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Dinshaw Maneckji Petit

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Religion
  
Parsi

Died
  
May 5, 1901

Spouse(s)
  
Sanaya Petit

Children
  
Sir Dinshaw Petit


Relatives
  
Grandchildren
  
Maryam Jinnah

Name
  
Dinshaw Petit

Great grandchildren
  
Dina Wadia

Dinshaw Maneckji Petit photosgenicom40eb343a267284gek35pus40eb34

Full Name
  
Dinshaw Maneckji Petit

Born
  
30 June 1823 (
1823-06-30
)

Other names
  
Sir Dinshaw Maneckji Petit, 1st Baronet

Sir Dinshaw Maneckji Petit, 1st Baronet (born Dinshaw Maneckji Petit; 30 June 1823 – 5 May 1901), was a Parsi entrepreneur and founder of the first textile mills in India. Part of the Petit family and the first baronet of Petit, he was the grandfather of Rattanbai Petit, who was the wife of the founder of Pakistan, Mohammed Ali Jinnah.

Contents

Dinshaw Maneckji Petit Dinshaw Maneckji Petit Sheriff of Bombay Antique Print 1887 eBay

Family and death

Dinshaw Maneckji Petit was born in Bombay, British India. Sir Dinshaw was married to Sanaya and was survived by Sir Dinshaw Petit (2nd Baronet). His son, Sir Dinshaw Maneckji Petit, 2nd Baronet, was married to, Sylla Tata, the daughter of Ratanji Dadabhoy Tata and the sister of Jehangir Tata, both of whom were the shareholders of the Tata Sons. His granddaughter Ratanbai Petit was the wife of the founder of Pakistan, Muhammad Ali Jinnah. Jinnah and Rattanbai's daughter (Petit's great granddaughter) Dina was married to Wadia Group chairperson, Neville Wadia until his death.

Dinshaw Maneckji Petit died on 1901 at Bombay. A posthumous portrait of the 1st Baronet was painted by Sir James Linton.

Career

As broker to European firms he amassed a large fortune during the period of speculation in Bombay at the time of the American Civil War. He founded the Manackji Petit Spinning & Weaving Mills.

In 1854 Dinshaw Maneckji Petit founded the "Persian Zoroastrian Amelioration Fund" with the aim of improving the conditions for the less fortunate Zoroastrian co-coreligionists in Iran. The fund succeeded in convincing a number of Iranian Zoroastrians to emigrate to India (where they are today known as Iranis), and may have been instrumental in obtaining a remission of the jizya poll tax for their co-religionists in 1882.

In 1886, he became a member of the governor-general's legislative council where he was criticised for playing a pro-colonial role despite being a non-official nominee to the council. He was referred to as a "gilded sham" and a "magnificent non-entity " by the nationalists. He devoted his wealth to philanthropic objects, among the public and private charities which he endowed being the Towers of Silence and fire temples of the Parsi, a hospital for animals, a college for women, and the Petit hospital.

For the advancement of technical education, Sir D. M. Petit also donated premises worth Rs. 3,00,000 at Byculla, Bombay to the famous Victoria Jubilee Technical Institute (VJTI) (recognised by the Government of Bombay as the Central Technological Institute, Bombay Province). In winter 1923, that institute relocated to its present location in Matunga, Bombay.

He was knighted in 1887, created the Petit baronet in 1890. The Petit surname is not traditionally Parsi and had come about in Sir Dinshaw's great grandfather's time in the 18th century. He had worked as a shipping clerk and interpreter for the British East India Company. French merchants who dealt with the lively, short Parsi clerk called him 'le petit Parsi'.

Styles

  • 1823-1886: Dinshaw Maneckji Petit
  • 1886-1887: Dinshaw Maneckji Petit, C.S.I.
  • 1887-1890: Sir Dinshaw Maneckji Petit
  • 1890-1901: Sir Dinshaw Maneckji Petit, Bt
  • References

    Dinshaw Maneckji Petit Wikipedia