In January 1784,
Sir William Jones sent out a circular-letter to a selected number of British residents of Calcutta with a view to establish a society for the Asiatic studies. At his invitation, 30 British residents met in the Grand Jury Room of the Supreme Court (in Calcutta's
Fort William) on 15 January 1784. The meeting was presided over by Sir Robert Chambers. At this meeting, Jones explained the aims of the Society he would establish. The
Memorandum of Articles of the Asiatic Society, prepared by Jones said: The bounds of investigations will be the geographical limits of Asia, and within these limits its enquiries will be extended to whatever is performed by man or produced by nature.Notable early members were
Charles Wilkins and
Alexander Hamilton (the cousin of the American statesman). Initially, the Grand Jury Room of the Supreme Court was used for the meetings of the members, who had to pay a quarterly fee of two
mohurs. The members were elected through ballot-voting. On 29 September 1796, the Society decided to have its own building. J.H. Harrington, then vice-president, selected the corner of
Park Street and
Chowringhee Road (present location) for the Society's house. The site was granted to the Society on 15 May 1805. The original plan for the new building was prepared by
Captain Thomas Preston. The French architect Jean-Jacques Pichou made certain modifications to it and constructed a two-storeyed building at the site. This 15,071 ft2 building was built at a cost of Rs. 30,000. The first quarterly meeting of the Society for 1808 was held at its new building on 3 February 1808. From 1784 to 1828, only Europeans were elected members of the Society. In 1829, at the initiative of
H.H. Wilson, a number of Indians were elected members, which include
Dwarakanath Tagore,
Baboo Rajchunder Das, Sivchandra Das, Maharaja Baidyanath Roy, Maharaja Bunwari Govind Roy, Raja Kalikrishna Bahadur,
Ram Comul Sen, and Prasanna Coomar Tagore (member of the
Pathuriaghata branch of the
Tagore family). On 12 December 1832,
Ram Comul Sen was elected 'Native Secretary'. Later,
Rajendralal Mitra became the first Indian President in 1885. Both the orientalist
Brajendranath De, and one of his grandsons, the historian
Barun De, were for some time vice-president of the Asiatic Society. ==Library==