Hemendra Mohan Bose (Bengali: হেমেন্দ্র মোহন বসু) (1864 - 1916) was an Indian entrepreneur and the first Indian to manufacture gramophones.[1] Many of his businesses spurred from amateur pursuits.[2]
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Bose was born in 1864 in the Jaysiddhi village of Mymensingh District. His studies were conducted at Medical College Kolkata, where he trained to be a medical professional. Bose began experimenting with perfume after college, and began moving away from the medical field and into business.[3]
In 1894, Bose began a perfume shop in Kolkata where he distilled the perfumes at 62 Bow Bazar Street in Kolkata. The business was titled H-Bose Perfumes. He was quite successful from the outset and purchased merchandising rights for toiletries and a factory as well, which were consolidated at a new space on 6 Shib Narayan Das Lane, Calcutta.[3] By 1900, he had created a printing press and publishing house titled Kuntaline Press at 5 Shib Narayan Das Lane in Kolkata which incidentally was next door to his perfume business. Later, he established India's first bicycle factory in 1903, one of the first among his Swadeshi ventures.[1]
In 1900, Bose began to make sound recordings privately,[4] after he had acquired an Edison phonograph. He began recording his friends in a leisurely fashion. Some of the first people recorded by Bose included J. C. Bose, P. C. Roy, and Rabindranath Tagore.[3] His company became known as "H. Bose recordings" which later became "H. Bose Swadeshi Records". By 1907, the demand for Bose's recordings grew so great that he began producing his own cylinders for recording. H. Bose was a well known supporter of the Swadeshi movement and many of his records covered this subject.[1]
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