Skeletons In The Cupboard: Cawnpur Well Massacre
Native runners known as sepoys or infantry men were the backbone of the East India Company army. They constituted more than 90 per cent of the company army numbering 300 thousands. Two months prior to the outbreak of rebellion, in the villages of northwestern provinces of India witnessed the revival of an old custom of circulating chapathis in the night by the Sepoys. It is believed that it was a secret message to be prepared for the mutiny. How it worked ° A runner coming at night carrying few chapathis. ° He deliver them to the chowkidar. ° Chowkidar prepares another set of chapathis. ° These are then sent to other villages through other runners. Irish reporter of Times, William Howard Russel later noted that it was a mysterious and fast method and difficult to trace the origin. It was thought that the mutineers were getting prepared. It was believed that it worked more swiftly than the British mail. It travelled from Farrukhabad to Gurgaon, from Oudh to Rohilk...