AdmiralJal Cursetji, PVSM (20 May 1919 – 29 January 1991) was a former Flag Officer in the Indian Navy. He served as the 8th Chief of the Naval Staff (CNS) from 1 March 1976 until 28 February 1979. He was the first hydrographer to serve as the CNS.
Born in a Parsi family in Jabalpur, Cursetji joined the Training Ship Dufferin in 1935, where his batchmate was Nilakanta Krishnan. After training on various ships of the Royal Navy, he served on the Aubrietia-class sloopHMIS Clive (L79) and the Bathurst-class corvetteHMIS Bombay (J249). In 1944, he commanded HMIS Bombay. After specialising in hydrography in the United Kingdom, he was tasked with the planning of setting up a hydrographic office in India. He served as the Surveyor-in-Charge, Marine Survey of India and commanded the survey ship INS Investigator. He was the first Indian to serve as the Chief Hydrographer of the Navy, from 1955 to 1957.
Cursetji was born in 1919 in Jabalpur, Madhya Pradesh in a Parsi family. He attended the St. Aloysius Senior Secondary School in Jabalpur. In 1935, he was successful in the entrance examination and joined the Indian Mercantile Marine Training Ship (IMMTS) Dufferin. After two years, he took the examination for entry into the Navy. He was one of the two cadets who were successful and joined the Royal Navy – the other being Nilakanta Krishnan.[3]
After the independence of India, Cursetji opted to join the Indian Navy. He was the senior most Indian officer in the Hydrographic Survey branch, and took part in the coastal surveys of Burma, Malaya and Indonesia. In April 1949, then an acting Commander, he was sent to the United Kingdom to prepare a report on establishing a Hydrographic office in India. After spending about a year, he returned in early 1950 and submitted his report to Naval HQ.[13] The Marine Survey of India (MSI) was established in 1874 in Calcutta and was responsible for the hydrographic surveys. It was headed by the Surveyor-in-Charge.[14]
In 1950, Cursetji took over as the Surveyor-in-Charge of the Marine Survey of India. He headed the MSI for about three years, till 1953. After relinquishing charge, he took command of the survey shipINS Investigator. On 1 Jun 1954, MSI was relocated to Dehradun, its present location, and was renamed Naval Hydrographic Office. The appointment of Surveyor-in-Charge Marine Survey of India was re-designated Chief Hydrographer of the Navy.[14] On 15 November 1955, he was promoted to acting rank of captain and appointed the Chief Hydrographer of the Navy.[15][16] He was the second incumbent and the first Indian to hold the appointment. This appointment was later re-designated Chief Hydrographer to the Government of India in 1964. Cursetji served as the Chief Hydrographer till November 1957.[14]
On 5 November 1957, Cursetji was appointed Captain (D) 11th Destroyer Squadron as well as the Commanding Officer of the lead destroyer of the squadron, INS Rajput (D141). Apart from the Rajput, the flotilla consisted of INS Ranjit (1949) and INS Rana (1942).[17] Later that year, on 31 December, he was promoted to the substantive rank of captain.[18] In 1961, Cursetji was appointed the first Naval attaché at the Embassy of India, Washington, D.C. The Ambassador of India to the United States during his tenure was Braj Kumar Nehru.[19] He simultaneously held the office of Naval adviser to the High Commissioner of India to Canada in Ottawa. He spent about four years in this appointment, till 1965. After returning to India, he was appointed CAPBRAX (captain naval barracks) and Commanding Officer of INS Angre. After a short stint, Cursetji was appointed the fourth commanding officer of the flagship of the Indian Navy – INS Vikrant, then the only aircraft carrier in Asia. He took over from Captain V. A. Kamath on 4 November 1966.[20] In mid-1967, he led the ship in large air-sea exercises in the Arabian Sea which was witnessed by the Prime Minister, Indira Gandhi.[21]
On 27 February 1973, with Admiral Sourendra Nath Kohli taking over as the Chief of the Naval Staff, Cursetji took command of the Western Naval Command. He was promoted to the substantive rank of vice admiral on 1 March that year.[26]
After a full three-year tenure, Cursetji retired on 28 February 1979.[34]
Personal life and legacy
Cursetji married Navaz Dallas in 1955. The couple had two daughters – Meher Cursetji Rafaat and Rashida Cursetji Mendu.[35][36] He died in Mumbai in January 1991.[37][38]
The Admiral Jal Cursetji rolling trophy, awarded to the best survey ship is named for him.[39] The Western Naval Command held a talk to observe the birth centenary of Cursetji in 2019.[38]