Tyndale Biscoe School
Tyndale Biscoe School is a school in Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir. The school was founded in 1880 CE and is one of the oldest schools in Jammu and Kashmir. The school was started by Christian missionaries and was named after Canon Cecil Tyndale-Biscoe. It still has affiliations with the Church Mission Society. Parvez Samuel Koul is the principal.
School organisation
Houses
The school is divided into four houses, named after mountain peaks in the Kashmir Valley.- Kolahoi - red
- Harmukh - yellow
- Tatakuti - blue
- Mahadev - green
Departments
The school has five departments. The activities of the departments are looked over by well experienced Head Of Departments.Department | Classes |
Lower Primary Department. | Nursery to II |
Junior Department | III to V |
Middle Department | VI to VIII |
Senior Department | IX and X |
Higher Secondary | XI and XII |
Activities
Tyndale Biscoe School is known for its extra-curricular activities, especially swimming, skiing, mountain climbing, camping and regatta. School placed emphasis on physical activities including mountaineering, tug-of-war, trekking, boxing, boating, football, cricket, and swimming stimulating sense of courage, masculinity and physical fitness.When football was introduced in the Valley by Missionary School, there was resistance initially. Students felt the cow leather was holy and touching the ball, made out of it, was blasphemous. Instead they played football with a wooden clog in their feet. Similarly, when boating was introduced in Mission School students did not like boating because, in Kashmiri society, boatmen weren't consider respectable members of the society. But later it was adopted and the Mission School boys became efficient paddlers and rowers.
History
Rev. J.H. Knowles, in 1880, laid the foundation of the C.M.S. School on the hospital premises in Srinagar. The school was started with 5 pupils. In 1883, the number of boys in the school increased to 30.It was in 1890 that the Government permitted the C.M.S. to shift the school to downtown, and it was moved from the hospital premises to a large house and compound on the river bank in the middle of the city at FatehKadal. As a result of this, the number of students increased to about 200 in 1890.
Canon C.E. Tyndale-Biscoe joined the school in 1891, there were 250 pupils on the school roll. The primary school grew into a middle school and eventually into a high school. The high school was designated the Hadow Memorial School after the name of its honorary treasurer for 40 years. Eventually, five other mission schools were set up, one each in different parts of the capital city and one in Anantnag.
Notable alumni
- Imran Raza Ansari - Politician and Religious Scholar
- Farooq Abdullah - politician and former Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir.
- Agha Shaukat Ali - Kashmiri Civil Servant turned Pakistani Politician after partition.
- Masarat Alam Bhat - Kashmiri separatist leader as of 2018 General Secretary of the All Parties Hurriyat Conference
- Thupstan Chhewang is an Indian politician
- Durga Prasad Dhar - prominent Kashmiri politician and an Indian diplomat.
- P. N. Dhar was an economist and the head of Indira Gandhi's secretariat.
- Khurshid Drabu CBE was an English judge, law lecturer and Muslim community leader. He was the first Muslim to be a judge in Britain.
- Shah Faesal - former IAS civil servant, social activist, politician.
- Bakshi Ghulam Mohammad - politician and former Prime Minister of Jammu and Kashmir
- Mohammad Shafi Qureshi an advocate, Indian politician and statesman from Kashmir and the founder of the Congress Party in Jammu and Kashmir.
- Ashfaq Majeed Wani - first Commander-in-Chief of Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front.
Financial controversy
Further, they claimed that the assets of the society have been converted into personal assets.“The illegal conversion of society assets into personal assets needs a thorough investigation. As in case of Tyndale Biscoe and Mallinson school Tangmarg, spread across an area of 19 Kanals of land, 12 kanals have been purchased in the name of Parvez Koul and seven Kanals in the name of Joyce Kaul, using the money of the society as reflected in the book accounts,” the litigation states.