The road leading from the north-east corner of B.B.D. Bagh to Bowbazar was earlier known as ‘Avenue to the eastward’. It was also known as the Great Bungalo Road. In 1768, it was said to be the best street in Kolkata.[1] The modern police office was the residence of John Palmer, one of the merchant princes of Kolkata. Earlier to that it was said to be ‘an old ruin of a house, formerly the residence of some native.’ The house next to it was the Harmonic Tavern, the handsomest house in its day and pulled down long back.[1]
Punishment in old Kolkata was often done by hanging. There was a gibbet at the crossing of Lalbazar and Chitpore Road (now Rabindra Sarani).[2]
Transport
Road
Lalbazar is surrounded by Old Court House Street on the west, Bentinck Street/Rabindra Sarani on the east, India Exchange Place Road on the north and R.N. Mukherjee Road on the south. Lalbazar Street (westward extension of Bepin Behari Ganguly Street) passes through the middle of the area from east to west. Many buses ply along these roads.[3]
^ abCotton, H.E.A., Calcutta Old and New, 1909/1980, p. 275-276, General Printers and Publishers Pvt. Ltd.
^Sidney Kitson, Calcutta Police, from the Crown to Ashok Pillar,in Calcutta, the Living City, Vol. I, edited by Sukanta Chaudhuri, p. 243-245, Oxford University Press, ISBN978-0-19-563696-3