Karachi, which is connected with centuries of history, a part of which was of historical importance, which has been demolished at that time in the name of development, something like this has happened to Boat Basin, Bath Island, Clifton and Gazri.
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Boat basin
This area was built in 1912 on 21 acres of land, before this there were bigger boats and motor launches bottom which had four docks, there were three rafts made of cement iron, from here people went for a boat ride
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Bath Island:
The name suggests that it was an island, which the locals called "Kharkhadi", the island was thirty feet high, until 1935, it had sea water coming from the west, Karachi people used to come to take a bath here,
Naomal in his book Memoirs say there were traces of the Old Town on this island, further says I wrote a letter to the Friar on April 17, 1869 that there was a cliff surrounded by the water between Chauney and Clifton, at one time on that high point Well, this city was inhabited by the king "Dilu Roy" to the north of it and between Clifton and Kamari, the Chinese "Chhni Nar" drain was flowing. When sea waves rose, the water flowed up to the Chhni Nar and the boats passed through the city. I used to come, the letter added that I was between the ages of ten and fifteen, I saw signs of many houses there, people went there in the rain to look for valuable things, Naomal letter reminds the Friar that this is the place I had You had seen it once, then the British government did it on it.
Had a small stone replaced,
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Clifton
Clifton: was called "Mahadev Ratneshwar Temple". Because locals called Mahadev, in this area Hindus used to have Masan. The current Bilawal Chowrangi road was called Masan Road, it was an island connected to the city by a wooden bridge and sea water.
Abdullah Shah Ghazi's shrine and Mahadev Ratneshwar Temple used to collide, Mahadev was also called by many people after the wind monkey, there were two 96 feet tall sand dunes named after the old wind monkey, located three miles south of the city from the General Post Office Because of being, sea breezes were blowing all the time, that's why the wind chimes used to say,
In the English era, this area was named Clifton. According to Burton, the name was given by English women but Burton did not mention the name. Mr. Kalmati thinks it must have been attributed to Colonel Preddy's assistant collector Mr. "Clifton".
Alexander F. Bailey writes about Clifton in his book Kurrachee: Past, Present and Future, that the name Clifton commemorates the birthplace of British General Charles Napier, who occupied Sindh, which is in Britain.
The wooden bridge was built by the British in 1877, the sea retreated 1350 feet in 1919 and the fixed bridge was built in 1921, in 1917, Jhangir Kothari built his house and garden and donated three lakh recreational place "Jhangir Kuthari Parade and Lady Laidfire" completed in 1921.
In the census of 1941 AD, Clifton's inhabited land was 1120 acres, where 753 people lived in 309 houses with slippery huts, where there used to be only one road, at that time these areas are beautiful and developed areas of Karachi,