Nirmal Chandra Chatterjee Explained

Nirmal Chandra Chatterjee
Birth Date:19 October 1895
Residence:Boinchee, Hooghly District, Bengal Presidency, British India
Death Date:1971 (aged 75)
Office:Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha
Constituency1:Hooghly, West Bengal
Term Start1:1952
Term End1:1957
Successor1:Provat Kar
Constituency2:Burdwan, West Bengal
Term Start2:1963
Term End2:1971
Predecessor2:Guru Gobinda Basu
Successor2:Somnath Chatterjee
Party:Hindu Mahasabha (before 1968)
Spouse:Surumika Devi
Children:2 Sons and 3 daughters including Somnath Chatterjee
Source:http://164.100.47.194/loksabha/writereaddata/biodata_1_12/650.htm

Nirmal Chandra Chatterjee (1895 - 1971/72) was an Indian politician & jurist who served as a judge at the Calcutta High Court & Also was an elected member of Loksabha from Bengal. He served as the vice president of the Supreme Court Bar Association, and treasurer of the Bar Association of India. He had also served as a president of the All India Civil Liberties Council, and as vice president of the International Commission of Jurists - Indian Branch.[1]

Early life and education

He was born on 19 October 1895 in Boinchee, in the Hooghly district to Bholanath Chatterjee. He was educated at the South Suburban School, the Mitra Institution, St. Mary's School, all in Calcutta, before graduating from the Scottish Church College. Subsequently, he studied law at the Hazra Law College of the University of Calcutta, before proceeding on to the Middle Temple, London, and subsequently finishing his academic pursuit at the University College, London.[1]

Career

He started out as a senior advocate in the Supreme Court of India. He went on to be a judge at the Calcutta High Court. Later he became the vice president of the Supreme Court Bar Association, and treasurer of the Bar Council of India. He had also served as a president of the All India Civil Liberties Council, and as vice president of the International Commission of Jurists - Indian Branch.[1]

He was the President of Bengal Hindu Mahasabha & the Vice President of All India Hindu Mahasabha. He presided over its[2] Gwalior session in 1947. But after partition and assassination of Mahatma Gandhi, he was somewhat disenchanted with party politics. Towards the end of 1947 and early 1948, he felt ill quite frequently and months could not attend his professional work. Doctors advised him that because of the serious attack of epidemic dropsy, he would not be able to lead an active life anymore. At that time, he got an offer for appointment as a Judge of Calcutta High court and he agreed to accept.

He was also a member of the Special Committee on Tibet of the International Commission of Jurists, and a chairman of the Subordinate Legislation Committee of Parliament. He represented India at the Commonwealth Law Conference held in London in 1955. He was a deputy leader of the Indian Lawyers Delegation to the USSR in 1959, and represented India at the International Bar Conference at Salzburg in Austria in 1960 and Commonwealth Law Conference held at Sydney in 1966. He was counsel for India at the Kutch International Tribunal in Geneva.[1]

He was a member of the 1st Lok Sabha (1952-1957) from Hooghly as a Hindu Mahasabha candidate and as an independent candidate for the 3rd Lok Sabha. He also won a bye-poll in 1963 as an independent from Burdwan with CPI support and also the 4th Lok Sabha (1967-1971) when he won again from Burdwan as an independent. He died in 1971.[3] [4]

Family

He married Binapani Devi on 30 May 1915, and later became the father of the Marxist leader, Parliamentarian Somnath Chatterjee, a communist leader from Bengal who served as the 14th Speaker of the Lok Sabha from 2004 to 2009.

Books written by him

Other works

Sports and hobbies

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://164.100.47.132/LssNew/biodata_1_12/650.htm Chatterjee, Nirmal Chandra
  2. Book: Chatterjee. Somnath. Keeping the faith. Harper Collins. 13.
  3. Book: Padalkar, Ravindra . Ruling Dynasties of Independent India - Volume 2 . 2021-02-14 . Notion Press . 978-1-63781-546-5 . en.
  4. Web site: General Elections, India, 1967 - Constituency Wise Detailed Results . West Bengal . Election Commission . 2 June 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140718185108/http://eci.nic.in/eci_main/StatisticalReports/LS_1967/Vol_I_LS_67.pdf . 18 July 2014 .