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Jim Corbett
Jim Corbett
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Edward James Corbett CIE VD (25 July 1875 – 19 April 1955) was an Anglo-Indian hunter and author. He gained fame through hunting and killing several man-eating tigers and leopards in Northern India, as detailed in his bestselling 1944 memoir Man-Eaters of Kumaon. In his later years, he became an outspoken advocate of the nascent conservation movement.

Key Information

Born in Naini Tal, Corbett explored and hunted in the jungles of India in childhood. He shot his first man-eater in 1907 and continued to hunt and kill such animals over the next four decades. Animals such as the Champawat Tiger, the Leopard of Rudraprayag, and the Panar Leopard had taken hundreds of victims in the divisions of Kumaon and Garhwal, before their deaths at Corbett's hands. Man-Eaters of Kumaon, which detailed several such hunts, became an international bestseller; it was followed by several other books and was adapted into a 1948 Hollywood film. Corbett increasingly disdained what he saw as the rapacious extermination of India's forests and wildlife, and fervently promoted wildlife photography as an alternative to trophy hunting. He played a major role in the creation of India's first wildlife reserve in 1934; it was renamed Jim Corbett National Park after his death. The Indochinese tiger subspecies received the scientific name Panthera tigris corbetti in his honour.

For many years, Corbett earned a living working for the railway companies, and for twenty-two years supervised the transport of goods across the Ganges at Mokameh Ghat. During the First World War, he recruited a labour corps and commanded them on the Western Front; he also supervised the logistics of the Third Anglo-Afghan War in 1919. Returning to his home town during the interwar period, he became a prominent local landowner and businessman who also organised hunts for the elite of British India, including the then-Governor-General Lord Linlithgow, who became a close friend. Corbett served as an instructor in jungle survival for troops of the Burma Campaign during the Second World War. Dismayed by the febrile atmosphere surrounding the Indian independence movement, he emigrated to Kenya in 1947, and died in Nyeri eight years later.

Ancestry and early life

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The Corbetts descended from several families who had emigrated from the British Isles to the Indian subcontinent over the course of the 19th century. His paternal grandparents Joseph and Harriet Corbett, having eloped together from a monastery and a nunnery in Belfast, had arrived in India on 7 February 1815.[2] They had nine children; the sixth, Christopher William, was born at Meerut in 1822, and followed his father into the Bengal Army, where he served as a medical officer. He married Mary Anne Morrow in December 1845, and they had three children before her early death. Surviving the Indian Mutiny of 1857, he retired from military service and married Mary Jane Doyle née Prussia, a 22-year-old widow of Anglo-Irish descent, in 1859. She had had four children with Charles James Doyle of Agra, who had been killed in the rebellion.[3]

In 1862, Christopher William was appointed the postmaster of Naini Tal, a thriving hill station in northern India which had been untouched by the Mutiny. There, he and Mary Jane had nine children, and additionally raised four children of a deceased sister.[4] As Christopher William's salary was not large enough to support so many people, they supplemented their income through shrewd property investments, which Mary Jane was especially skilled at—she in effect became the first estate agent in Naini Tal, a valuable position in the rapidly-expanding town.[5] Through his social connections and friendship with Henry Ramsay, the commissioner of the Kumaon division, Christopher William was additionally able to acquire a plot of land in the southern plains of Kumaon near Kaladhungi, on which he built a winter residence he named Arundel.[6]

Gurney House

Edward James Corbett, the eighth and penultimate child of Christopher William and Mary Jane, was born on 25 July 1875 in Naini Tal. His early childhood years were privileged, and he was cared for by his mother, his elder sisters, and local servants; from the latter, he picked up the local languages, the basics of Hindu practices and philosophy, and some of their superstitions.[7] However, the family soon suffered two misfortunes: first, a large landslide on 18 September 1880 which killed 151 people additionally ruined several of the Corbett's property investments; and second, Christopher William, who had retired from postmastership in 1878, died on 21 April 1881 after suffering heart problems.[8] Mary Jane built a home on the opposite side of Naini Tal lake to the landslide; named Gurney House, it would be Jim Corbett's home for most of his life.[9]

Corbett spent much of his childhood exploring the jungles around Gurney House; from these explorations, and from willing adults such as his eldest brother Tom and Kunwar Singh, the headman of the nearby village Chandni Chauk, he gained intimate knowledge of the habits of the local wildlife. He also began hunting, first with projectile weapons such as a catapult and a pellet bow, until being gifted an old muzzle-loading shotgun at the age of eight. With these weapons, he grew more skilled at hunting and tracking animals.[10] After surviving a near-fatal bout of pneumonia at the age of six, he began his formal education in Naini Tal at Oak Openings School; there, training with the local cadet company, the ten-year-old Corbett's shooting impressed a group of dignitaries including the future Field Marshal Earl Roberts enough that he was granted a loan of a military-specification Martini-Henry rifle.[11] Not long afterwards, he shot his first big cat—a leopard—with this rifle.[12]

Although Corbett soon became proficient as a young hunter, as a student, first at Oak Openings and then at the Diocesian Boys' School, he was fairly average. He wanted to become an engineer, but that required further education and money which the family did not have, as Tom had now married and was supporting his own family. Jim also knew that it would be his responsibility to look after his mother and two sisters in later years. In turn they, especially his one-year older sister Maggie, were quite devoted to him.[13] Leaving home at the age of seventeen, he took his first job as a temporary fuel inspector in Bihar, with a salary of one hundred rupees per month.[14]

Work career and First World War

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Corbett spent the two years of his contract near Bakhtiarpur, in charge of a sizeable labour force which collected timber to be used as locomotive fuel. The gruelling work was slightly eased by the rapport he, unlike most of European descent, could build with his men. In cutting down up to two acres (8,100 m2) of forest per day, he gained an appreciation for the then-unknown sciences of ecology and conservation.[15] At the end of his contract, Corbett's honesty in not keeping excess profits for himself impressed a senior railway agent and earned him a job at the Samastipur office, where he worked for a year on various jobs.[16] He was then appointed, in 1895, to the contract of transporting goods across the Ganges at Mokameh Ghat: by structuring his workforce efficiently and forming strong friendships with his subordinates, Corbett managed to clear the preexisting backlog, to the surprise of his superiors. He would remain in control of shipping goods at Mokhameh Ghat for the following twenty-two years.[17]

His life at Mokameh Ghat was regular and peaceful. Living in a bungalow with three servants, only rarely seeing other Europeans, he began to become an active member of the local community, building a small school; the initial number of twenty students rapidly expanded to over three hundred, and the local government was compelled to take over the institution's running.[18] Within a few years, Corbett was promoted to oversee the passenger steamers as well as the cargo shipping. This promotion gave him a large increase in salary, much of which he remitted to his family in Naini Tal, as well as access to the high-ranking travellers who often crossed the Ganges, such as Indian royalty and Chandra Shumsher Jung Bahadur Rana, the Prime Minister of Nepal. He also trained new arrivals from Britain whom the railways had recruited there.[19]

At Mokameh Ghat, Corbett had come to view himself as more Indian than any other identity, but he retained his patriotism for Britain. He attempted to enlist when the Second Boer War broke out, but the railway authorities refused to release him from his contract, believing he was too valuable in his position at Mokameh Ghat.[20] When the First World War broke out 1914, Corbett travelled to Calcutta to enlist but was rejected as too old at 38. However, as the war of attrition dragged on, the authorities began to recruit more heavily from India and he was commissioned as a captain in 1917, to the displeasure of his superiors.[21] Ordered to raise a labour corps, he easily recruited five thousand men in Kumaon, where he was greatly esteemed because of his hunting of man-eaters; he took a tenth of these as a personal unit, named the 70th Kumaon Company. They set sail from Bombay in late summer 1917.[22]

The Western Front in 1918; in January, Corbett was posted near Peronne (in the shaded area), which would be overrun in March by the German spring offensive.

Landing in Southampton, Corbett and his men were soon transferred to the Western Front, where they were posted to numerous positions including La Chapellette near Péronne. In the difficult conditions, Corbett sought to protect his men and keep their morale high. In addition to being in an unfamiliar land and climate, the Indian troops, often scorned by their British counterparts, faced difficulties like not being able to eat tinned beef stew or pork, both staples of British trench warfare.[23] Corbett conducted himself well. After a visit to La Chapellette in January 1918, Lord Ampthill, who was in charge of the foreign labour corps, noted that Corbett struck him as "competent and resourceful", having introduced a novel way of heating the troop accommodation and having built, to Ampthill's astonishment, a "substantial brick building" containing a bathroom and drying room, both heated by an incinerator.[24] At the conclusion of the war in 1918, only one of the five hundred men in the company had died. Corbett, now promoted to the rank of Major, explored London for a day before departing from Tilbury, visiting the pyramids of Giza on his way back home to India.[25]

While negotiating with the railways on how he would rejoin their workforce, Corbett was unexpectedly called up again by the army for the Third Anglo-Afghan War in 1919.[26] In late April or early May, he was sent to Peshawar, where he likely was in charge of the supply lines before the Battle of Thal, in which he may have seen action. He was subsequently involved in subduing tribes in Zhob district and Waziristan.[27]

Businessman and local notable

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After the Third Anglo-Afghan War finished in 1919, Corbett declined to return to the railways, and worked on a Kumaon house agency he had invested in and whose owner had subsequently died. Corbett expanded this business, named F.E.G. Mathews & Co. after its late owner, into hardware and tradesmanship.[28] Around 1915, he had purchased the near-derelict village of Chhoti Haldwani near Kaladhungi. Despite initial difficulties, the village came to prosper: Corbett imported new crops such as bananas, grapes, and maize, and maintained the village to a high standard. A 9-kilometre (5.6 mi) wall he built to protect the villagers remains standing.[29][30]

Corbett House, Kaladhungi

Corbett became close friends with Percy Wyndham, the Kumaon District Commissioner, and with him fought banditry in the jungles; they also invested together in East African coffee by jointly buying a farm near Majengo in then-Tanganyika.[31] Wyndham retired there in 1924, and Corbett travelled to East Africa most years to inspect his investment and see his friend.[32] He also built a house for himself and Maggie in Kaladhungi, although he normally eschewed what was nominally his bedroom and preferred to sleep in a tent in the garden; when the house was later converted into a museum in his honour, staff erected a bust of him on the normal site of his tent.[33]

In 1920, Corbett retook the position of vice-chairman of the Naini Tal municipal board, which he had vacated a decade earlier due to his inactivity. As part of this committee for two decades, he enforced economic standards and improved civil engineering in the town. As chairman of the public works committee, he took a personal interest both in maintaining and renewing the town's attractiveness, and in environmental protection. He passed laws against excessive fishing and deforestation, and unsuccessfully campaigned for power lines to be placed underground.[34]

As a more prominent figure in Naini Tal, Corbett began to be accepted into a wider social circle, to whom he had previously been an outcast.[35] He was increasingly called upon to coordinate hunting events. Initially arranging simple partridge shoots, Corbett was soon organising tiger shoots for the elite of British India.[36] This culminated in a close friendship with Lord Linlithgow, Governor-General of India between 1936 and 1943; Corbett organised hunts near Kaladhungi for Linlithgow and his family several times a year, and was often invited to stay in the Viceroy House in Delhi.[37]

Second World War service

[edit]

At the outbreak of the Second World War, Corbett, who had retained his rank of major in the reserve army, immediately volunteered again. Unsurprisingly, at well over sixty years old, he was rejected. After initially working for a charity which looked after the families of active servicemen, he became a recruitment officer in 1940 after lying about his own age. After two years in this role, he suffered from a serious typhus infection, probably exacerbated by a near-drowning experience he had had when a boat capsized on the Sharda River.[38][39] During a three-month hospital stay, he lost almost half his weight and came close to being permanently unable to walk, but regular exercise prevented this possibility.[40]

During Corbett's convalescence in 1942/43, Imperial Japan had commenced the Burma campaign in the jungles of Southeast Asia. When he next approached the army in late 1943, they saw his potential as a source of knowledge: by February 1944, he had been appointed senior instructor in junglecraft at Chhindwara and recommissioned as a lieutenant colonel.[40] He inspected the Burmese forests in March 1944 and returned to India on his first flight, courtesy of American airmen he had befriended.[41]

Corbett's training, for British and American troops destined for the Burmese jungles, encompassed a wide range of topics. Survival techniques he taught included obtaining fresh water, distinguishing poisonous snakes and edible plants, trapping small animals, creating natural herbal medicines for wounds, fevers, stomach problems, and communicating by blowing through reeds. His students were taught how to orient themselves, how to pinpoint sounds, and how to keep maximum visual awareness. He displayed how tracking skills allowed him to assess how many enemy soldiers passed on a track, how long ago, how fast they were travelling, and even whether their guns were loaded.[42] One of the soldiers he trained later noted that "Corbett appeared to be a cross between a magician and a master detective".[43]

Relationship with wildlife

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Hunting man-eaters

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Head of the Champawat tigress. Because of her visibly broken upper and lower right canine teeth, she became unable to hunt her natural prey of wild animals.[1]

In 1907, Corbett was approached by the deputy commissioner of Naini Tal, who asked him to hunt the Champawat Tiger. This tigress had allegedly killed two hundred people in Nepal, before a mass beating drove her into India. She established her territory around Lohaghat in early 1903 and doubled her total over the next four years, claiming a victim once every three weeks on average. None of the shikaris (hunters), sportsmen, or army infantry deputised to hunt her had come close.[44][45] Corbett accepted the task, and hunted the tigress for a number of days. After a seventeen-year-old girl was killed, a beat involving 298 men was organised, which drove the tigress from cover and allowed Corbett to shoot her.[46] As a reward, he was presented with a rifle by Sir John Hewett, Lieutenant Governor of the United Provinces. A twelve-guinea .275 Rigby with leaf sights and a French walnut stock, it became Corbett's favourite weapon, used in most subsequent man-eater hunts.[47]

In the wake of this success, Corbett was asked to hunt two other man-eating animals: a tiger active around Mukteshwar, and the Panar Leopard in the villages in the east of the Almora district. The latter animal had killed over four hundred people.[48] Corbett tackled them both in 1910, tracking and killing the tiger in the spring;[49] he was forced to abort his initial attempt to kill the leopard in April because of his work at Mokameh Ghat, but returned in September and killed the animal in a nighttime hunt.[50]

Corbett crouching over the Leopard of Rudraprayag

It was over fifteen years before Corbett hunted another man-eater. In 1925, he was asked by his friend Sir William Ibbotson to hunt the Leopard of Rudraprayag, which since 1918 had been terrorizing the populace of the neighbouring Garhwal division.[51] Although it had only claimed 125 victims, much less than the Panar Leopard, it received far more attention, being mentioned in the newspapers on multiple continents across the Anglosphere, in addition to nearly every publication in India. This notoriety came about because the leopard's territory covered the pilgrimage trails to the Hindu shrines of Kedarnath and Badrinath, then visited by 60,000 pilgrims annually.[52]

Corbett's sister Maggie tried to dissuade her brother, now fifty years old, but was unsuccessful. He hunted the leopard for ten weeks in the autumn of 1925, sometimes with Ibbotson and sometimes alone, on some occasions coming close and on one terrifying occasion being hunted himself, before reaching the limits of his endurance and returning home.[53] He returned early the next year, and again searched for several weeks. On the final night he was due to spend at Rudraprayag—he had put off urgent business in East Africa for three months already—he baited and fatally shot the leopard.[54]

The Talla Des man-eater, with the grandson of its last victim

Over the next several years, Corbett continued hunting man-eating tigers. When shooting the Talla Des man-eater in April 1929, he suffered from an abscess in his ear which almost deafened him permanently. That year, he began hunting the Tigers of Chowgarh, shooting first the cub and subsequently, on 11 April 1930, its mother. These were followed by: the Kanda man-eater in July 1932; the Mohan man-eater, likely around May 1933; the Chuka man-eater in April 1938; and the Thak man-eater in November of that year. He shot his final man-eater at the age of 71 after the Second World War.[55]

Conservation

[edit]
Corbett with the slain Bachelor of Powalgarh, 1930

On his trips to East Africa in the 1920s, Corbett began to compare the untouched grasslands there to the increasingly exploited forests in India. This kickstarted his thoughts on what would become known as conservationism, although for the time being he continued to hunt for sport, shipping antelope trophies back to India and killing the famous large tiger called the Bachelor of Powalgarh in 1930.[56] His biographer Martin Booth noted that Corbett never "truly resolved a conflict of ideals" between his love for the forest and animals and some desire to exploit them for himself, such as in his continuing organisation of tiger shoots.[57]

Corbett likely bought his first camera in Britain or Bombay on his way back from the Western Front. He was in possession of one by the time he went on a hike with an Eton College schoolmaster in September 1921.[58] Corbett was fascinated by the photography of his acquaintance Frederick Walter Champion, who devised ways of recording tigers on cine film. He soon came to appreciate that unlike a trophy, which soon loses its colour and elegance, photographs lasted forever, did not result in an animal's death, and required somewhat greater skill—because the early cameraman had to get much closer than the rifleman.[59] In a ten-year project, he constructed a "studio" around a jungle stream near his home, where he arranged foliage, hiding places, and hydrology to draw tigers to be filmed. His greatest success came in early 1938, when he filmed seven tigers, including one white, present simultaneously on the bank of the stream.[60]

In the 1930s, Corbett felt increasingly aggrieved at the degradation of the forests. He began writing to newspapers to condemn over-shooting and ruthless deforestation. These letters criticised shooting laws, called for conservation funds to be established, and censured over-eager hunters.[61] In collaboration with Malcolm Hailey, governor of the United Provinces, he established an conservationist association named "The All India Conference for the Preservation of Wild Life".[62] In 1934, he persuaded Hailey to establish India's first national park over 300 square kilometres (120 mi2) of forest in the Ramganga river valley; in 1957, it was renamed the Jim Corbett National Park.[63][39] The legislation introduced to protect this reserve was far ahead of its time, compared to other parts of India.[64]

Personal life

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Corbett never married. His biographer Martin Booth dismissed suggestions that he was homosexual, instead citing his personal demeanor and his economic, social, and familial circumstances. As a "domiciled" Anglo-Indian, Corbett was inferior socially to any young women from Britain looking for a husband, especially considering his isolated and somewhat primitive life at Mokameh Ghat. He was also generally quiet and introverted.[65] This lack of social confidence was encouraged by his mother Mary, who was intensely protective of all her sons, perhaps motivated by a desire to be looked after in old age. In 1902, she and Maggie, who was similarly jealous of any potential wife for Jim, managed to obstruct his courtship of a holidaying English girl with whom he had fallen in love.[66] Within months of Mary Corbett's death on 16 May 1924, Jim fell deeply in love with a nineteen-year-old woman named Helen, who was on holiday in India with her parents. She was flattered by his devoted courtship but was not certain about the prospect of marriage to him; her family and Jim's friends considered them totally unsuitable for each other. Rebuffed, he withdrew. On a trip to Britain in 1928, he stopped in Edinburgh to make a final bid for Helen's hand in marriage, but found she was engaged.[67]

It was common practice for European men to have affairs with Indian women of good standing; it is possible Corbett did so, either at Mokameh Ghat or in Naini Tal.[68] For many years, through love letters and private visits, he conducted an affair with Jean Ibbotson, the wife of his good friend William, who may have known about and condoned the relationship. Jean was extroverted, pretty, a skilled huntress, and a lover of nature; it is likely she played a part in Corbett's increasing conservationism.[69]

Corbett formed a number of close friendships with Indians, most notably his bearers, who served as a mix of army batmen and butlers. The two Corbett was closest to were Mothi Singh, who probably served Corbett the longest, and Madho Singh, who was notably present when Corbett killed the Chowgarh tigress.[70] He also forged a close friendship and business relationship with Bahadar Shah Khan, the Muslim headman of Chhoti Haldwani, who was an intermediary between Corbett and the village's inhabitants, and who on occasion served as Corbett's bearer or even advisor.[71]

Corbett received the Kaisar-i-Hind Medal, usually given for services to India, in the 1928 New Year Honours.[72][73] In 1942, he was made an officer of the Order of the British Empire for his hunting exploits and his wartime service, and he was made a Companion of the Order of the Indian Empire in the King's 1946 Birthday Honours.[72][74]

Writing career

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Corbett's initial forays into writing began in the 1920s, with submissions of jungle stories to Indian journals and the prominent British magazine Blackwood's, but most were initially rejected.[75] He persevered, interested in both setting down a record of his adventures and promoting his conservationist impulses. His first book, titled Jungle Stories and containing seven individual tales, was published in 1935. Only a hundred copies were privately printed; they are now collector's items.[76]

Jim Corbett in 1944

He wrote his following book during his recovery from typhus in 1943.[39][77] The original title was again Jungle Stories, and Corbett intended it to have a small print run, with all profits going towards St Dunstan's charity for blind servicemen. It consisted of the stories of seven tiger hunts, a story about his dog Robin, a story about fishing, and a two-page essay promoting wildlife photography over trophy hunting.[78] The Bombay branch of Oxford University Press offered to publish the book, but suggested changing the "bland" name: Man-Eaters of Kumaon was published in August 1944 at the initial price of five rupees for a hardback copy.[79]

Man-Eaters of Kumaon met with critical and commercial success, and Corbett became a regional celebrity. A second edition was published in Madras in September 1945; a third in Britain and the United States the following year, with a luxury reception at The Pierre hotel in New York. In four years, it was translated into nine languages and six Indian dialects; it remained in print for thirty years and had sold more than four million copies by 1980.[80] Universal Pictures bought the film rights, but decided against a script which Corbett approved of; the final film, directed by Byron Haskin and starring Sabu, Wendell Corey and Joanne Page bore little resemblance to its namesake book and was a total flop. Corbett said "that the best actor was the tiger".[81]

Because of Man-Eaters of Kumaon's success, Oxford University Press desired that Corbett publish a follow up, and he duly obliged in 1948 with The Man-Eating Leopard of Rudraprayag, which like his other publications had a conservationist subtext, but unlike them was the retelling of a single sustained narrative. Described by Booth as Corbett's "best book", it sold well but not as well as its predecessor.[82] My India was published in 1952 when the Corbetts had moved to East Africa, and remained in print in India until at least 1986. It has been described as "rich evocations of Indian rural life viewed from [Corbett's] unusual standpoint".[83] Jungle Lore and The Temple Tiger were published in the Octobers of 1953 and 1954 respectively, and both were quickly reprinted.[84] His last book, Tree Tops, was published in 1955.[85]

Later life and death

[edit]

Corbett was worried by the growth of the Indian independence movement in the interwar period, especially after the civil unrest caused by the arrest of Mahatma Gandhi in 1930. Foreseeing a day when those of European origin would no longer be welcome in India, he began to wind down his physical assets in the country and reinvested the money in annuities and life insurance.[86] By 1941, he had sold nearly all of his business holdings in Nani Tal. With Indian independence fast approaching after the Second World War, Corbett believed that he and his sister Maggie would soon become second-class citizens in an anti-British India. Like many other Anglo-Indians, they thus resolved to emigrate: they chose East Africa where Corbett had many contacts, in addition to family members such as his nephew Lieutenant General Thomas Corbett.[87] With the febrile political atmosphere stoking fears of the carnage of a second Indian Rebellion, and with Jim nearly dying of a combination of malaria and pneumonia, they sold Gurney House on 21 November 1947 and departed Naini Tal nine days later.[88]

Treetops Hotel, rebuilt in 1957 after the original structure was burned down in 1954.

Jim and Maggie travelled to Bombay via Lucknow, and there embarked on a ship to Mombasa, where they arrived on 15 December. After short stays with the Ibbotsons in Karen, near Nairobi, with their friends the Nestors in isolated Kipkaren, and with Tom Corbett in Mweiga, they rented the cottage named Paxtu at the Outspan Hotel in Nyeri, which had originally been built for Lord Baden-Powell.[89][90] Corbett occupied himself with photography of African subjects as far afield as Uganda, with fishing trips to the coral reefs of Malindi, visits to the ruins of Gedi, and investments in a safari company; he and Maggie also made visits to Britain in 1951 and 1953.[91]

One of the attractions of the Outspan site was the renowned Treetops Hotel, where Corbett often stayed either as a guest or as an honorary guide. On 5 February 1952, he was requested to accompany Princess Elizabeth during her stay at Treetops. That evening, he pointed out wildlife to her and discussed the Abominable Snowman with her husband Prince Philip, and he sat up at night to keep vigil against leopards. Unknown to the party, Elizabeth's father George VI died during the night and she ascended to the throne as Elizabeth II. Corbett would write in the visitors' logbook:[92][93]

For the first time in the history of the world, a young girl climbed into a tree one day a Princess and after having what she described as her most thrilling experience she climbed down from the tree next day a Queen.

Grave in Nyeri

Corbett's 1947 bout of pneumonia had inflicted lesions on his lungs which his smoking irritated. At Nyeri's altitude, 3,000 feet (910 m) above sea level, he coughed badly, often had difficulty breathing, and was taken to hospital with bronchitis on several occasions between 1949 and 1955.[94] He suffered a severe heart attack on the morning of 19 April 1955, and although he was quickly rushed to hospital, he died later that day. His last words to Maggie were: "Always be brave, and try to make the world a happier place for others." He was buried at St. Peter's Anglican Church in Nyeri.[95] Many obituaries were published in British and American newspapers, authored by notables including the sons of Governor-Generals Lord Willingdon and Linlithgow.[96]

Over the following decades, Corbett's books continued to be published and widely read while his house near Kaladhungi was turned into a museum. The Hailey National Park was renamed the Jim Corbett National Park in 1957, and it was later chosen for the successful Project Tiger conservation initiative.[97] In 1968, the Indochinese tiger, one of the five remaining subspecies of tigers, was named Panthera tigris corbetti after him.[39]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Edward James Corbett CIE (25 July 1875 – 19 April 1955), commonly known as Jim Corbett, was a British-Indian army officer, hunter, naturalist, author, and early conservationist who specialized in tracking and eliminating man-eating tigers and leopards in the Himalayan foothills of northern . Born in to Anglo-Indian parents, Corbett developed exceptional tracking skills during his youth spent exploring the local forests, which later enabled him to hunt big game with a .275 Rigby . From 1907 to 1938, he dispatched 19 tigers and 14 leopards documented as man-eaters by colonial authorities, preventing an estimated 1,200 human fatalities. His most notable exploit was the 1907 killing of the Champawat tigress, a single animal responsible for over 400 deaths across and , which had evaded Nepalese army efforts before Corbett tracked it using local testimony and blood trails. Corbett's hunts, often commissioned by Indian provincial governments to protect villagers, revealed patterns in man-eating behavior, such as injuries rendering normal prey capture difficult, which he detailed in seminal books like (1944) and The Man-Eating Leopard of Rudraprayag (1948). These works, blending adventure narrative with ecological observation, influenced global views on predator-human conflict and biology. Transitioning from hunter to preservationist, Corbett lobbied against of healthy tigers and supported habitat protection, aiding the 1936 creation of Hailey National Park (renamed in 1957) as India's first dedicated wildlife reserve. He served as a officer in the and, post-1947 Indian independence, relocated to , where he continued anti-poaching efforts until his death.

Early Life and Background

Ancestry and Family

Edward James Corbett was born on 25 July 1875 in Nainital, India, to Christopher William Corbett, a postmaster, and Mary Jane Corbett (née Peachey). He was the eighth of thirteen children in this Anglo-Irish family, whose ancestors had settled in India from Ireland beginning in the late 1700s, establishing roots across multiple generations during British colonial expansion. The Corbetts relocated to in 1862, drawn by administrative opportunities under the , where Christopher secured his position managing postal services in the hill station. This posting provided relative stability amid the demands of raising a large household, though the family's imperial ties fostered a deep, lifelong connection to Indian landscapes and communities. Financial strains emerged early when died in 1879, leaving to oversee the children; the eldest son, Tom, assumed the role to sustain the family. A devastating on 18 September 1880 further compounded hardships, destroying properties and contributing to economic precarity that necessitated self-reliance among the siblings from a young age. These challenges, rooted in and environmental vulnerabilities, shaped a pragmatic worldview attuned to India's rugged realities.

Childhood in India and Early Adventures

Edward James Corbett was born on 25 July 1875 in , in the Kumaon region of the Himalayan foothills, to Christopher William Corbett, the local of Irish descent, and Mary Jane Corbett. As the eighth of sixteen children in a large Anglo-Indian family, he spent his early years divided between the family home in and a rural property at , where proximity to dense forests fostered frequent exposure to local . This environment, characterized by the untamed jungles and villages of colonial 's northern hills, necessitated practical familiarity with animal behaviors for safety and sustenance, shaping his initial survival-oriented interactions with nature. Corbett's introduction to marksmanship occurred informally through his older brother Tom, who taught him the use of firearms during childhood hunts for jungle fowl and small game. By age eight, he had received his first , and at ten, he successfully shot his initial near , honing rudimentary tracking skills amid the region's abundant predators and prey. These experiences involved observing animal tracks, sounds, and habits in the forests, as later recounted in his writings, where he described identifying jungle noises and following spoor without formal training. Such early pursuits, driven by the demands of a frontier-like setting where human settlements bordered wild habitats, built foundational abilities in navigation and predator avoidance rather than structured education. In his later accounts, including Jungle Lore and My India, Corbett detailed youthful escapades tracking leopards and noting behavioral patterns, such as ambush tactics and territorial markings, which emerged from unsupervised explorations rather than guided instruction. These formative encounters, unmarred by later professional imperatives, emphasized empirical observation of wildlife dynamics in response to the Kumaon's ecological realities, where depredations on and occasional human threats underscored the interplay between rural livelihoods and populations.

Professional and Military Career

Initial Employment and Business Activities

At the age of eighteen in 1893, Edward James Corbett joined the Bengal and North Western Railway as a temporary fuel inspector to support his family following his father's death, a role that entailed overseeing the and supply of for in remote postings. His initial assignment was at Manakpur in , where he managed the logistical demands of sourcing timber from local forests and ensuring timely delivery to fuel the expanding colonial rail network, which relied heavily on wood due to the scarcity of in certain regions. This work exposed him to the challenges of coordinating labor gangs and navigating rugged terrain, honing skills in resource extraction and transport that were essential amid India's infrastructural growth. Corbett soon advanced to a contracting position at Mokameh Ghat in , supervising the trans-shipment of goods across the and maintaining fuel supplies for over two decades, a period marked by the railway's in British India's . As contractor, he employed dozens of local workers to fell trees and haul wood, demonstrating practical acumen in scaling operations to meet the voracious demands of locomotive traffic, which consumed vast quantities of timber annually—estimated at thousands of tons per major line. These responsibilities involved negotiating with forest suppliers, mitigating delays from monsoons and river crossings, and optimizing supply chains in an era when rail expansion strained natural resources, inadvertently contributing to in supply areas. By the early 1900s, Corbett had transitioned toward establishing a in , leveraging his railway experience in timber handling and transport to engage in local trade networks within the Kumaon community, where colonial demands for materials and fuel persisted. This shift allowed him to build connections among merchants and officials in the hill station, facilitating ventures in that aligned with the region's economic reliance on and , though specifics of his independent enterprises remain tied to informal colonial rather than formalized banking or estates at this stage. His oversight of large-scale wood procurement underscored a pragmatic approach to , prioritizing efficiency in a context where unreliable supply could halt rail operations vital to imperial administration.

World War I Service

In 1917, at the age of 41, Corbett received a wartime commission as a captain in the , having been deemed too old for combat duties but suitable for command roles. He was tasked with raising the 70th Kumaon Company of the Indian Labour Corps, recruiting approximately 500 volunteers from the Kumaon region to support logistics on the Western Front. The unit departed Bombay in late summer 1917 and was deployed near Péronne, , where Corbett supervised labor operations, including supply handling and infrastructure support amid the ongoing Allied offensives. Corbett remained with his company through the final months of the war, forgoing leave opportunities available to other officers and staying until the on , 1918. During this period, he managed administrative and organizational duties, applying his prior experience in frontier labor to maintain unit discipline and efficiency under harsh conditions. His service contributed to the broader Allied effort by bolstering non-combat manpower, which was critical as combat units faced heavy attrition; the Indian Labour Corps as a whole provided essential rear-echelon support, handling over 1.5 million tons of supplies across the front by war's end. Corbett was demobilized as following the war's conclusion, reflecting recognition of his effective leadership in sustaining the unit's operational readiness. For his meritorious volunteer service, which predated and encompassed his wartime role, he received the (VD), an award for long-term commitment in auxiliary forces. This decoration underscored his disciplined application of practical skills from civilian life, including logistical oversight honed in regional contracting, to wartime exigencies without direct engagement in frontline .

Interwar Business and Community Role

Following his World War I service, during which he led the 70th Kumaon Labour Company to France and was promoted to major, Corbett returned to in 1919 and declined a position to resume railway work, opting instead to base himself in Kumaon near and . Drawing on over two decades of prior experience as a fuel inspector, assistant , storekeeper, and labour contractor for Indian railway companies—where he supervised the transhipment and transport of goods across the at Mokameh —Corbett extended similar roles into the local economy of Kumaon, managing labour and for regional projects amid the interwar economic constraints. His practical, unpretentious approach earned him the affectionate local moniker "Carpet Sahib," derived from his preference for traversing the rugged Himalayan foothills on foot rather than by palanquin or motor transport, as was customary among other British officials; this grounded demeanor fostered trust and among Kumaoni villagers and officials alike. Corbett advised British administrators on leveraging knowledge for efficient transport routes and , contributing to stability in a region prone to seasonal disruptions from monsoons and avalanches. In community affairs, Corbett's fluency in Kumaoni dialects and decades-long familiarity with local customs enabled him to mediate interpersonal and land-use disputes, often resolving conflicts over grazing rights or water access through pragmatic informed by empirical observation of the landscape. His interventions, documented in regional lore as pivotal during the economic strains of the and 1930s—including aiding labour mobilization for road maintenance and forest clearance—solidified his stature as a leader, bridging colonial administration and indigenous needs without formal title. This role amplified his influence, as locals sought his counsel on practical matters, attributing to him a rare uncommon among figures of the era.

World War II Contributions

In 1941, at the age of 66, Corbett was enlisted by British authorities in to train Allied troops in techniques, utilizing his deep knowledge of forested terrain, animal behavior, and tracking skills honed from decades of hunting man-eating predators. This effort focused on preparing soldiers for potential Japanese incursions via Burma, incorporating empirical methods such as silent movement, scent avoidance, and in dense undergrowth to enhance survival and in tropical environments. His instruction emphasized causal factors in jungle operations, like predator-prey dynamics applied to enemy ambushes, providing a realistic edge over conventional military drills ill-suited to Indian topography. Corbett held the honorary rank of during this service, reflecting recognition of his specialized expertise rather than frontline command. However, his participation was curtailed by advancing age and health decline, limiting him to advisory capacities by 1942 amid the escalating demands of the . Post-active involvement, he offered informal guidance on wildlife-related risks to troop and in forested zones, underscoring the practical value of local ecological insight in wartime strategy. These contributions remained modest in scale, prioritizing targeted training over broader operational roles, consistent with his profile.

Hunting of Man-Eaters

Key Hunts and Challenges Faced

Jim Corbett's pursuit of man-eating tigers and leopards in the Kumaon region of India from 1907 to 1938 involved grueling expeditions marked by arduous terrain, inclement weather, and the predators' elusive behaviors. These hunts required extended periods of tracking across steep Himalayan foothills, dense forests, and river valleys, often under persistent rain that obscured spoor and heightened risks of slips and infections. Corbett relied on local villagers' accounts for leads, employing goats as bait tied to trees or salt licks to lure the animals into ambush positions on machans—elevated platforms built in trees for overnight vigils. The Tigress, responsible for 436 confirmed human deaths across and India's Kumaon district, prompted Corbett's first major man-eater hunt in spring 1907. Commissioned by the Naini Tal deputy commissioner after the tigress's relocation from following intensified local efforts, Corbett followed a fresh blood trail left after the killing of a 16-year-old girl near village. Despite the tigress's wariness—evading prior hunts through superior senses and nocturnal habits—he positioned himself along her return path and shot her with a single round from his .275 Rigby as she approached the kill site. The dense undergrowth and the animal's ability to detect human presence from afar demanded precise timing and minimal movement during stakeouts. In 1926, Corbett tracked the Leopard of , which had claimed 125 documented lives over eight years along routes in Garhwal. The leopard's cunning exploitation of rocky cliffs and forested ravines, combined with its habit of dragging victims into inaccessible caves, prolonged the ten-week campaign. Corbett endured sleepless nights in machans amid cold mountain winds, using goat and mimicking leopard calls to draw it out, ultimately killing it on May 2 near Gulabrai village after it responded to a bait during a midnight ambush. Logistical strains included coordinating with armed villagers for sweeps and navigating swollen rivers during the pre-monsoon period. The , an exceptionally large measuring 10 feet 7 inches between pegs, evaded hunters from 1920 to 1930 in the grasslands near Powalgarh. Though not initially a prolific man-eater, its size and elusiveness—frequently crossing open plains where it could spot stalkers from afar—posed unique challenges in a landscape prone to flooding. Corbett's successful hunt in April 1930 followed days of trailing in marshy terrain, culminating in a shot after the tiger charged through tall grass, testing his nerve against its speed and ferocity. Corbett's final man-eater hunt targeted the Thak Tigress in 1938, which had killed several villagers near Thak in Kumaon. Over months of intermittent tracking amid rugged valleys and monsoon-affected paths, he faced the tigress's tactical retreats into thorny scrub and her avoidance of baits, relying on persistent foot surveys and local intelligence. The tigress was dispatched on near Thak village after Corbett ambushed her from a tree platform, marking the culmination of physical endurance against an adversary that had survived prior encounters through acute vigilance.

Methods and Empirical Analysis of Causes

Corbett favored direct confrontation via over mechanical traps, which he deemed unreliable for elusive man-eaters capable of evading or damaging such devices. He typically used live bait like tethered goats or buffalo placed in kill zones identified through tracks and scat analysis, then waited or silently approached in soft-soled footwear to position for a precise shot, emphasizing minimal disturbance to avoid alerting the predator. This method relied on intimate of , , and animal patterns derived from years of field observation, allowing him to track individuals across rugged Himalayan foothills without reliance on beaters or large parties that could scatter the quarry. Post-kill examinations by Corbett routinely revealed underlying physical impairments as the of man-eating, with autopsies showing injuries that compromised the animals' ability to hunt ungulates like sambar or . For instance, the Thak tigress bore two healed gunshot wounds, including a septic injury that impaired mobility and predation efficiency. Comparable findings across cases included fractured canines, as observed in the tigress, and quill punctures from porcupine defenses embedding in limbs or jaws, often leading to infections or . In the 19 tigers and 14 leopards he dispatched—each verified through multiple eyewitness accounts of attacks—Corbett documented no instances of healthy, uninjured specimens turning man-eaters, attributing the behavior instead to acquired debilitations that shifted dietary reliance toward easier human targets. Empirical patterns from these dissections pointed to human-induced factors as primary drivers, including attempts that wounded without killing and disruption from settlement expansion, which forced predators into closer proximity to villages and depleted prey bases. Corbett rejected notions of innate , noting tigers' natural aversion to humans absent such compulsions, with injuries frequently tracing to defensive gunfire or opportunistic encounters in encroached territories. While colonial and local records often understated confirmed human fatalities—due to unreported deaths in isolated hill communities—Corbett's field validations, cross-referenced against kill sites and survivor testimonies, provided more reliable tallies, highlighting systemic undercounting in . This approach prioritized observable evidence over speculative attributions, revealing man-eating as a maladaptive response to anthropogenic pressures rather than predatory predisposition.

Quantifiable Impact on Human Safety

The Champawat Tiger, killed by Corbett in 1907, was responsible for 436 documented human deaths across and the Kumaon region of , primarily targeting vulnerable women and children gathering or water. Its elimination immediately halted further attacks, restoring safe access to essential resources for affected villages and preventing additional fatalities that could have extended its decade-long . Corbett's hunts targeted other notorious man-eaters, including the Leopard of Rudraprayag, which claimed 125 lives between 1918 and 1926, and the Panar Leopard, credited with around 400 deaths before its dispatch in 1910. Collectively, the man-eaters he eliminated accounted for over 1,200 human deaths, with his interventions credited for averting hundreds more by breaking cycles of predation that persisted until the animals were removed. Historical accounts from local communities highlight the restoration of nighttime security and daily activities, as villagers previously confined indoors at dusk expressed profound relief post-hunt. In the pre-translocation era of early 20th-century , where injured or habituated predators lacked non-lethal management options, Corbett's targeted eliminations represented a pragmatic, evidence-based response to verified threats, directly correlating with reduced human-wildlife conflict mortality in the regions. Empirical patterns from these cases show man-eaters averaging multiple kills annually until stopped, underscoring the causal link between their removal and preserved lives among impoverished rural populations.

Conservation Advocacy

Shift from Hunting to Preservation

Corbett discontinued trophy hunting of tigers and other , restricting his pursuits solely to man-eaters, after 1911, prompted by firsthand observations of depleting animal populations in Kumaon's forests. This restraint reflected an initial pivot from recreational killing—often pursued for sport or necessity in —to a measured acknowledgment that excessive human predation exacerbated local scarcities. By the 1920s, Corbett's perspective had deepened amid evident reductions in tiger numbers across Kumaon, which he linked to intensified habitat pressures from commercial , , and settlement encroachments that fragmented ecosystems and curtailed prey availability. He began publicly decrying practices as unsustainable, arguing they accelerated imbalances where predators, deprived of and , increasingly turned to prey—a causal chain rooted in anthropogenic disruption rather than innate feline aggression. This evolution underscored Corbett's growing empirical grasp of wildlife dynamics, transitioning from targeted eliminations justified by immediate human threats to a holistic recognition that preserving intact habitats was essential for averting broader collapses in predator-prey equilibria. His highlighted how colonial-era resource extraction, including timber felling for railways and fuel, had systematically eroded the forested expanses that once sustained robust densities, numbering in the thousands regionally prior to accelerated exploitation.

Role in Establishing Protected Areas

Corbett actively campaigned for the protection of forested areas in the Kumaon region of British , leveraging his decades of field experience to persuade provincial authorities of the ecological value of the river valley. Between 1933 and 1935, he collaborated with officials, including Governor Sir Malcolm Hailey, to advocate for a dedicated sanctuary amid growing threats from habitat loss and unregulated hunting. This effort culminated in the establishment of Hailey on August 8, 1936, encompassing 323.75 square kilometers of diverse terrain critical for and other habitats. Through his involvement in wildlife preservation organizations, such as the Association for the Preservation of Game in the United Provinces and the All-India Conference for the Preservation of Wildlife, Corbett served on committees that influenced policy on protected areas. He pushed for rigorous enforcement measures against and encroachment, emphasizing the need for institutional safeguards to maintain rather than relying solely on individual hunts. These roles informed the park's foundational regulations, which prioritized integrity over exploitation. The park's creation marked an early institutional success in large-scale conservation, providing a protected corridor that supported populations despite post-1947 challenges like population pressures and intermittent . By the late , under expanded management including launched in 1973, the reserve demonstrated measurable recovery, hosting one of India's highest densities at over 15 adults per 100 square kilometers in core areas. This outcome underscores the causal link between enforced protection and population stabilization, though sustained enforcement remains essential amid ongoing anthropogenic threats.

Views on Sustainable Wildlife Management

Corbett advocated a pragmatic approach to that emphasized targeted interventions against threats to human life while decrying the wholesale extermination of like through bounties and unregulated sport . He explicitly opposed policies incentivizing the indiscriminate slaughter of , arguing that such measures, prevalent in , accelerated population declines without addressing underlying causes of human-animal conflict. In response, he ceased general by the late 1920s, influenced by observations of rampant tiger killings that risked eradicating the entirely. Central to Corbett's philosophy was the endorsement of culling individual animals that posed direct dangers, such as man-eaters, as a necessary measure for safeguarding rural communities where livestock and human losses were empirically documented at hundreds annually in affected regions. He critiqued unfounded alarms over wildlife overpopulation, noting instead that habitat encroachment and injury-induced behavioral shifts—rather than numerical excess—drove predatory turnovers, thereby prioritizing causal prevention over reactive mass culls. This stance reflected a commitment to human-wildlife coexistence, where preservation efforts focused on maintaining viable habitats to avert conflicts stemming from scarcity. Corbett stressed education on animal and as foundational to sustainable practices, urging villagers and officials to recognize triggers like wounds or territorial pressures that transformed healthy predators into threats, thereby reducing reliance on lethal responses through informed avoidance. He underscored habitat integrity as the primary bulwark against such escalations, advocating preservation of forested corridors over sentimental or absolutist bans that ignored empirical realities of predator needs. In valuing , Corbett credited seasoned hunters with generating critical data on dynamics, countering absolutist anti-hunting by highlighting how their observations informed targeted and exposed flaws in blanket protections that overlooked human safety imperatives. This integration of field-derived insights supported a realist framework, where hunters' roles in monitoring and intervening complemented broader conservation without endorsing pursuits.

Literary and Intellectual Output

Major Publications

Corbett's first major publication, , appeared in 1944 from and chronicled his pursuits of eight man-eating tigers in the Kumaon region, derived directly from field notes and encounters spanning the 1907 Tiger kill through hunts in the 1930s. The book achieved immediate commercial success as a global , with serialization in Field & Stream magazine across 10 installments from 1946 to 1947. Subsequent works included My India in 1952, which assembled essays on rural Indian villagers and their encounters, rooted in Corbett's decades of residence and railway postings in the Himalayan foothills from the early 1900s. Jungle Lore, published in 1953 by , offered practical accounts of jungle navigation, animal tracking, and observations accumulated during Corbett's hunting expeditions and patrols between 1907 and the 1940s. The Man-Eating Leopard of Rudraprayag (1948) focused exclusively on the hunt for a that claimed over 125 human lives, reconstructed from on-site investigations and diaries maintained amid the rugged Garhwal terrain. Tree Tops (1955), co-authored with others, detailed wildlife sightings from elevated observation posts in Kenya's forests, based on Corbett's post-1947 relocations and field vigils there. These volumes, produced after Corbett's 1947 retirement, collectively drew from preserved journals of his pre-independence Indian fieldwork, with Man-Eaters of Kumaon alone translated into multiple languages and reprinted extensively to meet demand.

Themes and Influence on Wildlife Awareness

Corbett's writings recurrently highlighted the and adaptive behaviors of , particularly tigers, based on direct field observations rather than anthropomorphic assumptions. He emphasized that tigers exhibit caution and avoidance toward humans under normal conditions, attributing man-eating solely to physical impairments such as wounds, , or that compel otherwise healthy animals to target easier prey. This perspective debunked prevalent myths of tigers as innately ferocious predators, instead portraying them as rational actors responding to environmental pressures and bodily limitations, thereby fostering respect for their ecological roles. These themes underscored a human-centric realism, wherein preservation served human interests by mitigating conflicts through targeted interventions against aberrant individuals while safeguarding populations from and indiscriminate killing. Corbett's narratives countered overly sentimental views by grounding advocacy in causal evidence from tracked hunts, arguing that healthy s posed minimal threat and warranted protection to maintain natural balances disrupted by human expansion. The evidentiary accounts in his books elevated global awareness of tiger declines, influencing post-World War II conservation shifts in India by pressuring colonial and independent authorities toward habitat protections; for instance, his documentation of man-eater causes informed early arguments against of non-threatening animals, contributing to the 1936 establishment of Hailey National Park (later renamed in 1957). This pragmatic influence persisted, shaping policies that prioritized empirical management over absolutist , as evidenced by sustained tiger reserve expansions in the decades following Indian independence.

Personal Life

Family and Relationships

Corbett was the eighth of thirteen children born to Christopher William Corbett, a , and Mary Jane Corbett in , , on 25 July 1875. Many siblings died young, leaving him particularly close to his surviving sisters, with whom he shared a modest domestic life amid his extensive travels for work and hunting. He never married and had no children, prioritizing his professional duties and familial responsibilities over personal romantic entanglements. Corbett maintained an enduring companionship with his unmarried sister Margaret Winifred Corbett, known as , who served as his devoted household manager and closest confidante; they resided together in family properties such as the inherited house in after their mother's death in 1924. This bond reflected a simple, scandal-free domestic arrangement focused on mutual support rather than broader social engagements. Beyond immediate family, Corbett developed loyal relationships with local Indian assistants and trackers who joined him on perilous man-eater hunts, their evidenced by repeated collaboration in high-risk expeditions despite the dangers involved. These ties, built on practical trust and shared hardships rather than formal contracts, underscored his reliance on empirical competence over hierarchical distance in field operations.

Religious Beliefs and Personal Philosophy

Corbett adhered to , as confirmed in biographical accounts of his life and writings, where he is described as maintaining Christian principles amid his respect for local Hindu customs and villagers' superstitions, which he refrained from challenging. His family's Anglican background, particularly his mother Mary Jane's role as a devout pillar of Nainital's , likely shaped his . This affiliation is further evidenced by his burial on April 19, 1955, at St. Peter's Anglican Church in , , with a biblical from the Song of : "Until the day break, and the shadows flee away." In his narratives, such as (1944), Corbett invoked references to in contexts of peril and aid, portraying divine involvement alongside human effort during hunts, as in descriptions of tigresses facing " and man to help her." These accounts suggest a personal conviction in providence protecting him through narrow escapes in the Himalayan , where he attributed amid life-threatening encounters to higher intervention rather than mere . Corbett's philosophy framed nature as embodying a harmonious order under divine oversight, with humans tasked as stewards to intervene when imbalances—such as man-eating predators—threatened communities, prioritizing human welfare without descending into exploitative dominance. He rejected extremes of that ignored wildlife's intrinsic value but insisted ethical management required eliminating dangers to villagers, reflecting a realist view of causal chains in ecosystems where unchecked predation disrupted human coexistence with the wild.

Later Years and Legacy

Relocation and Final Pursuits

In November 1947, following 's , Corbett and his sister Maggie emigrated from Naini Tal to in the Colony of , seeking conditions reminiscent of their life in . They settled at Paxtu Cottage, associated with the Outspan Hotel, where Corbett continued his interest in wildlife amid the region's similar terrain and , including photographing and filming local species. Corbett maintained his engagement with wildlife observation by serving as a narrator at the in , approximately 16 kilometers from , where he described animal behaviors to visitors overlooking a . During the notable visit by Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip on the night of February 5-6, 1952, when Princess Elizabeth learned of her father King George VI's death and ascended to the throne as Queen Elizabeth II, Corbett served as a guide and recorded entries in the hotel's guest log, contributing to the site's fame through his detailed accounts of nocturnal wildlife activity. This role extended his earlier pursuits, emphasizing direct encounters with African game rather than . From the early 1950s, Corbett experienced worsening health, including cardiovascular issues that limited his mobility, though he persisted in documenting observations. His final writings included the 1954 publication The Temple Tiger and More Man-Eaters of Kumaon, compiling Indian hunting narratives, and the short 1955 account Tree Tops, focused on Kenyan experiences at the . Additionally, in 1953, he directed a personal on Kenyan , preserving visual records of local species.

Death and Posthumous Recognition

Edward James Corbett died on 19 April 1955 at age 79 from a heart attack, specifically and , while in , . The death certificate confirmed natural causes with no associated controversies. He was buried the following day at St. Peter's Anglican Church Cemetery in , where his grave bears an inscription noting his birth in , , on 25 July 1875. In posthumous recognition of his contributions to , Hailey National Park in —established in 1936 with Corbett's advocacy—was renamed in 1957. This renaming honored his role in protecting habitats and eliminating man-eating predators that threatened human lives.

Ongoing Debates and Critiques

Corbett's elimination of man-eating tigers and leopards, including the tigress responsible for 436 documented deaths across and , demonstrably reduced immediate threats to rural populations in the Kumaon region, with records attributing over 1,200 fatalities to the animals he targeted collectively. These , spanning from 1907 to the 1940s, involved eight tigers and two leopards confirmed as man-eaters through local reports and post-mortem evidence of remains in their diets, prioritizing empirical verification over unconfirmed claims. His advocacy for habitat protection culminated in the establishment of 's first in 1936, now evidencing tiger population recovery, with estimates rising from approximately 260 to 290 individuals in recent surveys amid broader national increases from 1,706 in 2010 to 3,682 in 2022. Critics, often from postcolonial or animal rights perspectives, argue that Corbett's actions embodied colonial paternalism, positioning a British hunter as savior to Indian villagers while reinforcing imperial control over wildlife narratives, as explored in analyses linking his hunts to European modernity's disruption of ecological balance. Some question the precision of attributed kill counts, noting discrepancies between Corbett's estimates and official records, potentially inflating the man-eater threat to justify interventions. Animal rights advocates decry all lethal control of predators, viewing even man-eater hunts as ethically indefensible violations of wildlife autonomy, though this stance overlooks verified human casualties exceeding hundreds per incident, where non-lethal alternatives like relocation proved ineffective due to the animals' learned predation on humans. Ongoing debates center on reconciling Corbett's hunting with conservation, challenging the hunter-conservationist binary: proponents emphasize data-driven defense of human life against verifiable threats, crediting his methods with pioneering sustainable management that enabled habitat rebounds without sport trophies, while skeptics from anthropocentric exploitation critiques contend his legacy sanitized colonial resource dominance. Empirical prioritization of human toll—hundreds killed annually by man-eaters in early 20th-century India—supports justification for targeted culls over blanket anti-hunting ideologies, as tiger recoveries in protected areas post-Corbett affirm the efficacy of his habitat-focused shift, countering claims of inherent exploitation. Right-leaning evaluations uphold anthropocentric realism in prioritizing populated agrarian defenses, whereas left-leaning views, influenced by institutional biases favoring decolonial reframings, often downplay human-centric data in favor of anti-colonial symbolism, yet lack counter-evidence to the documented fatalities averted.

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