Government Murray College Sialkot (often referred to as Murray College), formerly known as Scotch Mission College, is a government college located in Sialkot in the Punjab province of Pakistan.[2][3]
Motto | Urdu: ایمان ، اتحاد ، نظم (Iman, Ittehad, Tanzeem) |
---|---|
Motto in English | Faith, Unity, Discipline |
Type | Public and Co-educational |
Established | 1889 |
Affiliation | Higher Education Commission University of the Punjab University of Gujrat |
Students | 6000 |
Undergraduates | 2000 (2013)[1] |
Postgraduates | 600 |
Location | , , |
Campus | Urban |
Website | murraycollege |
History
editGovernment Murray College Sialkot was established as Scotch Mission College by Scottish missionaries belonging to the Church of Scotland Mission in 1889. The Church of Scotland came to Sialkot (then Part of British India) in January 1857 when the first Scottish missionary, Reverend Thomas Hunter, came to live with his wife, Jane Scott, and baby son near the Brigade Parade Ground, facing the Trinity Church (whose first stone was laid on 1 March 1852). The church was consecrated by the Bishop of Madras on 30 January 1857. Sialkot at that time was in the diocese of Calcutta in British India. Thomas Hunter, his wife and baby son were murdered in Sialkot during the Indian Rebellion of 1857 against the rule of the British East India Company.[4]
In 1972, the government of Pakistan dismissed the Scottish missionaries and nationalised the institution.[4]
In 2005, a new block was established at the college by the Government of Pakistan.[5] There is a private graveyard within the premises of the college which belongs to the Khan family of mori gate sialkot. The land of the college was donated by this family who kept some piece of land for themselves.
Hostels
editThere is a hostel at the college for girls.[6]
Faculties and departments
editMurray College consists of three faculties and following departments are associated with these faculties;
- Faculty of Natural Sciences
- Faculty of Social Sciences
- Department of BBA
- Department of English
- Department of Political science
- Department of Islamic Studies
- Department of Psychology
- Department of Urdu
- Department of Economics
- Faculty of Biological Sciences
Library
edit- Allama Iqbal Library[7]
Principals
edit- Captain Jhon Murray
- Rev. Jhon Waugh (1909–1914)
- Rev. Dr. William Scott (1914–1923)
- Rev. Jhon Garret (1923–1914)
- Rev. D. Leslie Scott (1947–1956)
- R.C. Thomas
- F.S. Khairullah
- Ahmed Raza Siddiqui
- Qamar Malik[8]
Notable alumni
edit- Muhammad Iqbal, philosopher, lawyer, and politician[9]
- Faiz Ahmed, several times nominee for the Nobel Peace Prize[9]
- Kuldip Nayar, Indian journalist[10]
- Manzoor Mirza, Educationist, economist and book author
- Mumtaz Hamid Rao, head of news and current affairs of Pakistan Television
- Zaheer Abbas, former captain of Pakistani National Cricket Team
- Khalid Hasan, Pakistani journalist[11]
- Umera Ahmed, Pakistani writer, author and screenwriter
References
edit- ^ Mehdi, Abid Hussain (25 November 2013). "Murray College students in a fix". DAWN.COM.
- ^ "Delegation: Govt Murray College to get university status". The Express Tribune. 4 April 2012.
- ^ Mehdi, Abid Hussain (11 October 2016). "Murray College short of classrooms". DAWN.COM.
- ^ a b "گورنمنٹ کرسچن ہائی سکول گندم منڈی ڈاکٹر علامہ اقبال کی علمی درسگاہ". jang.com.pk.
- ^ "New block at Murray College approved". DAWN.COM. 1 August 2005.
- ^ Correspondent, The Newspaper's (28 August 2013). "Murray College in dire need of girls hostel". DAWN.COM.
{{cite web}}
:|last=
has generic name (help) - ^ Mehdi, Abid (13 October 2014). "Murray College without a librarian for 19 years". DAWN.COM.
- ^ "Move against Murray College decried". DAWN.COM. 9 December 2007.
- ^ a b "Murray College in poor state". DAWN.COM. 30 December 2006.
- ^ InpaperMagazine, From (29 July 2012). "Flashback: Of the days gone by". DAWN.COM.
- ^ "The unexplored gem | Literati | thenews.com.pk". www.thenews.com.pk.
External links
edit