annexed Bengal in 1765, and Assam in 1838 As early as 1868, the government saw the need for an independent administration in the eastern portion of the
Bengal Presidency. They felt that
Fort William in
Calcutta, the capital of British India, was already overburdened. By 1903, it dawned on the government on the necessity of partitioning Bengal and creating prospects for Assam's commercial expansion. It was promised to increase investment in education and jobs in the new province called Eastern Bengal and Assam. initiated the creation of Eastern Bengal and Assam in Dacca, 1906
Lord Curzon, the
Viceroy of India, proposed the
Partition of Bengal and put it into effect on 16 October 1905. Dacca, the former Mughal capital of Bengal, regained its status as a
seat of government. Sir
Bampfylde Fuller was the province's first Lieutenant Governor. He served for a year in office, and resigned in 1906 after disagreements with
Lord Minto and pressure from the
British Parliament. He was succeeded by
Sir Lancelot Hare (1906–1911), who in turn was succeeded by
Sir Charles Stuart Bayley (1911–1912). The partition stoked controversy among Indian nationalists, who described it as an attempt to "
divide and rule" the Bengali homeland. The merchant class in Calcutta also feared losing their economic influence in the region. In 1906, the
All India Muslim League was formed in Dacca during the
All India Muhammadan Educational Conference, as a response to rising Hindu nationalism. This in turn sparked the creation of the
All India Hindu Mahasabha. At the
Delhi Durbar in 1911, King-Emperor
George V announced that the British government had decided to annul the partition. This move was seen as an appeasement of hardline
communal forces. Eastern Bengal was reunited with western Bengali districts, and Assam was made a chief commissioner's province. ==Geography==