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was named after him. When he took over as
Commissioner, water supply was scanty, garbage was piling up and the mortality rate was a high 40 per 1,000. Crawford cleaned the streets, fixed the drains and lowered the mortality rate by half from 35,000 to 18,000 over the next two years. However his plans
199:). Dressed as a tramp, he boarded the third-class compartment of a Bombay-bound train. While in a hotel near the docks, the police got wind of his presence and arrested him. Crawford had tried to buy a ticket to
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greatly overshot the civic budget and he was accused of financial mismanagement after he refused to heed to warnings that the deficit was ever widening. While criticised by many, he was defended by lawyer
170:'s Central Division), not guilty of accepting bribes but only of borrowing money from official subordinates. Crawford was subsequently removed from the Civil Service List and asked to return to
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which was published in 1897. He described many communities in the Bombay region along with their sketches. He meted out special harsh criticism on
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bank. Then, as a decoy, he wrote two letters to his brother based in Bombay that he would commit suicide at Holkar Bridge in Poona (now
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Later in his career it was alleged that
Crawford had accepted bribes from
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The Arthur
Crawford Scandal: Corruption, Governance, and Indian Victims
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Arthur
Travers Crawford, the first Municipal Commissioner (1865-1871)
254:, Arthur Crawford, Archibald Constable & Co., London, UK, 1897.
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Back in London, he penned his memoirs on his life in India, titled
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article alleged that
Crawford's illegal funds were transferred to
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Crawford acquired the Agri-Horticulture
Society's gardens at
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99:(1835–1911) was a British government employee and the first
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to comment that
Crawford could have passed off as a
126:in order to build the European cemetery in 1865.
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150:). This prompted a fierce public debate led by
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310:Indian Civil Service (British India) officers
230:. Other books published by Crawford include
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218:ironically however led contemporary writer
166:, found Crawford (then the Commissioner of
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179:Gopal Krishna Gokhale: His Life and Times
177:According to Govid Talwalkar's author of
232:Reminiscence of an Indian Police Officer
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272:; Alpana Lath Sawai; August 14, 2005
252:Our Troubles in Poona and the Deccan
208:Our Troubles in Poona and the Deccan
296:, Michael D. Metelits, Oxford, 2020
16:For the Australian politician, see
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88:Municipal Commissioner of Mumbai
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325:People from Bombay Presidency
276:The colourful Arthur Crawford
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63:1911 (aged 75–76)
18:Arthur Crawford (politician)
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260:– TIFR Mumbai pages
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97:Arthur Travers Crawford
146:(executive heads of a
101:Municipal Commissioner
156:Gopal Krishna Gokhale
79:civil servant, author
264:Arthur Crawford who?
236:The Unrest in India
164:Calcutta High Court
184:Westminster Review
240:Legends of Konkan
224:Chitpawan Brahmin
214:. His fluency in
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137:Pherozeshah Mehta
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320:1911 deaths
315:1835 births
90:(1865-1871)
68:Nationality
304:Categories
246:References
191:through a
144:mamlatdars
105:collector
212:Brahmins
269:Mid-day
216:Marathi
201:Colombo
162:of the
71:British
50: (
193:French
189:Europe
172:London
148:taluka
113:Mumbai
109:Bombay
228:dhoti
124:Sewri
117:India
111:(now
238:and
197:Pune
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154:and
103:and
60:Died
52:1835
48:1835
45:Born
280:TNN
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130:in
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