List of Indian engineering colleges before Independence

The impulse for creation of centers of technical training came from the British rulers of India, and it arose out of the necessity for the training of overseers for construction and maintenance of public buildings, roads, canals, and ports, and for the training of artisans and craftsmen for the use of INSTRUMENTS, and apparatus needed for the army, the navy, and the survey department.While superintending engineers were mostly recruited from Britain, lower grades-craftsmen, artisans and sub-overseers who were recruited locally. The necessity to make them more efficient, led to the establishment of industrial schools attached to The INDIAN Ordnance Factories and other engineering establishments. The first such industrial school was established at Guindy, Madras, in 1794, attached to the Gun Carriage Factory. This industrial school became ultimately the Guindy College of Engineering (College of Engineering, Guindy) and affiliated to the Madras University in 1858.

The first engineering college was established in the U.P. in 1847 for the training of Civil Engineers at Roorkee, Thomason College (which later become IIT Roorkee), which made use of the large workshops and public buildings there that were erected for the Upper Ganges Canal.In pursuance of the Government policy, three Engineering Colleges were opened by AbOUT 1856 in the three Presidencies. In Bengal, a College called the Calcutta College of Civil Engineering was opened at the Writers' Buildings in November 1856.In Bombay,the overseers' school at Pune eventually became the Pune College of Engineering and affiliated to the Bombay University in 1858.In the Madras Presidency, the industrial school attached to the Gun Carriage Factory became ultimately the Guindy College of Engineering and affiliated to the Madras University (1858). British opened Harcourt Butler Technological Institute, Kanpur for chemical sciences in 1921 in then United Provinces, now Uttar Pradesh. Indian School Of Mines, Dhanbad was established by British Indian Government on the lines of the Royal School of Mines - London, and was formally opened on 9 December 1926 by Lord Irwin, the then Viceroy of India.The PEC University of Technology, Chandigarh was originally established as Mugalpura Engineering College at Lahore (now in Pakistan) on November 9, 1921. The name of the college was later changed to Maclagan Engineering College on March 19, 1924.

In 1947 when India became independent, there were 36 institutions for first-degree engineering education, with an annual intake of about 2500 students.

Engineering college

Location

Established

Remarks

Thomason College of Civil Engineering

Roorkee, Uttarakhand

1847

Bengal Engineering College

Shibpur, West Bengal

1856

College of Engineering, Pune

Pune

1856

College of Engineering, Guindy

Madras

1858

Started as survey school in May 1749. Upgraded to an engineering college in 1858.

Indian Institute of Science(Tata Institute)

Bangalore

1911

College of Engineering and Technology, Jadavpur

Jadavpur, Calcutta

1912

College of Engineering, Bangalore

Bangalore

1917

–

Banaras Engineering College, BHU

Varanasi

1919

Harcourt Butler Technological Institute(HBTI)

Kanpur

1921

Indian School Of Mines, Jharkhand

Dhanbad

1926

College of Engineering, Bihar

Patna

1936

Established as a survey training school in 1886.

In 2004 the government of India upgraded the college to National Institutes of Technology status

College of Engineering, Trivandrum

Trivandrum

1939

College of Engineering, Aligarh

Aligarh

1939

Victoria Jubilee Technical Institute

Bombay

1946

Established as a diploma school in 1887

College of Engineering (Annamalai)

-

1945

College of Engineering, Calcutta

Calcutta

1946

B M S College of Engineering

Bangalore

1946

India's first private engineering college

Birla College of Engineering

Pilani

1946

Arthur Hope College of Technology, Coimbatore

Coimbatore

1945

Government Engineering College, Jabalpur

Jabalpur

7 July 1947

Raised to degree standard (college/university).