RIMC - Rashtriya Indian Military College

 

 

Joined RIMC – Rashtriya Indian Military College)  , Dehra Dun, in January 1966.

 

Was in Chandragupta Section – (New Section).

 

             ASHOK KUMAR SINGH MEETING WITH SARDAR SWARAN SINGH,DEFENCE MINISTER OF INDIA

About RIMC

                       The Rashtriya Indian Military College or the RIMC is a public school for boys situated in Doon Valley, Dehradun in India.The name of the school was Prince of Wales Royal Indian Military College but it was re-named in 1947. The RIMC is a feeder institution for the National Defence Academy, Indian Naval Academy and subsequently the Indian Armed Forces. Rimcollians, the name by which alumni of the RIMC are usually denoted, have gone on to hold the highest ranks in the Army, Navy and the Air Force of India and Pakistan.

                       RIMC was established in 1922 by the British Empire for training native Indian cadets for an entry into the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst to be trained as officers of the British Indian Army. His Royal Highness The Prince Edward, The Prince of Wales, inaugurated the school on the 13th of March, 1922, naming it the Prince of Wales Royal Indian Military College.

It was located on the premises of the Imperial Cadet Corps (also called Rajwada Camp), set amidst 138 acres (0.56 km2) of countryside adjacent to the Garhi Village in Dehradun Cantonment. The purpose of the school was to provide boys with education and training for the Indians being sent to the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, as part of the Empire's policy to make the officer cadre of the Indian Army more indigenous. RIMC was intended as a feeder institution to Royal Military Academy Sandhurst along the lines of an English public school.[4] The British[vague] believed that public school education was necessary for Indian boys to make them suitable for the discipline of Army life.

For the RIMC, the government order had appointed a military commandant of the rank of Lt Colonel, a civilian headmaster, senior or junior British Masters and Indian Masters. The first commandant was Lt Col H.L. Houghton of the Sikh Regiment, who took charge of the college on February 22, 1922. JGC Scott was appointed headmaster and the first group of British masters were JM Allen, CA Phillips and Kitter-master. The first mess contractors were MS Hazir and Co and the mess staff consisted mostly of Goans. Later the mess was taken over by the Army Service Corps. Hira Lal Atal was the first Cadet Captain and later as Adjutant General of the Indian Union, Major General Hira Lal Atal designed India’s highest award for bravery in combat, the Param Vir Chakra. Among the early cadets were K.S. Thimayya, Asghar Khan and others, who had illustrious military careers.

After India gained independence in 1947, the school continued to train young men to become a part of the Indian Armed Forces. The major difference is that instead of serving as a feeder institution to the RMA, RIMC now serves the NDA, which is in turn the feeder institution for the Indian Military Academy.