Alamohan Dass | |
Birth Date: | March 1895 |
Birth Place: | Khila-Dey Para, Howrah, Bengal, British India[1] (now Howrah District, West Bengal, India) |
Birth Name: | Surendra Mohan Das |
Death Date: | 30 December, 1969 |
Occupation: | Industrialist, Politician |
Known For: | India Machinery Company Bharat Jute Mill Arati Cotton Mill Dass Bank |
Karam Vir |
Alamohan Das was an industrialist in pre-independence and post-independence Bengal. He ventured into various industries like jute, cotton, heavy machinery, drug, banking etc. He is known for his role in the India Machinery Company, one of the earliest indigenous machine making industries of India.[2]
Alamohan Das was born in a middle-class Mahishya family in Khila-Baruipur, Howrah district[3] of West Bengal, India. He had little formal education as a child, except attending a village pathshala and a middle primary school. But as he hailed from a business minded Mahishya family, he came to Kolkata at the age of 15 and started his business career by selling parched rice, small things, but gradually switched over to industrial items. He started to read avidly to acquire knowledge for his betterment and fulfilling his ambitions. He was very much influenced by Bankim Chandra's Anandamath and Tagore's 'Banglar Mati Banglar Jwal'. He took the spirit of Swadeshi movement in his heart.[4]
In 1930, he founded the India Machinery Co., which, according to Government reports, was one of the few companies that produced machines of grade 1 category. Amongst the products of the company were lathes, weighing machines, textile manufacturing machines, and printing machines.[5] In 1937 he started Bharat Jute Mill.[6]
In independent India's first election in 1951, he won Amta North Vidansabha seat in the West Bengal state assembly, contesting as an independent candidate.[7]