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NERWA Chopal Shimla Confessions

NERWA Chopal Shimla Confessions

Dhadhu Dhar Nerwa, Shimla ,
This page has been created for all those peoples who belongs to Nerwa and chopal. so please friends join and share this page thanks. admin of this page is RONIT SHARMA belongs to Dhadhu gav (Nerwa)
Tel: 9816023360
HPU Shimla

HPU Shimla

Summer hill, Simla (Shimla) ,
Himachal Pradesh University
Tel: Phone
Convent of Jesus & Mary, Shimla

Convent of Jesus & Mary, Shimla

Convent of Jesus and Mary, Nav Bahar, Shimla, (H. P.), Shimla ,
Convent of Jesus and Mary is one of the best schools we have in Shimla. It is a CBSE affiliated school for girls from Nursery to XI. CJM is situated in a place called Nav Bahar; it is the part of the green belt of Shimla so manages to be one of the most beautiful places in Shimla so far. MAIN FEATURES : Value Education and Catechetic for Christians forms an integral part of the School Curriculum. The primary aim of the teaching faculty of the Convent of Jesus and Mary is to make God known and loved; therefore, the spiritual development of all their pupils is of prime concern. Physical training, games and sports are compulsory activities. Students are trained in Yoga, Karate and Gymnastics, besides being coached in Table Tennis, Basketball, Throwball, Lawn Tennis, Volley ball and Badminton in preparation for Inter-School Competitions. Other fields in which girls can hone their skills are Social Service, Creativity, Journalism, Computers, Environmental Preservation, House Keeping and Indian and Western Music.
IHM kufri shimla

IHM kufri shimla

kufri , Shimla ,
The Institute of Hotel Management, Shimla, is situated amidst quiet, lush green surroundings with a picturesque view of the Himalayan Range. The old- world air of the times of the British Raj lends a quaint charm to the site. Located on the NH22, at Kufri, it is at just the right distance from the hustle and bustle of Shimla and is easily accessible by road. The tranquility of the location is ideal for providing an academic ambience for the serious learner. The Institute is well equipped with the necessary infrastructure for imparting comprehensive training to the students. The faculty comprises of qualified and experienced staff from various prestigious catering institutes of the country - Mumbai, Delhi, etc., who are committed to enabling and motivating the students to mature into individuals with a sense of responsibility and pride in their chosen walk of life. The Placement and Industrial Training Cell of the Institute assists the students in arranging for training and placement in leading hotels. Campus interviews are held and the students are well placed in prestigious hotels like Taj, Oberoi, I.T.C. Hotels, Le- Meridien, Radisson Hotels, Hyatt, Imperial, etc., to name a few and in various international call centers – G.E., Daksh, etc. that are employing an appreciable number of our students today. Some students have also obtained jobs in countries overseas like Ireland and New Zealand and in international cruise lines as well. The well-stocked Library caters to the thirst of knowledge of the students in the field of hospitality.In addition to the curriculum, the students gain experience during the session by organizing theme parties, out-door caterings and functions in local hotels during Christmas, World Tourism Day, New Year, Chef-Competitions and other occasions. An attractive, newly built cafeteria caters to the needs of the students and vistiors alike.
Bishop Cotton School, Shimla

Bishop Cotton School, Shimla

Bishop Cotton School, Shimla ,
Bishop Cotton School, Shimla, is the one of the oldest boarding schools in Asia, having been founded on 28th July, 1859, by Bishop George Edward Lynch Cotton, son of an Army Captain, who died leading his Regiment in battle. A scholar of Westminister, and a graduate of Cambridge, in 1836 he was appointed Assistant Master at Rugby by Doctor Thomas Arnold, one of the founders of the British Public School system. It was the young Mr. Cotton who is spoken of as the "the model young master" in Thomas Hughes' famous book "Tom Brown's School Days" which gives an insight to school life at Rugby. After having taught for 15 years at Rugby, in 1852, he was appointed Master of Marlborough, where he established organized games and the House and prefect systems. He believed that " the prefects are and shall be, long as I am the Head, the governors of the school. As soon as I see this impracticable I will resign….." He was consecrated Bishop at Westminster Abbey by the Archbishop of Canterbury. Queen Victoria personally selected Bishop Cotton as Bishop of Calcutta and Metropolitan Bishop of India, Burma and the Island of Ceylon, keeping in view the critical period in India around 1857. As Bishop of Calcutta, on 28TH July, 1859, he conducted a service for the foundation of a public school at a hill station. Collections were made. in most of the Churches of the Diocese for this purpose. The collections were utilized to found the Bishop's School at Jutogh, Shimla. The land and the buildings on it were a gift from the Viceroy. Three private houses were purchased by Bishop Cotton out of the India Public School Fund for Rs.17,000/- The school opened for students on 15th March, 1863. Though mentioned in correspondence as the Simla Public School, it never actually bore this name. The first boy, Frederick Naylor, joined the school on 16th March, 1863, "creeping like a snail, unwilling to school," watched by the staff in curiosity and amusement. 35 boys were admitted that year and the school increased its strength to 65 students by the year 1864. This was the highest number the buildings and grounds permitted. A change of site was then deemed necessary because the Jutogh site was divided by a public road which was inconvenient. Bishop Cotton personally reconnoitered ten sites in September and October 1864, and finally approved the South end of Knollswood Spur which belonged to the Rajah of Keonthal. After lengthy negotiations the site was acquired through the intervention of the Viceroy and the foundation stone for the new buildings was laid on 26th September 1866, by H.E. the Viceroy, Sir John Lawrence, elder brother of Sir Henry Lawrence, founder of the Military Asylum at Sanawar (now known as Lawrence School). In September 1868, the school moved to Knollswood, our present site. A fortnight after laying the foundation stone, Bishop Cotton drowned in an accident on 6th October, 1866 while touring Assam in the Governor's yacht on the river Gorai. To perpetuate the memory of its founder, the name of the school was changed to Bishop Cotton School in 1867. Also one of the houses, both at Rugby and Marlborough, was named Cotton House. Two Schools, one in Bangalore and the other in Nagpur were also established in his memory and St. Paul's School, Darjeeling, (founded in 1823 and shifted from Calcutta to Darjeeling by Bishop Cotton) also erected a Cotton Hall in his memory. Bishop Cotton School is the first of its kind in this part of the world, to start the house system, organized games and the prefect system which were begun almost at the same time as they were developed in England. At the old schools in England, boys from a distance lodged at private, commercially run houses and attended the schools as day scholars. The 1840's saw a transition between the old style Dames' Houses, and a system whereby masters augmented their teacher's income by running boarding houses, doing business directly with the parent, and being known therefore as "Housemasters". The school grew from strength to strength under the stewardship of the first Headmaster, Rev. Samuel Slater, who had been brought from St, Paul's School in Calcutta, and who went on to serve Bishop Cotton School for twenty-two years, thereby laying a solid foundation and transforming the School into a prestigious institution which grew to attract students from among the Indian elite as well. By the turn of the century the reputation of the School was undeniable and greatly helped by staffs that were mainly educated at Oxford and Cambridge. On Sunday, 7th May, 1905, whilst most of the boys were on "Khud Leave", the school caught fire. The complete school was burnt except the Headmaster's Lodge (1868), the Hospital (1868) and the Senior Master's House (1873). The school was rebuilt and occupied in July 1907. The school Chapel which was originally consecrated on 21st September 1871, was rebuilt and used from 3rd April, 1908. In 1926 a hostel was constructed for the Simla Hill Chiefs' sons and relatives at a cost of Rs. 41,000/- financed entirely by the Hill Chiefs. Later the hostel was expanded and nine more rooms were added and became the College Section of the school, preparing the boys for the Intermediate Examinations. In 1959, the Centenary Year, dormitories were constructed on the first floor to house one hundred and forty small children. In 1937 a Prep School was opened by buying the Ayrcliff Girls' School, (now the Tibetan School in Chotta Shimla) for Rs. 35,000/-. In December 1947 the Prep School was closed as 42 Pakistani and 98 British and European boys left India and the School. The Prep School was finally sold in 1961 to the Dalai Lama, having been on rent to the Government from 1948 .
BISHOP COTTON SCHOOL SHIMLA

BISHOP COTTON SCHOOL SHIMLA

Bishop Cotton School, Shimla ,
Bishop Cotton School, Shimla, is the one of the oldest boarding schools in Asia, having been founded on 28th July, 1859, by Bishop George Edward Lynch Cotton, son of an Army Captain, who died leading his Regiment in battle. A scholar of Westminister, and a graduate of Cambridge, in 1836 he was appointed Assistant Master at Rugby by Doctor Thomas Arnold, one of the founders of the British Public School system. It was the young Mr. Cotton who is spoken of as the "the model young master" in Thomas Hughes' famous book "Tom Brown's School Days" which gives an insight to school life at Rugby. After having taught for 15 years at Rugby, in 1852, he was appointed Master of Marlborough, where he established organized games and the House and prefect systems. He believed that " the prefects are and shall be, long as I am the Head, the governors of the school. As soon as I see this impracticable I will resign….." He was consecrated Bishop at Westminster Abbey by the Archbishop of Canterbury. Queen Victoria personally selected Bishop Cotton as Bishop of Calcutta and Metropolitan Bishop of India, Burma and the Island of Ceylon, keeping in view the critical period in India around 1857. As Bishop of Calcutta, on 28TH July, 1859, he conducted a service for the foundation of a public school at a hill station. Collections were made. in most of the Churches of the Diocese for this purpose. The collections were utilized to found the Bishop's School at Jutogh, Shimla. The land and the buildings on it were a gift from the Viceroy. Three private houses were purchased by Bishop Cotton out of the India Public School Fund for Rs.17,000/- The school opened for students on 15th March, 1863. Though mentioned in correspondence as the Simla Public School, it never actually bore this name. The first boy, Frederick Naylor, joined the school on 16th March, 1863, "creeping like a snail, unwilling to school," watched by the staff in curiosity and amusement. 35 boys were admitted that year and the school increased its strength to 65 students by the year 1864. This was the highest number the buildings and grounds permitted. A change of site was then deemed necessary because the Jutogh site was divided by a public road which was inconvenient. Bishop Cotton personally reconnoitered ten sites in September and October 1864, and finally approved the South end of Knollswood Spur which belonged to the Rajah of Keonthal. After lengthy negotiations the site was acquired through the intervention of the Viceroy and the foundation stone for the new buildings was laid on 26th September 1866, by H.E. the Viceroy, Sir John Lawrence, elder brother of Sir Henry Lawrence, founder of the Military Asylum at Sanawar (now known as Lawrence School). In September 1868, the school moved to Knollswood, our present site. A fortnight after laying the foundation stone, Bishop Cotton drowned in an accident on 6th October, 1866 while touring Assam in the Governor's yacht on the river Gorai. To perpetuate the memory of its founder, the name of the school was changed to Bishop Cotton School in 1867. Also one of the houses, both at Rugby and Marlborough, was named Cotton House. Two Schools, one in Bangalore and the other in Nagpur were also established in his memory and St. Paul's School, Darjeeling, (founded in 1823 and shifted from Calcutta to Darjeeling by Bishop Cotton) also erected a Cotton Hall in his memory. Bishop Cotton School is the first of its kind in this part of the world, to start the house system, organized games and the prefect system which were begun almost at the same time as they were developed in England. At the old schools in England, boys from a distance lodged at private, commercially run houses and attended the schools as day scholars. The 1840's saw a transition between the old style Dames' Houses, and a system whereby masters augmented their teacher's income by running boarding houses, doing business directly with the parent, and being known therefore as "Housemasters". The school grew from strength to strength under the stewardship of the first Headmaster, Rev. Samuel Slater, who had been brought from St, Paul's School in Calcutta, and who went on to serve Bishop Cotton School for twenty-two years, thereby laying a solid foundation and transforming the School into a prestigious institution which grew to attract students from among the Indian elite as well. By the turn of the century the reputation of the School was undeniable and greatly helped by staffs that were mainly educated at Oxford and Cambridge. On Sunday, 7th May, 1905, whilst most of the boys were on "Khud Leave", the school caught fire. The complete school was burnt except the Headmaster's Lodge (1868), the Hospital (1868) and the Senior Master's House (1873). The school was rebuilt and occupied in July 1907. The school Chapel which was originally consecrated on 21st September 1871, was rebuilt and used from 3rd April, 1908. In 1926 a hostel was constructed for the Simla Hill Chiefs' sons and relatives at a cost of Rs. 41,000/- financed entirely by the Hill Chiefs. Later the hostel was expanded and nine more rooms were added and became the College Section of the school, preparing the boys for the Intermediate Examinations. In 1959, the Centenary Year, dormitories were constructed on the first floor to house one hundred and forty small children. In 1937 a Prep School was opened by buying the Ayrcliff Girls' School, (now the Tibetan School in Chotta Shimla) for Rs. 35,000/-. In December 1947 the Prep School was closed as 42 Pakistani and 98 British and European boys left India and the School. The Prep School was finally sold in 1961 to the Dalai Lama, having been on rent to the Government from 1948 . 
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Shimla Best Location

Shimla Best Location

shimla , Shimla ,
Places to Visit in Shimla There are so many places to visite in shimla like Sanjauli, Arki, Chail, Mashobra, Chharabra and Junga etc. But the main attraction where tourist visit more are as following: The Mall is the shopping place or shopping street of Shimla. The two main meeting point at Mall are Ridge and Scandal point. Since it is the main meeting place for every one so people walk up and down to the mall and stopping to gossip. The Mall also have tourist offices, clubs, banks, restaurants and bars like facilities. Christ Church is the second oldest Church in Northern India, situated on the Ridge. It has very attractive look with stained glasses windows that shows faith, hope and patience. Jakhu Hill is located 2 km away from Shimla and at height 8000ft. It is the highest peak and from here one can watch the beautifull site view of whole Shimla. It has also old temple of Lord Hanuman and home place for the monkeys waited for fed by visitors and this is also the main attraction for the children. Summer Hill Himachal Pradesh University is situated here. It is 5 km away from the Ridge and situated at the height of 6117 ft. When Mahatma Gandhi visited in Shimla he lived here in quiet surroundings.
Sanjauli D Heart Of Shimla

Sanjauli D Heart Of Shimla

sanjauli, Shimla ,
the info and photo of sanjauli
Tel: 9736269789
Shimla Highlander's

Shimla Highlander's

Sanjauli, Shimla ,
Bawa ek baar Like karke dekho bss Founder :- Mohit Thakur Page Code:- @[460403904000412:]
Shimla (शिमला)

Shimla (शिमला)

The popular tourist destination and the capital of Himachal, the city of Shimla, draped in forests of pine, rhododendron, and oak, experiences pleasant sum