Zebu, oxen from India
Zebu, oxen from India, at the Belle Isle [Park] Zoo, Detroit, Mich.
The Life of Dr. Anandabai Joshee
Published in 1888, The Life of Dr. Anandabai Joshee by Mrs. Caroline Healy Dall is a lengthy biography about Joshee, the first Indian woman to earn a medical degree in the U.S. Joshee was the cousin of Pandita Ramabai, who herself traveled to the U.S. in the 1886 and published the Marathi travelogue United Stateschi Lokastithi any Pravasvrutta (1889).
Canada and India (January 1916)
The January 1916 edition of Canada and India: A Journal of Information and Conciliation (Vol. 2, No. 1) opens with the tagline "The Strongest of all British Bonds are Knowledge and Sympathy." As a whole, the majority of the articles published in the journal emphasized the Indian nationalist movement, with several offering critical takes on the British empire.
Canada and India (March 1916)
The March 1916 edition of Canada and India: A Journal of Information and Conciliation (Vol. 2, No. 2) opens with several different poetic epigraphs by Edwin Arnold, Robert Bridges, and Bills Carman. The issue is broken into four sections, reporting on the activities of India, Canada, Britain, and Australia.
Jogesh Chander Misrow, "East Indian Immigration on the Pacific Coast" (1915)
Completed in 1915 at Stanford University, “East Indian Immigration on the Pacific Coast” is the Master’s thesis of Jogesh Chander Misrow. Born in Calcutta, Misrow served as an interpreter for the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization service (INS). Misrow attended the University of Washington, and later received an M.A. at Stanford.
Political Trouble in India (1907-1917) Political Trouble in India: 1907-1917, written by James Campbell Ker, a colonial Indian Civil Servant who had acted as personal assistant to the director of British criminal intelligence.