On 17 July 1924, as the mail boat docked at its usual berth in Kingstown, it brought the first head of state to the new Irish Free State. A contingent of the newly formed Irish National Guard and a number of Irish Free State ministers waited on the quayside. After a slight delay, to the astonishment of a group of curious bystanders, a figure in a silk dress coat, white leggings and a turban adorned with a large emerald emerged from the mail boat. His dark face wreathed in smiles, he advanced to greet the waiting ministers. Thus began the nine-year association with Ireland of His Highness Kumar Shri Ranjitsinhji, Jam Saheb of Nawanager, a small state in north-western India.
The desire to escape from his mounting debts, irate debtors and sponging friends, as well as to indulge his passion for fly-fishing, which by 1924 had replaced cricket as his chosen sport, made him look outside England. That Ranji should have chosen the Irish Free State, just recently violently broken away from the empire that he supported, is more a matter of fate. As a member of the Standing Committee of Indian Princes representing the interests of the independent Indian states in the face of the growing nationalism of Ghandi and Nehru, Ranji was appointed a legate to the Assembly of the League of Nations in 1923. At Geneva he made the acquaintance of the Irish delegation, led by W.T. Cosgrave, president of the new Irish Free State, who encouraged him to come to Ireland.
Became the biggest emloyer in Connemara
For the next nine years ‘the Ranji’, as he became more familiarly known, put his celebrity status and talents to work to improve the lives of the people in the locality, whose living conditions were as bad as those in any part of India. Living in thatched cottages, most with earthen floors, without electricity, running water or sanitation, tuberculosis and typhus were widespread. Meagre income came from subsistence farming supplemented by some inshore fishing. Ranji lent his support to the establishment of cottage industries, the breeding of Connemara ponies and fish conservation, and contributed to church-run events. He initiated innovation and improvement schemes on his estate, giving jobs to over 50 local people, making him the largest employer in Connemara. He became the fledgling Irish Tourist Board’s dream, as his presence in Ireland and his entertainment of many high-profile guests at Ballynahinch helped elevate Ireland as a tourist destination. ‘If it’s safe enough for Ranji it’s safe enough for anyone,’ one report stated. Sending his nieces to be educated by the Benedictine nuns at nearby Kylemore Abbey further confirmed his commitment to Connemara.