural indebtedness is
being gradually effected, while the moral education in self-help,
thrift, self-respect, and social solidarity which is being silently im-
parted can scarcely be overestimated. Many societies for co-operative
objects other than credit have been started. In each province the
local government appoints a registrar with one or two assistants, who,
with a trained staff, superintend and advise the societies in addition
to performing statutory functions under the act. The figures for
agricultural societies in 1918-19-United Provinces, 3177; Central
Provinces, 3871; Panjab, 5087—show the extent to which the move-
ment has spread. It is one of the most effective economic and educative
influences which have been introduced into India.
The modern development of local self-government is described in
another chapter. Beginning in 1873 with Lord Mayo's measures for
the decentralisation of finance,? it was placed by Lord Ripon in
1881–2 on a broader basis, with a largely increased elective element
and with a limited degree of freedom from official control. In actual
practice, however, most local bodies were dominated by the influence
of the district officer, and, in financial matters especially, by the
2
1 Annual Provincial Reports.
· Imp. Gaz. iv, 287 sqq. ; Parl. Papers, 1883, LI, I 599. ; Moral and Mat. Prog. Rep. 1882-3,
pp. 59-63.
19-2
## p. 292 (#330) ############################################
292 ADMINISTRATION IN U. P. , C. P. , AND PANJAB
a
increasingly centralised control of the provincial government and its
departments; both being exercised in the interests of administrative
efficiency, which otherwise, there can be little doubt, would have
seriously deteriorated, there being then no public opinion competent
to compel local bodies to discharge their responsibilities. The district
officer was not merely the controlling guide of local bodies, but their
main active element; their affairs forming a considerable part of his
daily work; a position which continued until the Indian Decentralisa-
tion Commission issued its report in 1909. It found that progress in
local self-government had been hindered because local bodies, and
more especially rural boards, had no real power and responsibility
owing to want of funds and to excessive control. It made many drastic
proposals for removing the trammels, the more important of which,
after reference to provincial governments, the Indian Government
accepted in 19151 with certain reservations and modifications. As a
general result central departmental control was much relaxed and in
some respects abrogated; local bodies have been placed in a freer and
stronger financial position; while in municipalities official chairmen
have for the most part disappeared. What the ultimate practical
outcome will be in terms of public health and convenience remains
to be seen. In the year 1917–18 there were in the United Provinces,
the Central Provinces and in the Panjab, 83, 57 and 100 munici-
palities respectively, which contained in the case of the first two 6) per
cent. , and in the case of the third 8 per cent. of the whole provincial
population.
The important subject of education has been treated elsewhere. Its
administration being for the most part in the hands of the provincial
education departments, its connection with district administration
has been mainly through the local bodies, who have helped to finance
primary, and to some extent also secondary education, without,
however, exercising much actual control over either. The function of
the district officer has been to co-operate, advise and encourage on
a basis of general interest, supervision and local knowledge.
The main lines which the development of district administration
has followed have now been sketched. Throughout the process the
district officer-collector or deput -commissioner on the whole re-
tained the position of principal local official of the government, in
direct control, so far as his district was concerned, of its chief activities,
and in direct touch with all others conducted by more purely depart-
mental officials not wholly subordinate to him. The extremely multi-
farious nature of his work has been indicated. His primary duties are
the collection of revenue from the land and from other sources, and
the exercise of judicial powers, criminal and revenue, both of first
instance and in appeal. But police, jails, municipalities, rural boards.
i Government of India Resolutions 55-77, 28 April, 1915.
• Statistical Abstract for 1917-18, p. 98.
## p. 293 (#331) ############################################
THE DISTRICT OFFICER
293
education, roads, sanitation, dispensaries, local taxation, agricultural
statistics, records of rights and irrigation are matters with which he
is more or less daily concerned, directly or indirectly. He is also
responsible for the maintenance and submission of correct accounts of
extensive local receipts and expenditure, and for the safe custody of
large amounts of public money. He must, moreover, be familiar with
the social life of the people and with the natural aspects of his district.
But the district officer who should seek to undertake personally the
daily minutiae of all these subjects would be unwise, not to say in-
competent. With a comparatively few of them to do so is inevitable,
but the main, the most important work is continuous supervision and
control of subordinates, combined with a broad view and a strong but
kindly grasp of the changing aspects and the half-expressed needs of
the mass of human beings committed to their care. Centralised
control has doubtless increased; but the common complaint that it
has harmfully restricted the initiative of the district officer is in the
main an exaggeration. It has certainly increased his otherwise mani-
fold preoccupations, and where he has not been provided with ade-
quate staff the result has been harmful. But he has been able to
succeed just in so far as he has appreciated the need for, and has
skilfully arranged, wherever possible, a devolution of actual work to
properly qualified subordinates.
## p. 294 (#332) ############################################
CHAPTER XVII
THE DEVELOPMENT OF FAMINE POLICY
Three
HREE hundred years ago the Dutchman, Francisco Pelsaert,
travelling in Upper India, described in vivid language the relations
between agriculture and the seasons:
The year is here divided into three seasons. In April, May and June the heat is
intolerable, and men can scarcely breathe, more than that, hot winds blow con-
tinuously, as stifling as if they came straight from the furnace of hell. The air is
filled with the dust raised by violent whirlwinds from the sandy soil, making day
like the darkest night that human eyes have seen or that can be grasped by the
imagination. Thus in the afternoon of 15 June, 1624, I watched a hurricane of dust
coming up gradually, which so hid the sky and the sun that for two hours people
could not tell if the world was at an end, for the darkness and fury of the wind
could not have been exceeded. Then the storm disappeared gradually, as it had
come, and the sun shone again. The months of June, July, August, September and
October are reckoned as the rainy season, during which it sometimes rains steadily.
The days are still very hot, but the rain brings a pleasant and refreshing coolness.
In November, December, January, February and March it is tolerably cool, and
the climate is pleasant.
From April to June the fields lie hard and dry, unfit for ploughing or sowing
owing to the heat. When the ground has been moistened by a few days' rain, the
cultivators begin to sow indigo, rice and various food grains eaten by the poor.
When all these are off the land, they plough and sow again, for there are two harvests;
that is to say in December and January they sow wheat and barley, various pulses
and "alsi" (linseed) from which oil is extracted. Large numbers of wells have to
be dug in order to irrigate the soil, for at that time it is beginning to lose its productive
power. Provided the rain is seasonable and the cold is not excessive, there is a
year of plenty, not merely of food, but in the trade of all sorts of commodities. I
But if the rain is not seasonable, if the monsoon fails over large
tracts which cannot be sufficiently irrigated from ponds, rivers, wells
or canals, the crops which are the mainstay of the countryside must
be sown in a much restricted area and will often be poor even there;
the grass which has been burnt up by the blazing sun and burning
winds of March, April and May cannot revive, and both the milch-
cows and the plough and transport cattle, which are the cultivator's
working capital, are decimated. The water level falls; and the supply
is tainted with noxious germs. The peasantry see their means of live-
lihood vanish. If no remedy be forthcoming they must starve.
Destitution will bring cholera and pestilence in its train; and thousands
of humble lives will be sacrificed. Such is famine in that grim shape
which it has often worn. But nature sometimes relents; and man has
done much to combat this king of terrors.
The drought which follows a feeble monsoon may be mitigated by
light winter rains; and in any case there are marked differences of
· Pelsaert, Jerangir's India, pp.
II, 705-22.
2 H. of C. Papers, 1887, vol. 2; Baden Powell, op. cit. 1, 340–9; Panjab Sett. Manual, p. 254;
Moral and Mat. Prog. Rep. 1882-3, pp. 117-19.
3 Baden Powell, op. cit. 1, 349-60; Report of Famine Commission, 1880; Imp. Gaz. IV, 24.
## p. 283 (#321) ############################################
IRRIGATION
283
a
rights it was hoped to shorten the settlement operations periodically
undertaken in each district, a hope which has been realised. The
introduction of more scientific methods of cadastral survey has greatly
promoted progress in this direction, while all transfers of right are
promptly attested and registered, correct record being thereby facili-
tated. As the result of the policy adopted, the three provinces now
possess up-to-date land records probably unrivalled in the world, and
containing detailed information about each one of several millions of
fields and holdings and many thousands of villages; while the usual
duration of settlement operations in a district has been reduced from
six years to little more than three.
The importance of irrigation is indicated by the fact that the total
area of crops irrigated by state canals in the Panjab and the United
Provinces increased from seven and a half million acres in the first
years of the present century to nearly eleven million acres in 1917-18,
while the entire capital cost of the works in the latter year was approxi-
mately twenty-two millions sterling. The greatest progress has been
in the Panjab where the area irrigated quadrupled during the forty
years ending 1918. It was in 1866, when Lord Lawrence, as viceroy,
inaugurated the policy of financing productive public works from
loan funds, that the modern development of irrigation began. The
first-fruits were the Sirhind Canal in the cis-Satlej-Panjab, which,
originally proposed in 1841, was sanctioned in 1870 and opened in
1882, with a total length, inclusive of branches and distributaries, of
3700 miles; the Lower Ganges Canal in the southern part of the Doab
of the North-Western Provinces, sanctioned in 1872 and completed
in 1878, and the Agra Canal, opened in 1874, which provides irriga-
tion on the west of the Jumna. Between 1870 and 1876 the Upper
Bari Doab Canal, and fifteen years later the Western Jumna Canal
were greatly improved and extended.
But the colony canals of the Panjab have been the most striking
irrigational development of the period under review. Their primary
object was not to serve areas already cultivated, but to make possible
the colonisation and development of the immense areas of waste
crown land which existed in the province within recent years and on
which large numbers of colonists selected from congested districts
have since been settled on specific terms as lessees of the state. The
encouraging results of two experiments made on non-perennial canals
in the 'eighties led to more ambitious schemes. In 1890 work began
on a perennial canal, with a head weir from the river Chenab,
designed to irrigate the waste tract-termed Bar-lying between it
and the Ravi. Now known as the Lower Chenab Canal, it has proved
1 Imp. Gaz. II, 331; Statistical Abstract relating to British India, 1917-18, p. 150.
Imp. Gaz. IV, 329; H. of C. Papers, 1866, vol. Lii; 1867, vol. i.
• Triennial Review of Irrigation, 1918-21, Calcutta, 1922, pt , chap. v.
• Idem, pt m, chap. vi.
## p. 284 (#322) ############################################
284 ADMINISTRATION IN U. P. , C. P. , AND PANJAB
to be one of the most successful irrigation systems in India, if not in
the world. Its total length is nearly 2700 miles. Colonisation began
in 1892, with the aid of a defective "inundation" canal, but the new
canal was not complete until 1899. By 1901 the population of the
tract had increased from practically nil to 800,000, while the area
now annually irrigated exceeds two million acres. The yearly net
revenue from the canal is nearly 40 per cent. of its capital cost of more
than two millions sterling. The headquarters of the colony are at
Lyallpur, one of the most flourishing towns in Upper India. The
second Colony Canal, the Lower Jehlam, in the tract between the
rivers Jehíım and Chenab, though sanctioned in 1888 was not begun
until 1898 and was opened in 1902. Its results have been satisfactory.
At the beginning of the century a project was on foot for the irrigation
of the lower portion of the Bari Doab from the river Satlej. Meanwhile
a commission’ was appointed in 1901 for the formulation, after full
enquiry into past results and existing needs, of a definite irrigation
policy for India as a whole. It reported in 1903. It found in the
Panjab one of the few tracts in which there was scope for the execution
of large productive schemes, which would both be financially re-
munerative and also augment the food supply of the country. It
supported the proposal to irrigate the lower part of the Bari Doab
while recommending the examination of an alternative scheme,
suggested by Sir James Wilson, a distinguished civil servant, and
Col. Jacob, an eminent irrigation officer, which substituted for a canal
from the Satlej a chain of canals which would successively convey the
water of the river Jehlam across the intervening Chenab and Ravi
rivers to the lower Bari Doab. This scheme, now known as the Triple
Projects and comprising the Upper Jehlam, Upper Chenab and
Lower Bari Doab canals, was ultimately approved. Its construction,
which cost seven millions sterling, took ten years, from 1905 to 1915.
The first two canals supply water to the third while irrigating extensive
areas in the tracts through which they pass. The total length of the
canals with distributaries is 3400 miles and the area irrigated nearly
two million acres. Colonisation was still in progress in 1918.
In the United Provinces the Betwa Canal, a protective work for
insecure districts in Bundelkhand, was opened in 1885 and proved its
value in the later famines. The Irrigation Commission recommended
other protective but non-remunerative works, of which the Ken Canal,
also in Bundelkhand, was opened in 1908. Up to 1907 there were no
state irrigation works in the Central Provinces. Until 1896 a com-
plete failure of rain had been unknown, but in the following famine
years the tract suffered severely. The commission, holding that pro-
tective irrigation was necessary, recommended the construction of
i Triennial Review, p. 137.
: Imp. Gaz. II, 351 sq. ; Triennial Review, pp. 109-10; Report of Indian Irrigation Commission,
3 Triennial Review, pp. 131 599.
Calcutta, 1903.
## p. 285 (#323) ############################################
FAMINES
285
small canals, and also of reservoirs for the storage of local rainfall and
of the comparatively precarious river supply. Up to 19181 several of
the latter had been completed, the most notable being the Ramtek
tank in the Nagpur district with a capacity of 4000 million cubic feet,
while three fairly large canals were still under construction. In 1918
several large new schemes for the Panjab and the United Provinces
were being considered. Some of these have since matured, the most
noteworthy being the Satlej valley project, with an estimated capital
cost of nine and a half millions sterling.
As a result of the extensive development which has been sketched
above irrigation had by 1918 become an important branch of district
administration. Local work is in the hands of officers of the irrigation
branch of the provincial public works department, but the collector
is intimately concerned with its success and is generally consulted in
all important developments. Moreover, he and his superiors, as land-
revenue officers, have a preponderant voice in the determination of
the rates charged for the consumption of canal water, while he is also
responsible for the collection of the resulting demand, though its
actual assessment at harvest time is usually made by irrigation officers.
In 1917-18 net revenue from state canals in the Panjab was 1. 8 millions
sterling, in the United Provinces £580,000, while in the Central
Provinces there was none. 3
Modern famine policy has been treated in another chapter, but a
few facts may be added here. In 1860-1 severe famine affected an
area of 50,000 square miles containing a population of twenty millions.
It comprised the south-eastern Panjab and the west of the present
United Provinces. The policy of relief on public works, initiated in
1837-8, was retained and expanded, while poorhouses for the gra-
tuitous relief of the incapable were opened for the first time. Remis-
sions of revenue were comparatively small but considerable advances
were made. Gratuitous relief appears to have been liberal: in the
Hissar district of the Panjab, for example, its recipients were treble
the number of persons on relief works. The same tract was again
severely attacked in 1868-9 by a famine which was far more wide-
spread than the last. Distress was extreme, mortality great, and the
destruction of cattle immense, while a heavy influx of starving multi-
tudes from the feudatory states, which were without famine organisa-
tion, greatly aggravated the situation and in fact broke down the
relief system. In the United Provinces the state spent nearly Rs. 30
lakhs in addition to heavy expenditure in the Panjab. In 1896–7 the
same areas again suffered from intense famine, and the Central
Provinces were for the first time affected. But on this occasion the
1 Triennial Review, p. 128.
2 Idem, p. 170.
3 Statistical Abstract, 1917-18, p. 150.
Imp. Gaz. II, 485; Rep. of Fam. Comm. 1880, p. 12; Adm. Rep. Unil. Provs. 1911-12, p. 12;
H. of C. Papers, 1862, vol. XL.
s Gazelleer of Hisar District, 1892, p. 23.
• Imp. Gaz. 111, 487; Rep. of Fam. Comm. 1880, p. 12; Adm. Rep. Unit. Prous. 1911-12,
p. 22.
## p. 286 (#324) ############################################
286 ADMINISTRATION IN U. P. , C. P. , AND PANJAB
organisation, as testified by the subsequent Famine Commission of
1898,- was far more efficient than it had been previously, while the
agricultural population generally showed a power, hitherto unknown,
of meeting the disaster. In the Panjab Hissar was again the most dis-
tressed district, and it accounted for more than one-half of the total
number relieved in that province, at one time as many as 15 per cent.
of its total population being in receipt of relief. Rs. 167 lakhs were
spent in the United Provinces and Rs. 23 lakhs in the Panjab in addi-
tion to heavy suspensions and remissions of land-revenue. Once more
in 1899–1900 the south-eastern Panjab and the Central Provinces
were very severely attacked. Distress was more intense than in 1896-7
and cattle mortality, owing to a complete failure of fodder, enormous. 3
In the Panjab the death-rates of the affected districts rose considerably
but mortality from actual starvation was prevented. Relief operations
in that province cost Rs. 48 lakhs, most of which was incurred in the
Hissar district. The great development of irrigation and of communi-
cations which has been achieved in recent years, the elaboration of
a complete famine organisation, not only in British territory but also
in the feudatory states, and, last but not least, the growth of general
economic prosperity have gone far to vanquish one of India's direct
and most persistent scourges.
The forests of India are of the first importance, not only for their
natural products but also through their influence on climate, rainfall,
and water supply. As has been truly said they are "the headworks
of Nature's irrigation scheme in India". Under native rule unchecked
destruction and wasteful misuse did untold damage. Up to 1855
British attempts at management were sporadic and dominated by
considerations of revenue, but in that year Lord Dalhousie inaugurated
a policy of scientific conservation and regulated exploitation. An
inspector-general of forests was appointed nine years later, but it was
not until 1869 that an organised forest department with a staff of
trained officers came into existence. Indian forest lands are the
property of the state, though generally more or less burdened with
public or private customary rights of user, largely grazing, in favour
of village communities or individuals; a fcature which mainly decides
the degree of conservation which can be applied. Those classed as
reserved” are important for purposes of scientific forestry. Forests
are “protected” with a view to later reservation or in order to increase
their direct utility to the agricultural population; while in “unclassed”
forests very few, if any, restrictions are enforced. The first legal basis
for forest administration was the Indian Forest Act of 1865, which
was replaced by the existing Act VII of 1878. It prescribes, inter alia,
1 Rep. of Fam. Comm. 1898.
* Adm. Rep. Unit. Provs. 1911-12, p. 23; Adm. Rep. Panjab, 1911-12, p. 24.
; Adm. Rep. Panjab, 1911-12, p. 25;
• Imp. Gaz. m, 107sq. ; Moral and Mat. Prog. Rep. 1882–3, pp. 202 sqq. ; H. of C. Papers,
1871, vol. LII.
66
9
## p. 287 (#325) ############################################
FORESTS
287
a procedure for the adjudication and record of public and private
rights in forest lands and for their extinction in the reserves, if necessary,
by compensation or exchange; the entire operation being known as
a forest settlement.
Each provincial government has a forest depart-
ment under a conservator of forests. For executive purposes there are
deputy-conservators, or district forest officers, each in charge of a
division, corresponding to a civil district, with an assistant and a
subordinate staff. The collector is not concerned with technical forest
work, but the deputy-conservator is under his control in all matters
which directly concern the people, such as grazing in forests, levy of
fees, and supply of forest produce. The collector, or a specially deputed
officer, carries out forest settlement operations, often a lengthy and
intricate business. Up to 1921 the Government of India controlled
forest administration through its inspector-general. The main objects
of the department are scientific improvement and regeneration of the
forests, and, as subsidiary measures, protection from fire and from
illicit grazing. Produce of various kinds is commercially extracted in
accordance with prescribed working plans, which regulate this as well
as other branches of forest technique. The United Provinces and the
Panjab are not of great importance as measured by the proportion of
forest to total area, which is 7 per cent. in each. In the Central
Provinces, however, the figure is 20 per cent. , the forest area consisting
of 20,000 square miles of “reserves " 1 Former large areas of unclassed
forest in the Panjab plains have been entirely colonised in recent
years. The reserves in all three provinces are chiefly in the hills.
Smuggled importation from feudatory states together with the wide
prevalence of illicit distillation of alcohol, facilitated by the abundance
of suitable material supplied by the cultivated sugar-cane and by the
wild mahua tree (Bassia latifolia), long hindered progress in excise
administration. But by 1918 much had been accomplished through
restriction of supply to supervised distilleries and by improving the
quality of the preventive establishment. ? An excise law, applying to
the North-Western Provinces, was passed in 1856, which provided
for central distilleries. But in view of their previous failure, it was not
until 1863 that they generally displaced the system of farms and out-
stills in the North-Western Provinces, though in Oudh they had been
introduced in 1861. A duty was levied on all spirituous liquor pro-
duced, and the right of vend at specified shops was leased separately.
By 1870 it became clear that the change had been too extensive, and
in 1873 illicit traffic was found to be very prevalent. Again there was
a reversion to farms and out-stills in many districts. Matters remained
thus in the United and the Central Provinces until the early years of
this century, farms and out-stills prevailing in one-third and nearly
1 Statistical Abstract, 1917-18, p. 157.
• Imp. Gaz. II, 235; Parl. Papers, LXII, 609 sqq. ; Moral and Mal. Prog. Rep. , 1882-3, pp.
170-1; Papers relating to Excise administration in India, Government of India Gazette,
i March, 1890.
## p. 288 (#326) ############################################
288 ADMINISTRATION IN U. P. , C. P. , AND PANJAB
three-fourths of their respective areas. Throughout the Panjab, where
previously there had been no excise restrictions, the farming system
was in force for some years after annexation, but in 1863 it was en-
tirely replaced by central distilleries, with separate licences for sale at
specified shops. Under this system, which continued for nearly forty
years, taxation was substantially increased, so that by 1890 illicit
traffic was more rife than in the rest of India. In the early years of
this century central distilleries gave place throughout the province to
a few private distilleries of modern type located at selected places.
Under direct official supervision and in mutual competition, they
supplied spirituous liquor, after payment of duty, and at prices liable
to government control, to local vendors, who were separately licensed
for specified shops. The system was known as the “free supply"
system. Only in two small areas, peculiarly situated, were out-stills
allowed.
With the passing of an Excise Act in 1896 matters had developed
thus far when in 1905 the government referred the whole question of
excise administration in India to a committee for review and for
advice. In doing so it declared definitely that, while refusing to inter-
fere with the moderate use of alcohol, its settled policy was to minimise
temptation for the abstainer and to discourage excess among others;
and that no considerations of revenue could be allowed to hamper
this policy. It held that the most effective means of pursuing this
was as high a taxation of liquor as was possible without stimulating
illicit production and resort to harmful substitutes. While recognising
that uniformity of method was impossible, it regarded the continuance
of extensive farm and out-still areas, of crude distillery systems, and
of low rates of taxation as defects to be remedied as soon as possible.
After a lengthy enquiry the committee in 1906 submitted with its
report detailed recommendations for the future course of excise ad-
ministration, most of which, with some modifications, are now in
force. 2 In each of the three provinces spirituous liquor is made in
private licensed distilleries under official supervision. After payment
of duty it is supplied to local licensed vendors under officially con-
trolled arrangements and at regulated prices. Out-still areas have
been reduced to a minimum in the United and the Central Provinces,
and entirely abolished in the Panjab. Separate licences, containing
many desirable prohibitions and restrictions, for the retail vend of
liquor at specified shops are issued on fees which are generally deter-
mined by auction. The duty is enhanced from time to time with the
object of increasing the proportion borne by its yield to that of vend
fees; but the risk of stimulating illicit distillation hampers the process.
On all foreign liquor, spirituous or fermented, import duty is levied,
* Report of the Excise Committee, 1905-6, and Government of India Resolutions
thereon, in Parl. Papers, 1907, LVIII, 645 599.
• Provincial Excise Administration Reports for 1907-8 and subsequent years.
## p. 289 (#327) ############################################
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
289
2
and sale is controlled by licences; while the production of beer, mainly
for European consumption, is also subject to excise regulations. The
general Excise Act has been replaced by separate provincial enact-
ments.
Opium was extensively grown in the Panjab before its annexation,
but its cultivation, manufacture and sale were soon brought under
control. 1 The first was gradually restricted and is now prohibited
except in a few small hill tracts, very little opium being at present
locally produced. For public consumption opium manufactured by
government agency is issued at a monopoly price to vendors licensed,
on fees usually determined by auction, to sell at specified shops. In
the United and the Central Provinces the supply is confined to such
government opium.
In 1893 a commission investigated the production, sale and con-
sumption of drugs made from the hemp plant (Cannabis sativa). ? It
did not recommend prohibition, but control and restriction. The
control is enforced by a system of licences for sale similar to liquor
licences. Cultivation has been greatly restricted, most of the supply
being imported from Central Asia.
Local excise administration is one of the more important duties of
the collector. The work has grown greatly in volume and complexity
in the present century; the total net revenue of the three provinces
in 1917–18 being 2. 2 millions sterling.
Important developments connected with agriculture, with rural
indebtedness, and with the closely allied subject of co-operation have
taken place within recent years. As has been already stated the
provincial departments of land records and agriculture, instituted in
1880, had little concern with technical agriculture. In 1901, as a first
step towards its more scientific organisation, the Indian Government
appointed an inspector-general of agriculture with a small staff of
experts. During the next few years the subject of agriculture was
separated from land records and provincial departments in:stituted,
each under a director with a small staff, subsequently increased by
the addition of trained officers. The fundamental object of these
departments is the development, by experiment and research, of
improved agricultural methods and implements, of better qualities
of seed, and of effective means of coping with crop diseases and insect
pests. With the growth of the departments many experimental stations
and demonstration farms had been established by 1915 and were
doing satisfactory work. Several cultural and manurial problems
had been dealt with, greatly improved varieties of seed for important
crops had been produced, and the introduction of better implements
had begun. For the provision of sound agricultural training on
Imp. Gaz. IV, 245; Report of Opium Commission, 1893, H. of C. Papers, 1895, vol. xlu.
* Report of Indian Heinp Drugs Commission, 1893, and Government of India Resolu-
tion thereon of 21 March, 1895.
• Annual Reports of Provincial Agricultural Departments.
GHIVI
19
1
## p. 290 (#328) ############################################
290 ADMINISTRATION IN U. P. , C. P. , AND PANJAB
scientific lines, an essential feature of the entire scheme, provincial
agricultural colleges, with research institutes attached, have been
estaulished; while a central college at Pusa in Bihar provides more
advanced instruction. The three provinces have taken their full share
in the progress, their colleges being located at Cawnpore, Nagpur,
and Lyallpur respectively. The last, situated in the Chenab colony,
is now a leading centre of research, experiment and instruction.
Though the modern movement was started not in response to popular
demand, but on the initiative of the government, the agricultural
department has succeeded to a surprising degree in securing the con-
fidence of the rural classes. The collector, though having no control of
its technical operations in his district, is closely concerned with it on
its administrative side and with its general results.
Debt is an inevitable adjunct of peasant agriculture, but under an
unhealthy system of credit, where numerous illiterate and often
thriftless rural borrowers are in the toils of literate and astute money-
lenders, it is apt to become both a fruitful economic evil and a political
danger. The grant of freely transferable proprietary rights to the
peasantry of the Panjab and of the United Provinces, combined with
a novel moderation in the fiscal demands of the state, put at its dis-
posal a volume of credit which grew with the value of land and of its
produce. In the period 1875-1900 indebtedness increased rapidly,
and with it the sale and mortgage of agricultural land. In the Panjab
the evil had attained alarming proportions by the latter year. After
very prolonged investigation and discussion a remedy was sought in
legislation. The Panjab Alienation of Land Act of 1900, while not
affecting transfers of land between members of the agricultural tribes
of the province, narrowly restricts such transfers where the transferees
are members of other classes, which include most of the professional
money-lenders. The undue restriction of credit, the general fall in
land values, the widespread evasion which some anticipated as
necessary results of the measure, have not occurred. Credit is being
placed on a more healthy basis by the co-operative movement noticed
below; the rise of land values, though not necessarily beneficial to the
rural population, has continued steadily, while the peasant himself
now regards the act as an indispensable factor of his economic
security. Its proper administration is one of the important duties of
the deputy-commissioner. Similar legislation has not been found to be
necessary in the United Provinces except in Bundelkhand, where it
was introduced in 1903. 2
It is, however, rural co-operation combined with improved agri-
cultural practice, which is proving itself to be the most effective means
of raising the economic condition of the peasantry. The subject is one
which deserves a much closer study than is possible here. After a
Adm. Rep. Panjab, 1911-12, p. 49, and other extensive literature.
; Adm. Rep. Unit. Provs. 1911-12, p. 20.
## p. 291 (#329) ############################################
CO-OPERATIVE SOCIETIES
291
preliminary period of investigation, with practical experiments in
various parts of India, a Co-operative Credit Societies Act was passed
in 1904, which provided legal facilities for the formation and working
of such societies. In the light of subsequent experience it was replaced
by the Co-operative Societies Act of 1912, an improved measure of
wider scope, which, in addition to credit societies, provided for societies
co-operative in the purchase of seed and implements, the marketing
of produce, and in other activities. A rural credit society is broadly
of the German Raiffeisen type, though with certain differences. Its
membership is confined to a small specified area, and its function is
to lend among its members for approved objects connected with
agriculture, including reasonable domestic consumption, funds raised
on their joint and several unlimited liability. A small entrance fee is
charged, and in the Panjab and the United Provinces, but not in the
Central Provinces, each member contributes in addition a small
amount of share capital. Deposits are received from both members
and non-members, and further capital is borrowed from other societies
or from central banks, which form an integral part of the system and
are in touch with the external money market. A committee of mem-
bers constitutes the managing body, and as no paid staff is employed,
working expenses are at a minimum; but borrowers are charged a
rate of interest, which, though much less than that usually taken by
money-lenders from single borrowers, allows of the accumulation of
a reserve fund. The whole of the above resources are employed as
working capital; and an immense alleviation of rural indebtedness is
being gradually effected, while the moral education in self-help,
thrift, self-respect, and social solidarity which is being silently im-
parted can scarcely be overestimated. Many societies for co-operative
objects other than credit have been started. In each province the
local government appoints a registrar with one or two assistants, who,
with a trained staff, superintend and advise the societies in addition
to performing statutory functions under the act. The figures for
agricultural societies in 1918-19-United Provinces, 3177; Central
Provinces, 3871; Panjab, 5087—show the extent to which the move-
ment has spread. It is one of the most effective economic and educative
influences which have been introduced into India.
The modern development of local self-government is described in
another chapter. Beginning in 1873 with Lord Mayo's measures for
the decentralisation of finance,? it was placed by Lord Ripon in
1881–2 on a broader basis, with a largely increased elective element
and with a limited degree of freedom from official control. In actual
practice, however, most local bodies were dominated by the influence
of the district officer, and, in financial matters especially, by the
2
1 Annual Provincial Reports.
· Imp. Gaz. iv, 287 sqq. ; Parl. Papers, 1883, LI, I 599. ; Moral and Mat. Prog. Rep. 1882-3,
pp. 59-63.
19-2
## p. 292 (#330) ############################################
292 ADMINISTRATION IN U. P. , C. P. , AND PANJAB
a
increasingly centralised control of the provincial government and its
departments; both being exercised in the interests of administrative
efficiency, which otherwise, there can be little doubt, would have
seriously deteriorated, there being then no public opinion competent
to compel local bodies to discharge their responsibilities. The district
officer was not merely the controlling guide of local bodies, but their
main active element; their affairs forming a considerable part of his
daily work; a position which continued until the Indian Decentralisa-
tion Commission issued its report in 1909. It found that progress in
local self-government had been hindered because local bodies, and
more especially rural boards, had no real power and responsibility
owing to want of funds and to excessive control. It made many drastic
proposals for removing the trammels, the more important of which,
after reference to provincial governments, the Indian Government
accepted in 19151 with certain reservations and modifications. As a
general result central departmental control was much relaxed and in
some respects abrogated; local bodies have been placed in a freer and
stronger financial position; while in municipalities official chairmen
have for the most part disappeared. What the ultimate practical
outcome will be in terms of public health and convenience remains
to be seen. In the year 1917–18 there were in the United Provinces,
the Central Provinces and in the Panjab, 83, 57 and 100 munici-
palities respectively, which contained in the case of the first two 6) per
cent. , and in the case of the third 8 per cent. of the whole provincial
population.
The important subject of education has been treated elsewhere. Its
administration being for the most part in the hands of the provincial
education departments, its connection with district administration
has been mainly through the local bodies, who have helped to finance
primary, and to some extent also secondary education, without,
however, exercising much actual control over either. The function of
the district officer has been to co-operate, advise and encourage on
a basis of general interest, supervision and local knowledge.
The main lines which the development of district administration
has followed have now been sketched. Throughout the process the
district officer-collector or deput -commissioner on the whole re-
tained the position of principal local official of the government, in
direct control, so far as his district was concerned, of its chief activities,
and in direct touch with all others conducted by more purely depart-
mental officials not wholly subordinate to him. The extremely multi-
farious nature of his work has been indicated. His primary duties are
the collection of revenue from the land and from other sources, and
the exercise of judicial powers, criminal and revenue, both of first
instance and in appeal. But police, jails, municipalities, rural boards.
i Government of India Resolutions 55-77, 28 April, 1915.
• Statistical Abstract for 1917-18, p. 98.
## p. 293 (#331) ############################################
THE DISTRICT OFFICER
293
education, roads, sanitation, dispensaries, local taxation, agricultural
statistics, records of rights and irrigation are matters with which he
is more or less daily concerned, directly or indirectly. He is also
responsible for the maintenance and submission of correct accounts of
extensive local receipts and expenditure, and for the safe custody of
large amounts of public money. He must, moreover, be familiar with
the social life of the people and with the natural aspects of his district.
But the district officer who should seek to undertake personally the
daily minutiae of all these subjects would be unwise, not to say in-
competent. With a comparatively few of them to do so is inevitable,
but the main, the most important work is continuous supervision and
control of subordinates, combined with a broad view and a strong but
kindly grasp of the changing aspects and the half-expressed needs of
the mass of human beings committed to their care. Centralised
control has doubtless increased; but the common complaint that it
has harmfully restricted the initiative of the district officer is in the
main an exaggeration. It has certainly increased his otherwise mani-
fold preoccupations, and where he has not been provided with ade-
quate staff the result has been harmful. But he has been able to
succeed just in so far as he has appreciated the need for, and has
skilfully arranged, wherever possible, a devolution of actual work to
properly qualified subordinates.
## p. 294 (#332) ############################################
CHAPTER XVII
THE DEVELOPMENT OF FAMINE POLICY
Three
HREE hundred years ago the Dutchman, Francisco Pelsaert,
travelling in Upper India, described in vivid language the relations
between agriculture and the seasons:
The year is here divided into three seasons. In April, May and June the heat is
intolerable, and men can scarcely breathe, more than that, hot winds blow con-
tinuously, as stifling as if they came straight from the furnace of hell. The air is
filled with the dust raised by violent whirlwinds from the sandy soil, making day
like the darkest night that human eyes have seen or that can be grasped by the
imagination. Thus in the afternoon of 15 June, 1624, I watched a hurricane of dust
coming up gradually, which so hid the sky and the sun that for two hours people
could not tell if the world was at an end, for the darkness and fury of the wind
could not have been exceeded. Then the storm disappeared gradually, as it had
come, and the sun shone again. The months of June, July, August, September and
October are reckoned as the rainy season, during which it sometimes rains steadily.
The days are still very hot, but the rain brings a pleasant and refreshing coolness.
In November, December, January, February and March it is tolerably cool, and
the climate is pleasant.
From April to June the fields lie hard and dry, unfit for ploughing or sowing
owing to the heat. When the ground has been moistened by a few days' rain, the
cultivators begin to sow indigo, rice and various food grains eaten by the poor.
When all these are off the land, they plough and sow again, for there are two harvests;
that is to say in December and January they sow wheat and barley, various pulses
and "alsi" (linseed) from which oil is extracted. Large numbers of wells have to
be dug in order to irrigate the soil, for at that time it is beginning to lose its productive
power. Provided the rain is seasonable and the cold is not excessive, there is a
year of plenty, not merely of food, but in the trade of all sorts of commodities. I
But if the rain is not seasonable, if the monsoon fails over large
tracts which cannot be sufficiently irrigated from ponds, rivers, wells
or canals, the crops which are the mainstay of the countryside must
be sown in a much restricted area and will often be poor even there;
the grass which has been burnt up by the blazing sun and burning
winds of March, April and May cannot revive, and both the milch-
cows and the plough and transport cattle, which are the cultivator's
working capital, are decimated. The water level falls; and the supply
is tainted with noxious germs. The peasantry see their means of live-
lihood vanish. If no remedy be forthcoming they must starve.
Destitution will bring cholera and pestilence in its train; and thousands
of humble lives will be sacrificed. Such is famine in that grim shape
which it has often worn. But nature sometimes relents; and man has
done much to combat this king of terrors.
The drought which follows a feeble monsoon may be mitigated by
light winter rains; and in any case there are marked differences of
· Pelsaert, Jerangir's India, pp.