The first session of the Indian National…
December 1885 CE
The first session of the Indian National Congress is held in Bombay from December 28–31, 1885, and is attended by seventy-two delegates.
A political party that is later to lead the Indian independence movement, the Indian National Congress had been founded by Indian and British members of the Theosophical Society movement, most notably Allan Octavian Hume.
It has been suggested that the idea was originally conceived in a private meeting of seventeen men after a Theosophical Convention held at Madras in December 1884.
Hume had taken the initiative, and it was in March 1885 that the first notice was issued convening the first Indian National Union to meet at Poona the following December.
Founded in 1885 with the objective of obtaining a greater share in government for educated Indians, the Indian National Congress is initially not opposed to British rule.
The Congress is to meet once a year during December.
Indeed, it is a Scotsman, A. O. Hume, who brings about its first meeting in Bombay, with the approval of Lord Dufferin, the Viceroy.
Womesh Chandra Bonnerjee is the first President of the INC.
The first meeting had been scheduled to be held in Pune, but due to a plague outbreak there, the meeting was later shifted to Bombay.