Horsley Hills Explained

Horsley Hills
Native Name Lang:Telugu
Other Name:Yengu Mallamma Kondalu
Nickname:ooty of Andhrapradesh
Settlement Type:Township
Pushpin Map:India Andhra Pradesh
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Andhra Pradesh, India
Coordinates:13.66°N 78.4°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name: India
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Name1:Andhra Pradesh
Founder:W.D.Horsely
Government Type:Tourism of Andhra Pradesh
Governing Body:Horsely Hills Township committee, Chairman: Subcollector, B.kothakota(m)
Unit Pref:Metric
Elevation M:1290
Population Density Km2:auto
Demographics Type1:Languages
Demographics1 Title1:Official
Demographics1 Info1:Telugu and English
Timezone1:IST
Utc Offset1:+5:30
Postal Code:517325
Registration Plate:AP03

Horsley Hills or Horsleykonda or Yenugulla Mallamma Konda is a series of hills in Andhra Pradesh in Madanapalle Taluka of Annamayya district and is about 9 miles from Madanapalle town. The local name of the hill was Yenugu Mallama Konda after a legend of a saintly old woman named Mallamma who lived at the top of the hill and was fed by elephants (yenugulu). W.D. Horsley, a British collector, built his home around 1870 after whom it is named. In contrast to the dry and hot surrounding, this area is well vegetated with cooler climate. This made it attractive as a hill station and a tourist spot.[1]

Flora and fauna

The native vegetation of the area has been replaced in some parts with dense growths of eucalyptus and plantations of exotic trees. In the past the area had more wildlife including Sambar deer (now reintroduced into the wild), wild boar and sloth bear. More than 133 species of birds have been recorded from the area and these include the endemic Yellow-throated bulbul, first recorded from the area in 1908.[2] [3] [4] Other birds which are rare in the surrounding region include the black eagle and the white-rumped shama.[5] [6] The endemic toad Duttaphrynus hololius[7] has been found here and a ground orchid Diplocentrum recurvum was rediscovered here after nearly a century.[8] Several species of lichen have also been documented from the region.[9]

Temperature

The minimum temperature is around 15 °C and the maximum temperature is 30 °C.[10]

Tourism

The major industry of Horsley Hills is tourism. Following are the main attractions of this town

People

Before coming into existence as a hill resort i.e. before the advent of W.D.Horsley, this area was home to the tribes of Yanadis and Chenchus. They rear Punganur breed of cows for livelihood. Today, there are different communities of people on the hills. Some of them run small hotels and others work as jeep drivers for tourists.[11]

William D. Horsley was born at Chengalpet on 8 September 1834[12] where his father John Horsley served in the Madras Civil Service from 1817-51. An older brother, Ralph, born in 1831 at Courtallam, was murdered at Bellary in 1856 where he was a Head Assistant Collector.[13] William married Mary Pelly in April 1864 and died in 1899.[14]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Government of India. The Imperial Gazetteer of India. Volume XIII. Gyaraspur to Jais. 1908. Oxford University Press. 178.
  2. Subramanya. S. Prasad. J. N. . 1996. Yellowthroated Bulbuls at Horsley Hills. J. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. . 93. 1. 55–58.
  3. Allen, P Roscoe . 1908. Notes on the Yellow-throated Bulbul Pycnonotus xantholaemus. J. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. . 18. 4. 905–907.
  4. Lists, records and Horsley Hills ornithology. Ghorpade, Kumar. 53–54. Newsletter for Birdwatchers. 38. 3. 1998.
  5. Subramanya, S.. Prasad, J.N. . 1992. Birds of Horsley Hills. Newsletter for Birdwatchers. 32. 9–10. 8–10.
  6. Prasanna, Manu. Belliappa, KM. Vittal, BS . 1997. Birds in Horsley Hills. Newsletter for Birdwatchers. 37. 5. 76.
  7. A note on records of rare and endemic Duttaphrynus hololius (Günther, 1876) from Tamil Nadu, Eastern Ghats, India. Kalaimani, A.. Nath, Anukul. Kumar, R. Brawin. Frog Leg. 2012. 18. 27–30.
  8. Mahendranath, M.. Chetty, K.M.. Prasad, K. . 2015. A re-collection of Diplocentrum recurvum lindl. (Orchidaceae) after a lapse of 100 years or more from Andhra Pradesh, India. Journal of Threatened Taxa . 7. 10. 7712–7715. 10.11609/JoTT.o4172.7712-5. free.
  9. New distributional records and checklist of lichens for Andhra Pradesh, India. 2011. 1371–1376 . 137. 12. Reddy, A.M. Nayaka, S. Shankar, P.C.. Reddy, S.R.. Rao, B R P. Indian Forester.
  10. Book: Kohli, M.S.. Mountains of India. 168, 169.
  11. Book: Francis, W.. Imperial gazetteer of India.
  12. Web site: FIBIS database. 10 September 2015.
  13. Book: Cotton, Julian James. 1946. List of inscriptions on tombs or monuments in Madras possessing historical or archaeological interest. Volume 2. 2. Government Press. Madras.
  14. Web site: The Peerage. 10 September 2015.