Military College Jhelum
Coordinates: 32°53′48″N 73°45′29″E / 32.89667°N 73.75806°E
Military College Jhelum | |
---|---|
Knowledge and Action ݝڶݥ ۇ ݝݥڶ | |
Location | |
Sarai Alamgir, Punjab Pakistan | |
Information | |
Type | Military school |
Established | 3 March 1922 |
Faculty | 50 |
Grades | 8th - 12th(ICS/Pre-Eng) |
Number of students | ~650 |
Houses | 8 |
School color(s) | Dark green |
Mascot | Alamgirians |
Website | www.militarycollege.edu.pk |
Military College Jhelum or MCJ, is a military high school, located at Sarai Alamgir (Jhelum District) but now in (Gujrat District), Pakistan. Though it is physically located in Gujrat District, due to its very close proximity it is still associated with the City of Jhelum, and is considered to be in the cantonment limit of Jhelum. The institution feeds the Pakistan Military Academy, Kakul. Military College Jhelum is one of three military colleges in Pakistan; the others being Military College Murree and Military College Sui.
History
The college's foundation stone was laid on 3 March 1922 by the Prince of Wales.[1] as the King George Royal Indian Military School (KGRIMS) at the Jhelum and Jallandhar cantonments in Punjab Province (Jallandhar is now in Indian state of Punjab but the school was relocated and renamed as the Chail Military School). Regular classes at the college began on 15 September 1925.
British instructors
From 16 April 1932 to 11 November 1936, the Chief Instructor of the college was Warrant Officer Charles Eaton. A bungalow was built for him and his family on the banks of the Canal and still exists. When W.O. Eaton and his family left the students lined the route all the way to the railway station and festooned him with garlands, such was their esteem. In 1943, the school underwent and the college emerged as an institution of choice for potential officers of the army.
Location
Military College Jhelum is located in the district of Gujrat in the town of Sarai Alamgir. Due to its proximity to city of Jhelum and because original Jhelum was on Sarai Alamgir side plus the inclusion of Sarai Alamgir in district Jhelum before 1998, it is widely known as Military College Jhelum (MCJ).
Student life
The students are called Cadets and they reside in hostels called Houses. Cadets take part in sports such as field hockey, football, basketball,swimming, volleyball, table tennis and horse riding. Fitness activities include judo, karate, gymnastics, jogging and running. Physical training (PT) is conducted in the morning and sports in the evening. Students are taught drill and shooting. Cadets also take part in variety of curricular and semi curricular activities like Essay Writing, Debating, Book Review Writing, Drama and Quiz Shows.
Houses
There are seven houses in Military College Jhelum: five senior houses and two junior houses. Houses compete with each other for the annual house championship. Many competitions are held among them including sports trophy assault course trophy debates competition etc. The house with the most trophies on aggregate is awarded the "Champion of the Year" status. Houses compete fiercely among each other for the pride of their house. Details of the houses are as follows :
Senior Houses
- Aurangzeb House
This house was established in 1925 as Birdwood house and named after British/Indian army Commander-in-Chief Field Marshal Sir William Birdwood of Gallipoli. In 1958, Birdwood House was renamed Aurangzeb House after the name of famous Mughal king Sultan Mohy-Ud-Din Aurangzeb Alamgir. It was Junior House at that time and there was 73 cadets residing in the house. The first Housemaster was Jamadar Faiz Muhammad Khan and first head boy was C/No 29 Muhammad Zar Khan who held this appointment for five years. The colour of hose flag is orange and motto of house was “Birdies Don’t Tell a Lie ” in 1956, “Excelsior” in 1973, “Truthfulness” in 1985 and present is “Truthfulness Always” since 1991.
- Tipu Sultan House
In April 1928 British Army Chief of General Staff, Lieutenant General Andrio Sakeen inaugurated the house (Third House of School). It was named as “Sakeen House” after his name. The first House Master was Risaldar Muhammad Abdul Latif. In 1959, it was renamed as Tipu Sultan House. The colour of house flag is green and motto is “Duty First” since 1973.
- Sir Syed House
Sir Syed House was raised in August 2011 to cater for the accommodation requirement of the cadets due to the increased intake. Almost 5-6 cadets per house/ class were shifted to Sir Syed house. House was named Sir Syed House after the Muslim scholar, Sir Syed Ahmed Khan. The first house master of the house was Lieutenant Colonel Muhammad Ali and first house prefect was C/No 7392 Saad Hamid. The colour of house flag is grey and motto of house is “Never Give In”.
- Jinnah House
Jinnah House was established in 1990 and named after founder of Pakistan Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah, in order to meet the requirement of enhanced strength of cadets. It was inaugurated by Lieutenant General Muhammad Arif Bangish. The first house master was Major Doctor Abdul Wahid and first house perfect was C/No 5395 Athar Hussain. The colour of house flag is light blue and motto of house is“ Work, Work and Work. Initially, it accommodated 8th and 9th class cadets but after few years it was later on declared as a senior house.
- Iqbal House
Iqbal house came into existence in 1992 and named after our famous philosopher and poet Allama Muhammad Iqbal. It was inaugurated by General Abdul Waheed, Chief of Army Staff. The first house master of the house was Major Manzoor Ahmed Zafar and first house prefect was C/No 5155 Muhammad Rajil Irshad Khan. In the beginning, it was a junior house. Later on, it was granted the status of a senior house. The colour of house flag is maroon and motto of the house is “I Can, I Will”.
Junior Houses
- Babur House
In order to expand the college for war purposes, a fourth house was established in 1943 as Auckinlect house (Kacha House) named after Field Marshal Sir Kalaad Auckinlect (Commander in Chief) who inaugurated it in November 1943. In 1959, Auckinlect house was shifted in Sakeen house and was renamed as Babur house in the honour of Zaheer Uddin Babur, the founder of Mughal dynasty. Subedar Fateh Khan has the honour of being first Housemaster and C/No 760 Muhammad Aslam Janjua was the first House prefect of the house. The colour of house flag is red. Initially, motto of the house was “Hard work, simple living and high thinking”. The present motto of Babur House is “Conviction and Courage” since 1972.
- Mehmood Ghaznavi House
This house was established in 1925 as Robert House and named after British army Commander-in-Chief Field Marshal Lord Fredrick Robert, Robert of Kandhar. In 1958, it was shifted in Birdwood House and was renamed as Mehmood Ghaznavi House after the name of a great king, conqueror and idol negotiator Sultan Mehmood Ghaznavi. This house has a unique honour of receiving the first batch of 21 students on 15 September 1925. First house master of house was Subedar Walayat Shah and first house prefect was C/ No 2 Sultan Muhammad. The colour of house flag is dark blue and motto of house was “Work is Worship” in 1972, “I Will Never Fail” in 1976, “Strive Till Death” in 1979 and present is “Work is Worship” since 1982.
Parents day
Every year parents day is celebrated at Military College Jhelum in which cadets indulge in different activities such as parade, horse jumping, gymnastics and different science and arts club activities. On this occasion, the champion house is also declared.
Honours of the College
The College Roll of honour radiates full with the names of martyrs, heroes, serving and retired officers in echelons of civilian and military establishments
The College has to its credit:
- Nishan-e-Haider 01
- Sitara-e-Jurat 47
- Tamgha-e-Jurat 03
- Tamgha-e-Shujaat 01
- MC 04
- Imtiazi Asnads 15
Some of the distinguished Alamgirians
- General (R) Muhammad Iqbal Khan, NI(M), SB - (Late)****
- Air Chief Marshal (Retd) Zulfiqar Ali Khan (Late)****
- Admiral (Retd) Abdul Aziz Mirza****
- General (Retd) Muhammad Yusaf Khan****
- General (Retd) Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, NI(M), HI****
80 General Officers Over 100 Brigadiers and 2000 Colonels. In the civilians also, there are numerous luminaries and highly placed officers from the College alumni.
Gallantry awards
1948 War
- 380 Lt Col Sher Muhammad, SJ
- 573 Jem Syed Akbar Hussain
Bajore 1958
- Maj Mumtaz Ali SJ
1965 War
- 397 Lt Col Muhammad Jamshéd, SJ
- 562 Lt Col Muhammad Sher
- 717 Lt Col Sahib Zad Gul
- 748 Lt Col Muhammad Hayat
- 842 Maj Rashid Ahmed
- 835 Maj Haq Nawaz Kayani SJ & Bar (Shaheed)
- 924 Lt Col Ahmad Khan
- 856 Lt Col Mumtaz Ali, SJ & Bar (He was the only officer decorated with SJ & Bar up to 1971)
- 741 Maj Muhammad Hussain Malik
- 752 Maj AqiI Dad
- 1018 Lt Col Raja Asghar SJ
- 1221 Lt Col Muhammad Aslam Janjua
- 1289 Maj Muhammad Rafique
- 1663 Maj Muhammad Yunis
- 1738 Capt Sultan Ahmed
- 2180 Capt lftikhar Jafar
- 2027 Lt Muhammad Saeed
- 2124 Lt Muhammad lmtiaz
- 888 N/Sub Sultan Sikandar, TJ
- 1048 Ris Muhammad Hanif
1971 War
- 1811 Maj Muhammad Akram, NH
- 835 Lt Col Haq Nawaz Kayani SJ & Bar (Shaheed)
- 971 Lt Col Yaqub Malik
- 1478 Lt Col Muhammad Razaq Khan Mirza
- 1738 Lt Col Sultan Ahmad, SJ & Bar
- 1523 Maj Kazim Kamal, BR (Shaheed)
- 1739 Maj Pir Dad Khan
- 1820 Maj Muhammad Hanif
- 2027 Maj Muhammad Saeed
- 2029 Maj Muhammad Yousaf
- 2181 Maj Muhammad Faheem Durani
- 2561 Maj Muhammad Ajmal
- 2318 Capt Saeed UIlah Jang
- 2839 Capt Munir Akbar
- 2875 Capt Talat Umar
- 2290 Lt Gul Zaman Malik
- 2315 Lt Sikandar Hayat, TJ
- 2575 Capt Daud-Ur-Rehman
- 2908 2/Lt Amjad Khurshid (Shaheed)
1999 War (Kargil)
- 3234 Brig Khalid Nazir, SJ, SI(M)
- 4029 Maj Abdul Wahab, SJ (Shaheed)
- 5027 Capt Muhammad Ammar Hussain
- 5146 Capt Izhar Haider (Shaheed)
List of Commandants
Commandants and their tenure start dates are:[2]
King George Royal Indian Military School Period | |
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Capt. W.L. Clark, A.E.C. | 15 September 1925 |
Capt. H.H. Clark, A.E.C. | 24 August 1930 |
Maj. W.P. Selbie, MC, A.E.C. | 9 April 1933 |
Lt. Col. T.H.L. Stebbing, A.E.C. | 14 May 1937 |
King George Royal Indian Military College Period | |
Lt.Col. T.H.L. Stebbing, A.E.C. | 1943 |
Maj. Aurangzeb Khan, Baloch | 22 August 1947 |
Lt.Col. S.F.H. Zaidi, A.S.C. | 24 February 1948 |
Lt.Col. Muhammad Rafiq, Punjab | 1 July 1952 |
Lt.Col. Sultan Sikandar, Punjab | 28 April 1953 |
Lt.Col. H.L. Edwards, A.E.C. | 9 July 1954 |
Lt.Col. Muhammad Rafiq, Punjab | 18 October 1955 |
Military College Jhelum Period | |
Lt.Col. Muhammad Rafiq, Punjab | 23 March 1956 |
Lt.Col. Muhammad Sardar Khan, A.E.C. | 3 May 1959 |
Lt.Col. Murtaza Hussain Khan, A.E.C. | 15 May 1967 |
Lt.Col. Pervaiz Sikandar, | 22 June 1969 |
Lt.Col. S.A. Qureshi, A.E.C. | 31 December 1969 |
Col. N.D. Ahmed, | 28 October 1970 |
Col. Muhammad Zahur-ul-Haq, | 29 April 1974 |
Col. Muhammad Ikram Ameen, | 15 June 1977 |
Col. Muhammad Said Khokahar, | 23 August 1978 |
Col. Abdul Sattar, | 5 June 1980 |
Brig. Abdul Sattar, | 1 January 1981 |
Brig. Inayat-ur-Rehman Siddiqui, | 1 January 1983 |
Brig. Usman Shah, SI(M) | 13 August 1984 |
Brig. Dr. Noor-ul-Haq, A.E.C | 7 August 1987 |
Brig . Maqsud-ul-Hassan, SI(M), TI(M), | 12 October 1991 |
Brig.(Retd) Afzal Malik SI(M), TI(M) | August 1998 – May 2013 |
Brig. Akhter Pervaiz SI(M), | May 2013 – August 2015 |
Brig. Ahmed Salman, | October 2015 – To Date |
List of Deputy Commandants and Chief Instructors
Names of Deputy Commandants and Chief Instructors and their tenure dates are:[3]
Military College Jhelum Period | |
---|---|
Major Muhammad Waliullah | January 1955 – November 1956 |
Major Khushal Khan | November 1956 – April 1960 |
Major Abdul Aziz Hashmi | June 1960 – June 1961 |
Major Perwaiz Sikandar | June 1961 – June 1964 |
Major Nazir Ahmad | June 1964 – November 1965 |
Major B.A. Malik | May 1966 – December 1969 |
Major Muhammad Zahur-ul-Haq | December 1969 – February 1971 |
Lt. Col. Muhammad A. Saleemi | August 1971 – March 1973 |
Lt. Col. Muhammad Ikram Ameen | March 1973 – October 1973 |
Major Muhammad Bashir | October 1973 – February 1974 |
Lt. Col. Muhammad Ikram Ameen | April 1974 – May 1975 |
Lt. Col. Ghulam Abbas | May 1975 – January 1977 |
Lt. Col. Muhammad Shafi | January 1977 – August 1978 |
Lt. Col. Hamid Riaz Siddiqui | August 1978 – December 1982 |
Lt. Col. Sher Afzal Khan | January 1983 – July 1985 |
Lt. Col. Nasrullah Khan | July 1985 – December 1987 |
Lt. Col. Z.H. Naqvi | December 1987 – April 1989 |
Lt. Col. Salim Iqbal | April 1989 – October 1990 |
Col. Imtiaz Ali | October 1990 – May 1992 |
Col. Ghulam Rasul | May 1992 – June 1993 |
Lt. Col. Safdar Ali Shah | June 1993 – October 1993 |
Lt. Col. Wali Muhammad | October 1993 – August 1995 |
Col. Muhammad Rafi Butt | August 1995 – November 1997 |
Lt. Col. Muhammad Bashir | November 1997 – September 1999 |
Col. Maqbool Ahmed | September 1999 – September 2001 |
Col. Umer Shabbir | September 2001 – September 2003 |
Col. Noor Sultan Lali | September 2003 – July 2005 |
Col. Raheel Ashraf | July 2005 – August 2007 |
Col. Dr. Muhammad Ashraf | August 2007 – July 2009 |
Col. Aamir Hafeez | August 2009 – July 2011 |
Lt. Col. Khwaja Iqbal Ahmed | August 2011 – October 2012 |
Col. Javid Aslam | November 2012 – July 2015 |
Col. Dr. Syed Shahid Rasool | August 2015 – To Date |
List of Adjutants
Names of Adjutants and their tenure dates are:[4]
Military College Jhelum Period | |
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Capt Sher Afzal Khan Malik | 1960 – 1960 |
Capt Nisar Ali Khan | 1960 – 1963 |
Capt Muhammad Muneer Khan | 1963 – 1964 |
Capt Ahmed Jan | 1964 – 1965 |
Capt Ikram Ullah Khan | 1965 – 1967 |
Capt Sheikh Abdul Naeem | 1967 – 1968 |
Capt Shahzada Khurram | 1968 – 1971 |
Capt Sher Afzal Khan | 1971 – 1971 |
Capt Muhammad Tufail | 1971 – 1973 |
Capt Saulat Abbas | 1973 – 1975 |
Capt Muhammad Iqbal | 1975 – 1977 |
Capt Umer Saeed Khan | August 1977 – May 1980 |
Capt Ghulam Abbas Khan | May 1980 – January 1982 |
Capt Umer Saeed Khan | March 1982 – March 1984 |
Capt Ghulam Abbas Khan | March 1984 – June 1986 |
Capt Raja Khaqan Afzal | June 1986 – July 1988 |
Capt Khalid Mehmood | July 1988 – February 1991 |
Capt Taj Muhammad Khan | February 1991 – June 1991 |
Capt Noman Inayat | June 1991 – October 1991 |
Capt Ali Tahir Saeed | October 1991 – September 1992 |
Capt Muhammad Qaddus | September 1992 – September 1995 |
Capt Abdul Qayyum Satti | September 1995 – January 1997 |
Capt Hassan Khattak | January 1997 – August 1998 |
Capt Rehan Mushtaq | August 1998 – June 1999 |
Capt Muhammad Taswar Sattar | June 1999 – November 2001 |
Capt Mubasshir Nadeem | November 2001 – November 2003 |
Capt Numan Kayani | November 2003 – August 2005 |
Capt Aftab Ali Khan | August 2005 – September 2006 |
Capt Nadeem Asif | September 2006 – October 2008 |
Capt Rashid Ullah Khan | October 2008 – January 2010 |
Capt Shahid Iqbal Khan | January 2010 – November 2011 |
Capt Kashif Sattar | November 2011 – October 2012 |
Capt Muhammad Ali Mehdi | October 2012 – December 2013 |
Capt Masood Shah | January 2014 – November 2014 |
Maj Asrar ul Gulzar | December 2014 – December 2015 |
Capt Junaid Lodhi | January 2016 – To Date |
Notable alumni
The college has produced five four-star generals of Pakistan Army, Air Force and Navy, namely former Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff General Muhammad Iqbal Khan (Late), former Chief of Air Staff Air Chief Marshal Zulfiqar Ali Khan (late), former Chief of Naval Staff Admiral Abdul Aziz Mirza, former Vice Chief of Army Staff General Yusaf Khan, and former Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani.
College has more than 30 Swords of Honour, and many gallantry medals including one Nishan-e-Haider Major Muhammad Akram.
The senior notable military officers of the College Alumni include;
- Lt Gen (R) Muhammad Safdar, SBt, Governor of Punjab and Chief of General Staff, GHQ
- Maj Gen (R) Muhammad Akram,
- Maj Gen (R) Ghazanfar Ali Khan, GOC 41st Infantry Division, Quetta and Vice Chief of General Staff, GHQ
- Lt Gen (R) Raza Muhammad Khan, Commander XXXI Corps, Bahawalpur
- Maj Gen Tariq Mehmood, Deputy DG ISI, Islamabad
- Maj Gen Zahir Shah, Director General Survey of Pakistan
- Lt Gen Javed Iqbal,AG GHQ
- Masood Ashraf Raja, English Professor, University of North Texas
- Maj Gen Obaidullah Khan
See also
- Military College Sui
- Army Burn Hall College
- Cadet College Hasan Abdal
- Cadet College Kallar Kahar
- Cadet College Kohat
- Garrison Cadet College Kohat
- PAF Public School Sargodha
- Cadet College Petaro
- Cadet College Palandri
- Cadet College Skardu
- Pakistan Steel Cadet College
- Divisional Public School & College Faisalabad
References
- ↑ http://www.defencejournal.com/2000/nov/british-factor.htm
- ↑ "List of MCJ Commandants". Retrieved 22 August 2016.
- ↑ "List of MCJ Deputy Commandants and Chief Instructors". Retrieved 22 August 2016.
- ↑ "List of MCJ Adjutants". Retrieved 24 August 2016.
External links
- New official website of MCJ
- *Military College Jhelum alumni website: (www.alamgirian.org)
- Military College Jhelum Alumni Website: (www.militarycollegejhelum.com)
- MCJ website (This website has been merged with official Alamgirian websites)