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 Inscriptions Card Index

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Date transcribed2013-05-20
Transcribed byRobert Charnock

Surname  ARRATOON    
Given Name  Carapiet Chater    
Date of Death  1857    
Place of Death  Calcutta    
Place of Burial  Barisal Cemetery    
Age  76 yrs    
Inscription  One Carapiet Chater Arratoon, was received by the Serampore Missionaries in 1808 and sent to work in Jessore and in 1812 to Surat via Bombay. He died in Calcutta 1857, aged 76 years    
Plot #  #23 D/- 1836    
Notes usually added later in freehand  From the story of Lal Bazar Church, Calcutta by Wenger. Almost certainly the father of Mr. J.C. Aratoon who was buried in Barisal    
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The data reproduced here was accumulated over many years by the late genealogists Lt.-Col Hubert Kendall Percy-Smith, FSG, and Brigadier Humphry Bullock, CIE, OBE, who realized the need to gather records of persons who served in British India as gravestone inscriptions were already subject to damage and erosion. They gathered them from a variety of sources published about the sub-continent, from church records, by transcribing records of gravestones, etc. The co-operation between these two gentlemen was very close and it is difficult, on many occasions, to determine which of them was responsible for the differing details of their work.

On his death, Lt.-Col. Percy-Smith bequeathed his work to the National Army Museum who subsequently made a gift of it to BACSA, the 'British Association for Cemeteries in South Asia'. BACSA have most kindly licensed us to reproduce their holdings here. Brigadier Bullock's daughter, Mrs Anne Macdonald, has generously given us to permission to publish his work.

It may be pointed out that Percy-Smith and Bullock endeavoured to compile service histories and even pedigrees using their source material. Their data in this respect is included in our transcriptions but it should be understood that it represents deductions made by these two gentlemen.

It should also be pointed out that some of their data may have been obtained directly, or otherwise, from the same sources that we present elsewhere. This may, of course, result in duplication which we trust will be acceptable to researchers
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