Posted on: 3 December 2010

The Catholic church at Bandel, near Hooghly, in the middle distance, buildings on the river bank and boats in the foreground - 1820

Watercolour by Sir Charles D'Oyly of the Catholic church at Bandel, near Hooghly in West Bengal, inscribed: 'N1' 'Bandel Church and Refectory. Augt 1820.', from an album in red leather covers with a gold stamped border, containing 28 water-colours of a trip along the Bhagirathi and Ganges Rivers, dated August to October 1820. The trip must have been to take up his new appointment as Opium Agent at Patna. The boat in the foreground is a budgerow (bazra), passenger-carrying native cargo barges, half covered with a roof construction which has been described as resembling 'a haystack upon a barge'.
D'Oyly arrived in India in 1797 and spent his first few years in Calcutta as Assistant to the Registrar of the Court of Appeal. He was Collector of Dacca from 1808-18 and was Opium Agent at Patna from 1821-1831. Whilst at Dacca he met the artist George Chinnery and became his pupil from 1808-12. D'Oyly was a prolific amateur artist who was greatly admired by the European community. He set up and ran a lithographic press, 'The Behar Lithography', and also formed an amateur art society 'The United Patna and Gaya Society' or 'Behar School of Athens': 'for the promotion of Arts and Sciences and for the circulation of fun and merriment of all descriptions.'

Source : British Library


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I am among the 'select few' who've spent a day and a night at Bandel ,while on a school picnic in mid 1959.

Been there. Very interesting place.

Can we have a latest photograph?

Sir Charles "arrived" in India considerably before 1797 [as above] having been born there in 1781 (though, of course, he was educated in England).