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 HIS PABENTAGK AND BIRTH. 17 killed and wounded ; and Gopal Krishna was com- pelled to abandon the idea of getting possession of the two sons of Ram Bhadra Ghose. The Raja, how- ever, took his revenge by razing to the ground the family house of the Ghoses at Bhulladia, and con- fiscating all their property. The family eventually settled in another part of Bikrampur, on the banks of the Dhalaswari river, about 1 5 miles from the old historic town of Dacca, in a village called Bairagadi, where Babu Ram Lochun Ghose. the father of Mr. Manomohun Ghose, was born in the year 1 790 a. d. He was a self-educated man, there being no English schools or colleges in those days. After filling vari- ous humble offices under the English Government, he was selected in 1841, by Lord Auckland, then Governor-General of India, to fill the office of a Subordinate Judge, then called chief Sudder Amin, he being one of the first batch of the Indian gentlemen who were appointed to the judicial office, under the British Government. He was. an intimate friend and coadjutor of the late Raja Ram Mohun Roy with whose ideas of social and religious reforms, he was in hearty sympathy. Babu Ram Lochun Ghose was instrumental, to a great extent, in establishing the English College at Dacca, at a time when the pre- judices and superstitions of' his fellow-countrymen deterred them from encouraging the diffusion of European education in Eastern Bengal. He made a liberal donation to the funds of that college which led the Government to found a scholarship in his name which is annually awarded to some student, - and is known as the "Ramlochun Ghose Prize." While he held the appointment of Principal Sudder Amin of Krishnaghur, in the district of Nuddea, (which he did up to within a few years prior to his death), his eldest son, Mr. Manomohun Ghose was born at Bairagadi, in Dacca, on the 13th March 1844. It was in this old historic town of Krishnaghur, where Ramlochun 3