Prafull Chandra was born on 2 August 1861 in
Raruli-Katipara, a village in the District of Khulna (in present day
Bangladesh). His early education started in his village school. He often played
truant and spent his time resting comfortably on the branch of a tree, hidden
under its leaves. After attending the village school, he went to Kolkata, where
he studied at Hare School and the Metropolitan College. The lectures of
Alexander Pedler in the Presidency College, which he used to attend, attracted
him to chemistry, although his first love was literature. He continued to take
interest in literature, and taught himself Latin and French at home. After
obtaining a F.A. diploma from the University of Calcutta, he proceeded to the
University of Edinburgh on a Gilchrist scholarship where he obtained both his
B.Sc. and D.Sc. degrees. In 1888, Prafulla Chandra made his journey home to
India. Initially he spent a year working with his famous friend Jagadish
Chandra Bose in his laboratory. In 1889, Prafulla Chandra was appointed an
Assistant Professor of Chemistry in the Presidency College, Kolkata. His
publications on mercurous nitrite and its derivatives brought him recognition
from all over the world. Equally important was his role as a teacher - he
inspired a generation of young chemists in India thereby building up an Indian
school of chemistry. Famous Indian scientists like Meghnad Saha and Shanti
Swarup Bhatnagar were among his students.
Prafulla Chandra believed that the progress of India could
be achieved only by industrialization. He set up the first chemical factory in
India, with very minimal resources, working from his home. In 1901, this
pioneering effort resulted in the formation of the Bengal Chemical and
Pharmaceutical Works Ltd. He retired from the Presidency College in 1916, and
was appointed as Professor of Chemistry at the University Science College. In
1921 when Prafulla Chandra reached 60 years, he donated, in advance, all his
salary for the rest of his service in the University to the development of the
Department of Chemistry and to the creation of two research fellowships. The
value of this endowment was about two lakh rupees. He eventually retired at the
age of 75. In Prafulla Chandra Ray, the qualities of both a scientist and an
industrial entrepreneur were combined and he can be thought of as the father of
the Indian Pharmaceutical industry?.
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