Jamshedpur stays true to the values of J.N. Tata, after whom the city is named
“TATA WAS A visionary with political, social and commercial interests and he used them as a single driving force to promote a strong and independent India,” writes Morgen Witzel in Tata: The Evolution of a Corporate Brand. Today, Jamshedpur (earlier Sakchi) in Jharkhand stands testimony to it.
Influenced by Scottish historian, essayist and mathematician Thomas Carlyle, who said the country that makes steel has the gold, Jamsetji Nusserwanji Tata set out to give India iron and steel manufacturing projects. Not only did he travel to America to meet up with industry leaders, he also brought the services of the finest in the business to India to start preliminary scientific investigations, before erecting the steel plant.
Sakchi was an ideal location, owing to the excellent quality of coal to its north, rich iron ore to its south and the port city of Kolkata to its east. Frank Harris in Jamsetji Nusserwanji Tata: A Chronicle of His Life writes about the cosmopolitan nature of Sakchi, thanks to the Americans,
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