This lantern slide, “Boy's Branch Game Room (Kolkata, Bangla, India),” shows a group of around fifty Indian boys playing in the Kolkata (previously called Calcutta) Y.M.C.A. game room.
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Notes:
This branch is the oldest in Asia and was started by the Montreal Boys’ Department. In 1889, the Y.M.C.A. International Committee sent a young American named David McConaughy to Madras to serve as the first foreign secretary in India. McConaughy encouraged the development of pre-existing Associations and held the first National Convention in 1891, resulting in the formation of the National Council of India, Burma, and Ceylon. The Association’s most notable contribution in India was their rural development work, first begun by K. T. Paul in 1913. Paul established micro-loan programs that freed the rural poor from the grips of moneylenders and won many converts among India's lower classes. Joseph Hawkes, the slide’s creator, spent much of his life producing and coloring lantern slides from his home in New York. This slide is part of Springfield College’s lantern slide series depicting Y.M.C.A. work in India, Ceylon, and Burma in the early twentieth century. The series was prepared by the Foreign Division of the American and Canadian Y.M.C.A, which established self-sustaining associations staffed by trained secretaries in foreign lands.
Part of the Y.M.C.A. Work in India and Sri Lanka Lantern Slide Series