Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Ward No. 123, Kolkata Municipal Corporation

Kolkata Municipal Corporation in West Bengal, India From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

Ward No. 123, Kolkata Municipal Corporation is an administrative division of Kolkata Municipal Corporation in Borough No. 13, covering parts of Barisha neighbourhood in the Indian state of West Bengal.

Quick facts Country, State ...
Remove ads

History

Summarize
Perspective

The establishment and evolution of Kolkata Municipal Corporation followed a long process starting from around the middle of the 19th century. The Municipal Consolidation Act of 1888 and certain steps taken thereafter saw the addition of peripheral areas in the eastern and southern parts of the city to the corporation area. In 1888, there were 75 commissioners, 50 of whom were elected, 15 appointed by the government and 10 nominated from bodies like Chambers of Commerce, Trades Associations and the Port Commissioners. The Calcutta Municipal Act of 1923 brought about important changes. The adjacent municipalities of Cossipore, Chitpore, Manicktola and Garden Reach, as well as the New Dock Extension area, were amalgamated with Kolkata whilst Garden Reach was later taken out.[1][2]

Post-independence developments saw the introduction of adult franchise in municipal elections in 1962, in which the number of wards increased from 75 to 100. Tollygunge had been merged with Kolkata in 1953. The Calcutta Municipal Corporation Act 1980, which came into effect in 1984, extended the boundaries of Kolkata by including South Suburban, Garden Reach and Jadavpur municipalities in Kolkata. With the addition of Joka to Kolkata, the number of wards rose to 144.[1][2]

Remove ads

Geography

Ward No. 123 is bordered on the north by Raja Rammohan Roy Road, Hem Chandra Mukherjee Road and Motilal Gupta Road; on the east by Kalipada Mukherjee Road, Hem Chandra Mukherjee Road, Ishan Ghosh Road and a line drawn in continuation to the south up to Dhalipara Road; on the south by Chandi Charan Ghosh Road, James Long Sarani (Diamond Harbour Bypass), Vidyasagar Sarani and a line drawn in continuation to the east where it meets the north-western boundary of Chakthakurani mauza; and on the west by Diamond Harbour Road.[3]

Thumb
Location of Ward No. 123 in Kolkata Ward Map

The ward is served by Haridevpur police station of Kolkata Police.[4][5][6]

Behala Women police station covers all police districts under the jurisdiction of the South West Division i.e. Sarsuna, Taratala, Behala, Parnasree, Thakurpukur and Haridevpur.[4]

Remove ads

Demographics

Summarize
Perspective

As per the 2011 Census of India, Ward No. 123, Kolkata Municipal Corporation, had a total population of 35,836, of which 17,727 (50%) were males and 17,659 (50%) were females. Population below 6 years was 2,174. The total number of literates in Ward No. 123 was 31,026 (93.42% of the population over 6 years).[7]

Kolkata is the second most literate district in West Bengal.[8] The literacy rate of Kolkata district has increased from 53.0% in 1951 to 86.3% in the 2011 census.[9]

See also – List of West Bengal districts ranked by literacy rate

More information Literacy in KMC wards, North Kolkata ...

Census data about mother tongue and religion is not available at the ward level. For district level information see Kolkata district.

According to the District Census Handbook Kolkata 2011, 141 wards of Kolkata Municipal Corporation formed Kolkata district. (3 wards were added later).[10]

Remove ads

Election highlights

The ward forms a city municipal corporation council electoral constituency and is a part of Behala Purba (Vidhan Sabha constituency).[11]

More information Election year, Constituency ...
Remove ads

Kolkata/Southern fringes travel guide from Wikivoyage

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads