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Indian Civil Service

The Indian Civil Service (ICS), officially known as the Imperial Civil Service, was the higher civil service of the British Empire in India during British rule in the period between 1858 and 1947.

Its members ruled over more than 300 million people[1] in the Presidencies and provinces of British India and were ultimately responsible for overseeing all government activity in the 250 districts that comprised British India. They were appointed under Section XXXII(32) of the Government of India Act 1858,[2][3] enacted by the British Parliament.[4] The ICS was headed by the Secretary of State for India, a member of the British cabinet.

At first almost all the top thousand members of the ICS, known as "Civilians", were British, and had been educated in the best British schools.[5]

At the time of the partition of India in 1947, the outgoing Government of India's ICS was divided between India and Pakistan.[a] Although these are now organised differently, the contemporary Civil Services of India, the Central Superior Services of Pakistan, Bangladesh Civil Service and Myanmar Civil Service are all descended from the old Indian Civil Service. Historians often rate the ICS, together with the railway system, the legal system, and the Indian Army, as among the most important legacies of British rule in India.[6]

Origins and history

From 1858, after the demise of the East India Company's rule in India, the British civil service took on its administrative responsibilities. The change in governance came about due to the Indian Rebellion of 1857, which came close to toppling British rule in the country.[7]

Entry and setting

Up to 1853, the Directors of the East India Company made appointments of covenanted civil servants by nominations. This nomination system was abolished by the British Parliament in 1853 and it was decided that appointments would be through competitive examinations of all British subjects, without distinction of race.

The examination for admission to the service was first held only in London in the month of August of each year.[8] All candidate were required to pass a compulsory horse-riding test.

An appointment to the civil service of the Company will not be a matter of favour but a matter of right. He who obtains such an appointment will owe it solely to his own abilities and industry. It is undoubtedly desirable that the civil servants of the Company should have received the best, the most finished education that the native country affords (the Report insisted that the civil servants of the Company should have taken the first degree in arts at Oxford or Cambridge Universities).

— Macaulay Committee Report[9]

The competitive examination for entry to the civil service was combined for the Diplomatic, the Home, the Indian, and the Colonial Services. Candidates had to be aged between 18 and 23 to take the exam.[10] The total marks possible in the examination were 1,900 and one could get up to three opportunities to enter.[citation needed] Successful candidates underwent one or two years of probation in the United Kingdom, according to whether they had taken the London or the Indian examination. This period[11] was spent at the University of Oxford (Indian Institute), the University of Cambridge, colleges in the University of London (including School of Oriental Studies) or Trinity College Dublin,[11] where a candidate studied the law and institutions of India, including criminal law and the law of evidence, which together gave knowledge of the revenue system, as well as reading Indian history and learning the language of the province to which they had been assigned.[11]

The Early Nationalists,[12] also known as the Moderates,[13] worked for implementation of various social reforms such as the appointment of a Public Service Commission and a resolution of the House of Commons (1893) allowing for simultaneous examination for the Indian Civil Service in London and India.

By 1920, there were five methods of entry into the higher civil service: firstly, the open competitive examinations in London; secondly, separate competitive examinations in India; thirdly, nomination in India to satisfy provincial and communal representation; fourthly, promotion from the Provincial Civil Service and lastly, appointments from the bar (one-fourth of the posts in the ICS were to be filled from the bar).[14]

Uniform and dressing

 
 
 
Sir Henry Edward Stokes, Sir Gabriel Stokes and V. Narahari Rao in the uniform of the Indian Civil Service.

Queen Victoria had suggested that the civil servants in India should have an official dress uniform, as did their counterparts in the Colonial Service. However, the Council of India decided that prescribing a dress uniform would be an undue expense for their officials.[15]

The only civilians allowed a dress uniform by regulations were those who had distinct duties of a political kind to perform, and who are thereby brought into frequent and direct personal contact with native princes.[15] This uniform included a blue coat with gold embroidery, a black velvet lining, collar and cuffs, blue cloth trousers with gold and lace two inches wide, a beaver cocked hat with black silk cockade and ostrich feathers, and a sword.[15]

Nature and role

The civil services were divided into two categories – covenanted and uncovenanted. The covenanted civil service consisted of British civil servants occupying the higher posts in the government. The uncovenanted civil service was introduced to facilitate the entry of Indians at the lower rung of the administration.[16][17]

Salary and ranks

After the Indian Rebellion of 1857, pay scales were drawn up.[1] Assistant Commissioners started out in their early twenties on around £300 a year.[1] The governorship of a British province was the highest post an ICS officer could aspire to.[18] The governors at the top of the pyramid got £6,000 a year plus allowances.[1] All ICS officers retired on the same pension of £1,000.[1] This sum was paid as an annuity each year after retirement. Widows of deceased officers were entitled to £300 a year, leading to a popular saying that an ICS marriage was worth "three hundred a year alive or dead".[19]

In the first decades of the twentieth century, the imbalance in salaries and emoluments was so great that 8,000 British officers earned £13,930,554, while 130,000 Indians in government service (not just those in the Indian Civil Service proper) were collectively paid a total of £3,284,163.[20]

ICS officers normally served for a minimum of twenty five years, and there was a maximum service period of thirty five years.[1]

ICS officers served as political officers in the Indian Political Department and also were given fifty percent of the judgeships in the state high court (the rest were generally elevated from the high court bar).[18] The tenure of ICS officers serving as judges of the high court and Supreme Court was determined by the retirement age fixed for judges.[18]

Source:[b][c]

Changes after 1912

If a responsible government is to be established in India, there will be a far greater need than is even dreamt of at present for persons to take part in public affairs in the legislative assemblies and elsewhere and for this reason the more Indians we can employ in the public service the better. Moreover, it would lessen the burden of Imperial responsibilities if a body of capable Indian administrators could be produced..

— Regarding the importance of Indianising Civil Services, Montagu–Chelmsford Reforms[21]

With the passing of the Government of India Act 1919, the Imperial Services headed by the Secretary of State for India, were split into two – All India Services and Central Services.[22]

Before the First World War, 95% of ICS officers were Europeans; after the war, the British government faced growing difficulties in recruiting British candidates to the service. With fewer young British men interested in joining, mainly due to the decreased levels of compensation compared to other careers,[23] and confronted with numerous vacancies, the government resorted to direct appointments; between 1915 and 1924, 80% of new British ICS appointees entered the service in this way. During the same period, 44% of new appointments to the ICS were filled by Indians.[23]

In 1922, Indian candidates were permitted to sit for the ICS examinations in Delhi; in 1924, the Lee Commission, chaired by Arthur Lee, 1st Viscount Lee of Fareham (which eventually led to the foundation of the Federal Public Service Commission and Provincial Public Service Commission under the Government of India Act 1935) made several recommendations: ICS officers should receive increased and more comprehensive levels of compensation, future batches of ICS officers should be composed of 40% Europeans and 40% Indians with the remaining 20% of appointments to be filled by direct promotion of Indians from the Provincial Civil Services (PCS), and the examinations in Delhi and London were to produce an equal number of ICS probationers.[23] In addition, under-representation of candidates from Indian minority groups (Muslims, Burmese and so on) would be corrected by direct appointments of qualified candidates from those groups, while British candidates would continue to have priority over Indians for ICS appointments.[23] While initially successful, the expansion of the Indian independence movement from the late 1920s resulted in a hardening of Indian attitudes against European officers, and furthered distrust of Indian ICS appointments amongst Indians. This resulted in a declining recruitment base in terms of quality and quantity.[23]

The All India and class 1 Central Services were designated as Central Superior Services as early as 1924.[24] From 1924 to 1934, Administration in India consisted of "ten"[24] All India Services and five central departments, all under the control of Secretary of State for India, and 3 central departments under joint Provincial and Imperial Control.

After the 1935 Government of India Act

The finances of India under British rule depended largely on land taxes, and these became problematic in the 1930s. Epstein argues that after 1919 it became harder and harder to collect the land revenue. The suppression of civil disobedience by the British after 1934 temporarily increased the power of the revenue agents, but after 1937 they were forced by the new Congress-controlled provincial governments to hand back confiscated land. The outbreak of the Second World War strengthened them again, but in the face of the Quit India movement the revenue collectors had to rely on military force, and by 1946–47 direct British control was rapidly disappearing in much of the countryside.[25]

The outbreak of war in 1939 had immediate consequences for recruitment to the ICS. The examinations in London were suspended after that year's batch (12 British and eight Indian examinees) had qualified. In 1940 and 1941, 12 and four British candidates, respectively, were nominated to the ICS; the following year, the final London-nominated ICS candidates, both of whom were Indian, entered the service. Examinations continued to be held in Delhi for Indian candidates until 1943, when the last seven ICS officers (seven examinees, two nominated) joined. By this time, the British government felt it could no longer rely unambiguously on the complete loyalty of its Indian officers. During the period of the Interim Government of India (1946–1947), a few British candidates were given emergency appointments in the ICS, though ultimately none of them ever served in India.[23]

Partition of India, dissolution and subsequent service of officers

At the time of the partition of India and departure of the British, in 1947, the Indian Civil Service was divided between the new Dominions of India and Pakistan. The part which went to India was named the Indian Administrative Service (IAS), while the part that went to Pakistan was named the "Civil Service of Pakistan" (CSP). In 1947, there were 980 ICS officers. 468 were Europeans, 352 Hindus, 101 Muslims, two depressed classes/Scheduled Castes, five domiciled Europeans and Anglo-Indians, 25 Indian Christians, 13 Parsis, 10 Sikhs and four other communities.[18] Many Hindus and Muslims went to India and Pakistan respectively. This sudden loss of officer cadre caused major challenges in administering the nascent states.

Despite offers from the new Indian and Pakistani governments, virtually all of the European former ICS officers left following partition, with the majority of those who did not opt for retirement continuing their careers either in the British Home Civil Service or in another British colonial civil service.[26] A few British ex-ICS officers stayed on over the ensuing quarter-century, notably those who had selected the "judicial side" of the ICS. The last British former ICS officer from the "judicial side" still serving in the subcontinent, Justice Donald Falshaw (ICS 1928), retired as Chief Justice of the Punjab High Court (now the Punjab and Haryana High Court) in May 1966,[27][28] receiving a knighthood in the British 1967 New Year Honours upon his return to Britain. J. P. L. Gwynn (ICS 1939), the last former ICS officer holding British nationality and the last to serve in an executive capacity under the Indian government, ended his Indian service in 1968 as Second Member of the Board of Revenue, but continued to serve in the British Home Civil Service until his final retirement in 1976.[29][30]

Justice William Broome (ICS 1932), a district and sessions judge at the time of independence in 1947, remained in Indian government service as a judge. Having married an Indian, Swarup Kumari Gaur, in 1937, with whom he raised a family, he eventually renounced his British citizenship in 1958 and became an Indian citizen with the personal intervention of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, himself a former barrister who regarded Broome as a distinguished jurist and as "much as Indian as anybody can be who is not born in India". Upon his retirement on 18 March 1972 from the Allahabad High Court as its most senior puisne judge, Broome was the last former ICS officer of European origin serving in India.[28]

Nirmal Kumar Mukarji (ICS 1943), a member of the final batch recruited to the ICS, who retired as Cabinet Secretary in April 1980, was the last Indian administrative officer who had originally joined as an ICS.[18] The last former ICS officer to retire, Aftab Ghulam Nabi Kazi (also a member of the final ICS batch of 1943),[31] retired as Chairman of the Pakistan Board of Investment in 1994. The last living British ex-ICS officer, Ian Dixon Scott (ICS 1932), died in 2002. V. K. Rao (ICS 1937), the last living ICS officer to have joined the service in a regular pre-war intake, died in 2018. He was a retired Chief Secretary of Andhra Pradesh and was the oldest former ICS officer on record at the time of his death. V.M.M. Nair (ICS 1942) transferred to the Indian Political Service in 1946 and then to the Indian Foreign Service after independence, retiring in 1977 as Ambassador to Spain. At his death in 2021, he was the last surviving former Indian Civil Service officer.[32]

Support and criticism

If you take that steel frame out of the fabric, it would collapse. There is one institution we will not cripple, there is one institution we will not deprive of its functions or of its privileges; and that is the institution which built up the British Raj – the British Civil Service of India.

—  David Lloyd George, then Prime Minister of the United Kingdom on the Imperial Civil Service[33]

Dewey has commented that "in their heyday they [Indian Civil Service officers] were mostly run by Englishmen with a few notable sons of Hindus and even a fewer Muslims were the most powerful officials in the Empire, if not the world. A tiny cadre, a little over a thousand strong, ruled more than 300 million Indians. Each Civilian had an average 300,000 subjects, and each Civilian penetrated every corner of his subjects' lives, because the Indian Civil Service directed all the activities of the Anglo-Indian state."[34]

The ICS had responsibility for maintaining law and order, and often were at loggerheads with the independence activists during the Indian independence movement. Jawaharlal Nehru often ridiculed the ICS for its support of British policies. He noted that someone had once defined the Indian Civil Service, "with which we are unfortunately still afflicted in this country, as neither Indian, nor civil, nor a service".[35] As Prime Minister, Nehru retained the organisation and its top people, albeit with a change of title to the "Indian Administrative Service". It continued its main roles. Nehru appointed long-time ICS officials Chintaman Deshmukh as his Finance Minister, and K. P. S. Menon as his Foreign Minister. Sardar Patel appreciated their role in keeping India united after partition, and noted in Parliament that without them, the country would have collapsed.

 
Commemoration of the Indian Civil Services at Westminster Abbey, London

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Dewey, Clive (July 1993). Anglo-Indian Attitudes: Mind of the Indian Civil Service. A&C Black, 1993. ISBN 978-0-8264-3254-4.
  2. ^ "The Indian Civil Service". Retrieved 18 September 2014.
  3. ^ "Administering India: The Indian Civil Service". Retrieved 18 September 2014.
  4. ^ Blunt, (1937)
  5. ^ Surjit Mansingh, The A to Z of India (2010), pp 288–90
  6. ^ Ramesh Kumar Arora and Rajni Goyal, Indian public administration: institutions and issues (1995) p. 42; Ranbir Vohra, The making of India: a historical survey (2001) p 185
  7. ^ Naithani, Sadhana (2006). In quest of Indian folktales: Pandit Ram Gharib Chaube and William Crooke. Indiana University Press. p. 6. ISBN 978-0-253-34544-8.
  8. ^ The India List and India Office List. India Office; India Office Records. 1905.
  9. ^ "History of civil services in India and Reforms" (PDF). arc.gov.in. New Delhi: Department of Administrative Reforms and Public Grievances, Government of India. 8 June 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
  10. ^ "Historical Perspective of The Indian Civil Services & The Union Public Service Commission". upscpathshala.com. UPSC Pathshala. 11 June 2020. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  11. ^ a b c "The Colonial Service Training Courses : Professionalizing the Colonial Service". britishempire.co.uk. Retrieved 25 February 2016.
  12. ^ Ralhan, Om Prakash, ed. (1995). Encyclopedia of Political Parties – India – Pakistan – Bangladesh – National – Regional – Local. Vol. 23. Moderate phrase in India. New Delhi: Anmol Publications. pp. 29–36. The phase from 1885 to 1905 is known as the period of the Early Nationalists.
  13. ^ Porter, Robin J. (2001). "Imperial India, 1858–1914". Oxford History of the British Empire: The Nineteenth Century. pp. 345, 434.
  14. ^ Arora, Ramesh Kumar; Goyal, Rajni (1995). Indian public administration: Institutions and Issues. p. 43.
  15. ^ a b c Cohn, Bernard S. (1996). Colonialism and Its Forms of Knowledge: The British in India. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-00043-5.
  16. ^ Meghna Sabharwal, Evan M. Berman "Public Administration in South Asia: India, Bangladesh, and Pakistan (Public Administration and Public Policy)" (2013)
  17. ^ "Civil Service". The British Library. 8 June 2011. Retrieved 14 August 2015.
  18. ^ a b c d e . Hindustan Times. Archived from the original on 4 September 2016. Retrieved 4 September 2016.
  19. ^ Mason, Philip. The Men who Ruled India. p. 146. ISBN 0-330-29621-3.
  20. ^ "The Un-Indian Civil Service". OPEN. 10 August 2016. Retrieved 18 May 2017.
  21. ^ P. N., Chopra (2003). A Comprehensive History of India, Volume 3. Sterling Publishers Pvt. Ltd. ISBN 978-81-207-2506-5.
  22. ^ Goel, S.L. (2008). Public Personnel Administration : Theory and Practice. Deep and Deep Publications, 2008. ISBN 978-81-7629-395-2.
  23. ^ a b c d e f David C. Potter, "Manpower Shortage and the End of Colonialism: The Case of Indian Civil Service," Modern Asian Studies, (Jan 1973) 7#1 pp 47–73
  24. ^ a b Maheshwari, Shriram (1992). Problems and Issues in Administrative Federalism. Allied Publishers. ISBN 978-81-7023-342-8.
  25. ^ Simon Epstein, 'District Officers in Decline: The Erosion of British Authority in the Bombay Countryside, 1919 to 1947' in Modern Asian Studies, (May 1982) 16#3, pp 493–518
  26. ^ Wilson, John (2016). The Chaos of Empire: the British Raj and the Conquest of India. New York: PublicAffairs. pp. 492–494. ISBN 978-1-61039-293-8.
  27. ^ "Last Briton Leaves Indian Service". The Times. 12 May 1966.
  28. ^ a b McDonald, Douglas (2015). "Becoming Indian: William Broome and Colonial Continuity in Post-Independence India". Indian Historical Review. 42 (2): 303–331. doi:10.1177/0376983615597167. S2CID 146608189.
  29. ^ P. M. Gwynn (17 November 1999). "Obituary: J. P. L. Gwynn". The Independent. Retrieved 8 February 2019.
  30. ^ K. S. S. Seshan (16 June 2016). "JPL Gwynn: Smitten by the land and language". The Hindu. Retrieved 8 February 2019.
  31. ^ The India Office and Burma Office List: 1947. Harrison & Sons, Ltd. 1947. p. 241.
  32. ^ "Ex-diplomat V.M.M. Nair passes away". The Hindu. 6 October 2021. Retrieved 6 October 2021.
  33. ^ Bali, H.N (2013). One Who Forged India's Steel Frame. Boloji.
  34. ^ Dewey, Clive (1993). Anglo-Indian attitudes: the mind of the Indian Civil Service. Continuum International Publishing Group. p. 3. ISBN 978-1-85285-097-5.
  35. ^ Jawaharlal Nehru, Glimpses of world history: being further letters to his daughter (Lindsay Drummond Ltd., 1949), p. 94

Notes

  1. ^ ICS members in Pakistan was originally administering equally both West Pakistan and East Pakistan. However Pakistan was split into two. West Pakistan is now renamed to Islamic Republic of Pakistan and East Pakistan is now renamed to People's Republic of Bangladesh.
  2. ^ As per published records and book named "The India List and India Office List 1905" as published by India Office and India Office Records.
  3. ^ As per Warrant or Precedence of 1905.

Further reading

  • Blunt, Edward. The I.C.S.: the Indian civil service (1937)
  • Burra, Arudra. "The Indian Civil Service and the nationalist movement: neutrality, politics and continuity," Commonwealth & Comparative Politics, Nov 2010, 48#4 pp 404–432
  • Dewey, Clive. Anglo-Indian attitudes: the mind of the Indian Civil Service (1993)
  • Ewing, Ann. "Administering India: The Indian Civil Service," History Today, June 1982, 32#6 pp 43–48, covers 1858–1947
  • Gilmour, David. The Ruling Caste: Imperial Lives in the Victorian Raj (2007) excerpt and text search
  • Gould, William. "The Dual State: The Unruly 'Subordinate', Caste, Community and Civil Service Recruitment in North India, 1930–1955," Journal of Historical Sociology, Mar-June 2007, Vol. 20 Issue 1/2, pp 13–43
  • Krishna, Anirudh. "Continuity and change: the Indian administrative service 30 years ago and today," Commonwealth & Comparative Politics, Nov 2010, 48#4 pp 433–444
  • MacMillan, Margaret. Women of the Raj: The Mothers, Wives, and Daughters of the British Empire in India (2007)
  • Masani, Zareer. Indian Tales of the Raj (1990), interviews with retired ICS officers about pre-1947 days
  • Potter, David C. India's Political Administrators,1919–1983 (1987) 289pp; the standard scholarly history
  • Potter, David C. "The Last of the Indian Civil Service," South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies (Apr 1979), Vol. 2 Issue 1/2, pp 19–29
  • Potter, David C. "Manpower Shortage and the End of Colonialism: The Case of Indian Civil Service," Modern Asian Studies, (Jan 1973) 7#1 pp 47–73 in JSTOR
  • Sharma, Malti. Indianization of the civil services in British India, 1858–1935 (2001)
  • Smith, Vincent Arthur (1903). The Indian Civil Service as a profession  (1 ed.). Dublin: Hodges, Figgis, & Co., Ltd.
  • Thakur, R.N. The All India services: a study of their origin & growth (1969)

External links

  • The Indian Civil Service

indian, civil, service, confused, with, civil, services, india, officially, known, imperial, civil, service, higher, civil, service, british, empire, india, during, british, rule, period, between, 1858, 1947, members, ruled, over, more, than, million, people, . Not to be confused with Civil Services of India The Indian Civil Service ICS officially known as the Imperial Civil Service was the higher civil service of the British Empire in India during British rule in the period between 1858 and 1947 Its members ruled over more than 300 million people 1 in the Presidencies and provinces of British India and were ultimately responsible for overseeing all government activity in the 250 districts that comprised British India They were appointed under Section XXXII 32 of the Government of India Act 1858 2 3 enacted by the British Parliament 4 The ICS was headed by the Secretary of State for India a member of the British cabinet At first almost all the top thousand members of the ICS known as Civilians were British and had been educated in the best British schools 5 At the time of the partition of India in 1947 the outgoing Government of India s ICS was divided between India and Pakistan a Although these are now organised differently the contemporary Civil Services of India the Central Superior Services of Pakistan Bangladesh Civil Service and Myanmar Civil Service are all descended from the old Indian Civil Service Historians often rate the ICS together with the railway system the legal system and the Indian Army as among the most important legacies of British rule in India 6 Contents 1 Origins and history 1 1 Entry and setting 2 Uniform and dressing 3 Nature and role 4 Salary and ranks 5 Changes after 1912 6 After the 1935 Government of India Act 7 Partition of India dissolution and subsequent service of officers 8 Support and criticism 9 See also 10 References 11 Notes 12 Further reading 13 External linksOrigins and history EditMain articles Civil Service in early India and British Raj From 1858 after the demise of the East India Company s rule in India the British civil service took on its administrative responsibilities The change in governance came about due to the Indian Rebellion of 1857 which came close to toppling British rule in the country 7 Entry and setting Edit Main articles Aitchison Commission and Early Nationalists Up to 1853 the Directors of the East India Company made appointments of covenanted civil servants by nominations This nomination system was abolished by the British Parliament in 1853 and it was decided that appointments would be through competitive examinations of all British subjects without distinction of race The examination for admission to the service was first held only in London in the month of August of each year 8 All candidate were required to pass a compulsory horse riding test An appointment to the civil service of the Company will not be a matter of favour but a matter of right He who obtains such an appointment will owe it solely to his own abilities and industry It is undoubtedly desirable that the civil servants of the Company should have received the best the most finished education that the native country affords the Report insisted that the civil servants of the Company should have taken the first degree in arts at Oxford or Cambridge Universities Macaulay Committee Report 9 The competitive examination for entry to the civil service was combined for the Diplomatic the Home the Indian and the Colonial Services Candidates had to be aged between 18 and 23 to take the exam 10 The total marks possible in the examination were 1 900 and one could get up to three opportunities to enter citation needed Successful candidates underwent one or two years of probation in the United Kingdom according to whether they had taken the London or the Indian examination This period 11 was spent at the University of Oxford Indian Institute the University of Cambridge colleges in the University of London including School of Oriental Studies or Trinity College Dublin 11 where a candidate studied the law and institutions of India including criminal law and the law of evidence which together gave knowledge of the revenue system as well as reading Indian history and learning the language of the province to which they had been assigned 11 The Early Nationalists 12 also known as the Moderates 13 worked for implementation of various social reforms such as the appointment of a Public Service Commission and a resolution of the House of Commons 1893 allowing for simultaneous examination for the Indian Civil Service in London and India By 1920 there were five methods of entry into the higher civil service firstly the open competitive examinations in London secondly separate competitive examinations in India thirdly nomination in India to satisfy provincial and communal representation fourthly promotion from the Provincial Civil Service and lastly appointments from the bar one fourth of the posts in the ICS were to be filled from the bar 14 Uniform and dressing Edit Sir Henry Edward Stokes Sir Gabriel Stokes and V Narahari Rao in the uniform of the Indian Civil Service Queen Victoria had suggested that the civil servants in India should have an official dress uniform as did their counterparts in the Colonial Service However the Council of India decided that prescribing a dress uniform would be an undue expense for their officials 15 The only civilians allowed a dress uniform by regulations were those who had distinct duties of a political kind to perform and who are thereby brought into frequent and direct personal contact with native princes 15 This uniform included a blue coat with gold embroidery a black velvet lining collar and cuffs blue cloth trousers with gold and lace two inches wide a beaver cocked hat with black silk cockade and ostrich feathers and a sword 15 Nature and role EditMain article Aitchison Commission The civil services were divided into two categories covenanted and uncovenanted The covenanted civil service consisted of British civil servants occupying the higher posts in the government The uncovenanted civil service was introduced to facilitate the entry of Indians at the lower rung of the administration 16 17 Salary and ranks EditAfter the Indian Rebellion of 1857 pay scales were drawn up 1 Assistant Commissioners started out in their early twenties on around 300 a year 1 The governorship of a British province was the highest post an ICS officer could aspire to 18 The governors at the top of the pyramid got 6 000 a year plus allowances 1 All ICS officers retired on the same pension of 1 000 1 This sum was paid as an annuity each year after retirement Widows of deceased officers were entitled to 300 a year leading to a popular saying that an ICS marriage was worth three hundred a year alive or dead 19 In the first decades of the twentieth century the imbalance in salaries and emoluments was so great that 8 000 British officers earned 13 930 554 while 130 000 Indians in government service not just those in the Indian Civil Service proper were collectively paid a total of 3 284 163 20 ICS officers normally served for a minimum of twenty five years and there was a maximum service period of thirty five years 1 ICS officers served as political officers in the Indian Political Department and also were given fifty percent of the judgeships in the state high court the rest were generally elevated from the high court bar 18 The tenure of ICS officers serving as judges of the high court and Supreme Court was determined by the retirement age fixed for judges 18 Source b c Central Government Secretary to Government of India Joint Secretary to Government of India Deputy Secretary Additional Deputy Secretary Under Secretary Assistant Secretary to Government of India Courts Judge of State High Court District Judge State Government Chief Secretary British Empire Secretary to State Government Divisional Commissioner Deputy Commissioner District Collector Assistant CommissionerChanges after 1912 EditIf a responsible government is to be established in India there will be a far greater need than is even dreamt of at present for persons to take part in public affairs in the legislative assemblies and elsewhere and for this reason the more Indians we can employ in the public service the better Moreover it would lessen the burden of Imperial responsibilities if a body of capable Indian administrators could be produced Regarding the importance of Indianising Civil Services Montagu Chelmsford Reforms 21 With the passing of the Government of India Act 1919 the Imperial Services headed by the Secretary of State for India were split into two All India Services and Central Services 22 Before the First World War 95 of ICS officers were Europeans after the war the British government faced growing difficulties in recruiting British candidates to the service With fewer young British men interested in joining mainly due to the decreased levels of compensation compared to other careers 23 and confronted with numerous vacancies the government resorted to direct appointments between 1915 and 1924 80 of new British ICS appointees entered the service in this way During the same period 44 of new appointments to the ICS were filled by Indians 23 In 1922 Indian candidates were permitted to sit for the ICS examinations in Delhi in 1924 the Lee Commission chaired by Arthur Lee 1st Viscount Lee of Fareham which eventually led to the foundation of the Federal Public Service Commission and Provincial Public Service Commission under the Government of India Act 1935 made several recommendations ICS officers should receive increased and more comprehensive levels of compensation future batches of ICS officers should be composed of 40 Europeans and 40 Indians with the remaining 20 of appointments to be filled by direct promotion of Indians from the Provincial Civil Services PCS and the examinations in Delhi and London were to produce an equal number of ICS probationers 23 In addition under representation of candidates from Indian minority groups Muslims Burmese and so on would be corrected by direct appointments of qualified candidates from those groups while British candidates would continue to have priority over Indians for ICS appointments 23 While initially successful the expansion of the Indian independence movement from the late 1920s resulted in a hardening of Indian attitudes against European officers and furthered distrust of Indian ICS appointments amongst Indians This resulted in a declining recruitment base in terms of quality and quantity 23 The All India and class 1 Central Services were designated as Central Superior Services as early as 1924 24 From 1924 to 1934 Administration in India consisted of ten 24 All India Services and five central departments all under the control of Secretary of State for India and 3 central departments under joint Provincial and Imperial Control After the 1935 Government of India Act EditThe finances of India under British rule depended largely on land taxes and these became problematic in the 1930s Epstein argues that after 1919 it became harder and harder to collect the land revenue The suppression of civil disobedience by the British after 1934 temporarily increased the power of the revenue agents but after 1937 they were forced by the new Congress controlled provincial governments to hand back confiscated land The outbreak of the Second World War strengthened them again but in the face of the Quit India movement the revenue collectors had to rely on military force and by 1946 47 direct British control was rapidly disappearing in much of the countryside 25 The outbreak of war in 1939 had immediate consequences for recruitment to the ICS The examinations in London were suspended after that year s batch 12 British and eight Indian examinees had qualified In 1940 and 1941 12 and four British candidates respectively were nominated to the ICS the following year the final London nominated ICS candidates both of whom were Indian entered the service Examinations continued to be held in Delhi for Indian candidates until 1943 when the last seven ICS officers seven examinees two nominated joined By this time the British government felt it could no longer rely unambiguously on the complete loyalty of its Indian officers During the period of the Interim Government of India 1946 1947 a few British candidates were given emergency appointments in the ICS though ultimately none of them ever served in India 23 Partition of India dissolution and subsequent service of officers EditAt the time of the partition of India and departure of the British in 1947 the Indian Civil Service was divided between the new Dominions of India and Pakistan The part which went to India was named the Indian Administrative Service IAS while the part that went to Pakistan was named the Civil Service of Pakistan CSP In 1947 there were 980 ICS officers 468 were Europeans 352 Hindus 101 Muslims two depressed classes Scheduled Castes five domiciled Europeans and Anglo Indians 25 Indian Christians 13 Parsis 10 Sikhs and four other communities 18 Many Hindus and Muslims went to India and Pakistan respectively This sudden loss of officer cadre caused major challenges in administering the nascent states Despite offers from the new Indian and Pakistani governments virtually all of the European former ICS officers left following partition with the majority of those who did not opt for retirement continuing their careers either in the British Home Civil Service or in another British colonial civil service 26 A few British ex ICS officers stayed on over the ensuing quarter century notably those who had selected the judicial side of the ICS The last British former ICS officer from the judicial side still serving in the subcontinent Justice Donald Falshaw ICS 1928 retired as Chief Justice of the Punjab High Court now the Punjab and Haryana High Court in May 1966 27 28 receiving a knighthood in the British 1967 New Year Honours upon his return to Britain J P L Gwynn ICS 1939 the last former ICS officer holding British nationality and the last to serve in an executive capacity under the Indian government ended his Indian service in 1968 as Second Member of the Board of Revenue but continued to serve in the British Home Civil Service until his final retirement in 1976 29 30 Justice William Broome ICS 1932 a district and sessions judge at the time of independence in 1947 remained in Indian government service as a judge Having married an Indian Swarup Kumari Gaur in 1937 with whom he raised a family he eventually renounced his British citizenship in 1958 and became an Indian citizen with the personal intervention of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru himself a former barrister who regarded Broome as a distinguished jurist and as much as Indian as anybody can be who is not born in India Upon his retirement on 18 March 1972 from the Allahabad High Court as its most senior puisne judge Broome was the last former ICS officer of European origin serving in India 28 Nirmal Kumar Mukarji ICS 1943 a member of the final batch recruited to the ICS who retired as Cabinet Secretary in April 1980 was the last Indian administrative officer who had originally joined as an ICS 18 The last former ICS officer to retire Aftab Ghulam Nabi Kazi also a member of the final ICS batch of 1943 31 retired as Chairman of the Pakistan Board of Investment in 1994 The last living British ex ICS officer Ian Dixon Scott ICS 1932 died in 2002 V K Rao ICS 1937 the last living ICS officer to have joined the service in a regular pre war intake died in 2018 He was a retired Chief Secretary of Andhra Pradesh and was the oldest former ICS officer on record at the time of his death V M M Nair ICS 1942 transferred to the Indian Political Service in 1946 and then to the Indian Foreign Service after independence retiring in 1977 as Ambassador to Spain At his death in 2021 he was the last surviving former Indian Civil Service officer 32 Support and criticism EditIf you take that steel frame out of the fabric it would collapse There is one institution we will not cripple there is one institution we will not deprive of its functions or of its privileges and that is the institution which built up the British Raj the British Civil Service of India David Lloyd George then Prime Minister of the United Kingdom on the Imperial Civil Service 33 Dewey has commented that in their heyday they Indian Civil Service officers were mostly run by Englishmen with a few notable sons of Hindus and even a fewer Muslims were the most powerful officials in the Empire if not the world A tiny cadre a little over a thousand strong ruled more than 300 million Indians Each Civilian had an average 300 000 subjects and each Civilian penetrated every corner of his subjects lives because the Indian Civil Service directed all the activities of the Anglo Indian state 34 The ICS had responsibility for maintaining law and order and often were at loggerheads with the independence activists during the Indian independence movement Jawaharlal Nehru often ridiculed the ICS for its support of British policies He noted that someone had once defined the Indian Civil Service with which we are unfortunately still afflicted in this country as neither Indian nor civil nor a service 35 As Prime Minister Nehru retained the organisation and its top people albeit with a change of title to the Indian Administrative Service It continued its main roles Nehru appointed long time ICS officials Chintaman Deshmukh as his Finance Minister and K P S Menon as his Foreign Minister Sardar Patel appreciated their role in keeping India united after partition and noted in Parliament that without them the country would have collapsed Commemoration of the Indian Civil Services at Westminster Abbey LondonSee also EditList of Indian members of the Indian Civil Service List of Public service commissions in IndiaReferences Edit a b c d e f Dewey Clive July 1993 Anglo Indian Attitudes Mind of the Indian Civil Service A amp C Black 1993 ISBN 978 0 8264 3254 4 The Indian Civil Service Retrieved 18 September 2014 Administering India The Indian Civil Service Retrieved 18 September 2014 Blunt 1937 Surjit Mansingh The A to Z of India 2010 pp 288 90 Ramesh Kumar Arora and Rajni Goyal Indian public administration institutions and issues 1995 p 42 Ranbir Vohra The making of India a historical survey 2001 p 185 Naithani Sadhana 2006 In quest of Indian folktales Pandit Ram Gharib Chaube and William Crooke Indiana University Press p 6 ISBN 978 0 253 34544 8 The India List and India Office List India Office India Office Records 1905 History of civil services in India and Reforms PDF arc gov in New Delhi Department of Administrative Reforms and Public Grievances Government of India 8 June 2011 Retrieved 15 September 2011 Historical Perspective of The Indian Civil Services amp The Union Public Service Commission upscpathshala com UPSC Pathshala 11 June 2020 Retrieved 23 July 2020 a b c The Colonial Service Training Courses Professionalizing the Colonial Service britishempire co uk Retrieved 25 February 2016 Ralhan Om Prakash ed 1995 Encyclopedia of Political Parties India Pakistan Bangladesh National Regional Local Vol 23 Moderate phrase in India New Delhi Anmol Publications pp 29 36 The phase from 1885 to 1905 is known as the period of the Early Nationalists Porter Robin J 2001 Imperial India 1858 1914 Oxford History of the British Empire The Nineteenth Century pp 345 434 Arora Ramesh Kumar Goyal Rajni 1995 Indian public administration Institutions and Issues p 43 a b c Cohn Bernard S 1996 Colonialism and Its Forms of Knowledge The British in India Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 00043 5 Meghna Sabharwal Evan M Berman Public Administration in South Asia India Bangladesh and Pakistan Public Administration and Public Policy 2013 Civil Service The British Library 8 June 2011 Retrieved 14 August 2015 a b c d e Archive The men who ran the Raj Hindustan Times Archived from the original on 4 September 2016 Retrieved 4 September 2016 Mason Philip The Men who Ruled India p 146 ISBN 0 330 29621 3 The Un Indian Civil Service OPEN 10 August 2016 Retrieved 18 May 2017 P N Chopra 2003 A Comprehensive History of India Volume 3 Sterling Publishers Pvt Ltd ISBN 978 81 207 2506 5 Goel S L 2008 Public Personnel Administration Theory and Practice Deep and Deep Publications 2008 ISBN 978 81 7629 395 2 a b c d e f David C Potter Manpower Shortage and the End of Colonialism The Case of Indian Civil Service Modern Asian Studies Jan 1973 7 1 pp 47 73 a b Maheshwari Shriram 1992 Problems and Issues in Administrative Federalism Allied Publishers ISBN 978 81 7023 342 8 Simon Epstein District Officers in Decline The Erosion of British Authority in the Bombay Countryside 1919 to 1947 in Modern Asian Studies May 1982 16 3 pp 493 518 Wilson John 2016 The Chaos of Empire the British Raj and the Conquest of India New York PublicAffairs pp 492 494 ISBN 978 1 61039 293 8 Last Briton Leaves Indian Service The Times 12 May 1966 a b McDonald Douglas 2015 Becoming Indian William Broome and Colonial Continuity in Post Independence India Indian Historical Review 42 2 303 331 doi 10 1177 0376983615597167 S2CID 146608189 P M Gwynn 17 November 1999 Obituary J P L Gwynn The Independent Retrieved 8 February 2019 K S S Seshan 16 June 2016 JPL Gwynn Smitten by the land and language The Hindu Retrieved 8 February 2019 The India Office and Burma Office List 1947 Harrison amp Sons Ltd 1947 p 241 Ex diplomat V M M Nair passes away The Hindu 6 October 2021 Retrieved 6 October 2021 Bali H N 2013 One Who Forged India s Steel Frame Boloji Dewey Clive 1993 Anglo Indian attitudes the mind of the Indian Civil Service Continuum International Publishing Group p 3 ISBN 978 1 85285 097 5 Jawaharlal Nehru Glimpses of world history being further letters to his daughter Lindsay Drummond Ltd 1949 p 94Notes Edit ICS members in Pakistan was originally administering equally both West Pakistan and East Pakistan However Pakistan was split into two West Pakistan is now renamed to Islamic Republic of Pakistan and East Pakistan is now renamed to People s Republic of Bangladesh As per published records and book named The India List and India Office List 1905 as published by India Office and India Office Records As per Warrant or Precedence of 1905 Further reading EditBlunt Edward The I C S the Indian civil service 1937 Burra Arudra The Indian Civil Service and the nationalist movement neutrality politics and continuity Commonwealth amp Comparative Politics Nov 2010 48 4 pp 404 432 Dewey Clive Anglo Indian attitudes the mind of the Indian Civil Service 1993 Ewing Ann Administering India The Indian Civil Service History Today June 1982 32 6 pp 43 48 covers 1858 1947 Gilmour David The Ruling Caste Imperial Lives in the Victorian Raj 2007 excerpt and text search Gould William The Dual State The Unruly Subordinate Caste Community and Civil Service Recruitment in North India 1930 1955 Journal of Historical Sociology Mar June 2007 Vol 20 Issue 1 2 pp 13 43 Krishna Anirudh Continuity and change the Indian administrative service 30 years ago and today Commonwealth amp Comparative Politics Nov 2010 48 4 pp 433 444 MacMillan Margaret Women of the Raj The Mothers Wives and Daughters of the British Empire in India 2007 Masani Zareer Indian Tales of the Raj 1990 interviews with retired ICS officers about pre 1947 days Potter David C India s Political Administrators 1919 1983 1987 289pp the standard scholarly history Potter David C The Last of the Indian Civil Service South Asia Journal of South Asian Studies Apr 1979 Vol 2 Issue 1 2 pp 19 29 Potter David C Manpower Shortage and the End of Colonialism The Case of Indian Civil Service Modern Asian Studies Jan 1973 7 1 pp 47 73 in JSTOR Sharma Malti Indianization of the civil services in British India 1858 1935 2001 Smith Vincent Arthur 1903 The Indian Civil Service as a profession 1 ed Dublin Hodges Figgis amp Co Ltd Thakur R N The All India services a study of their origin amp growth 1969 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Indian Civil Service The Indian Civil Service Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Indian Civil Service amp oldid 1149262516, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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