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ALMORA , a See also: town and See also: district of See also: British See also: India, the chief town and administrative headquarters of the See also: Kumaon division of the See also: United Provinces, situated on a See also: mountain-See also: ridge of the Himalayas 5494 ft. above the' See also: sea
.
Pop
.
(1901) 8596
.
The town has a See also: college called after See also: Sir See also: Henry
See also: Ramsay; a See also: government high school; a Christian girls' school; and a large cantonment
.
The town was captured by the Gurkhas in 1790, who constructed a fort on the eastern extremity of the ridge
.
Another citadel, Fort Moira, is situated on the other extremity of the ridge
.
Almora is also celebrated as the scene of the British victory which terminated the war with See also: Nepal in See also: April 1815, and which resulted in the evacuation of Kumaon by the Gurkhas and the annexation of the province by the British
.
The DISTRICT of ALMORA was constituted in 1891, together with Naini Tal, by a redistribution of the two former districts of Kumaon and the Tarai
.
It lies among the mountains of Kumaon, between the upper See also: waters of the See also: Ganges and the See also: Gogra, here called the See also: Kali
.
See also: Area, 5419 sq. m.; pop
.
(1901) 465,893, showing an increase of 13% during the See also: decade
.
See also: Tea is grown in the district, which includes the military sanatorium of Ranikhet
.
The nearest railway via Naini Tal is the extension of the Oudh andSee also: Rohilkhand See also: line from near See also: Bareilly to Kathgodam
.
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