1772 esplanade boundary

 n 1772, a survey of the city fixed the limit of the Esplanade with six

boundary stones. At least one of these 20 feet tall masonry obelisks

remains to this day — at Moor Street near Dare House, cared for by

Parry & Co., announcing in granite the Esplanade's boundary as of

January 1, 1773. In 1775 there was a proposal to plant a hedge right

around the limits of Madras. The proposal was dropped, but a perusal

of the survey indicates the Madras limits at the time: the Adyar River

in the south, up to a point near the present Mount Road-Chamier's

Road junction, then along Mount Road and Nungambakkam Tank

Road, then around Chetput and Vepery and so to the sea at a point

a mile distant from Black Town's northern wall. There still survives a

northern boundary stone on Monegar Choultry Street.

The last time, in John Company's day, that the limits of Madras were

fixed, was on November 2, 1798 when they were formally announced

by the Governor-in-Council and a new map was drawn. The limits to

the south and west were as proposed in 1775, but the western limits

now moved north, past Chetput to take in Kilpauk and Perambur.

From north of Perambur,

the northern boundary ran

to the

sea,

incorporating Tondiarpet. Thus, by the beginning of the 19th Century,

Madras City had almost taken its present shape.

When Madras celebrated its tercentenary in 1939, the only major

change in the City's extent from the 1798 limits was the inclusion of

Mambalam, in 1923, making the railway line the western boundary.