Mahomed returned to India in 1193.
Mahomed died in 1851 at 32 Grand Parade, Brighton.
At this time Ali Mahomed was in his brother-in-law's house.
However, Mahomed was forced to close his luxurious restaurant in 1812.
The business was an immediate success and‘Dean Mahomed' became known as‘Dr Brighton'.
This business was an immediate success and Dean Mahomed became known as“Dr. Brighton”.
Nonetheless, Mahomed was forced to close his luxurious restaurant in 1812
and sought to reinvent himself.
Nine years after the occurrence of the incident depicted in the last chapter,
Ali Mahomed saw Hemadpant and related to him the following story.
Sake Dean Mahomed was a Anglo-Indian traveller,
surgeon and entrepreneur who was one of the most notable early non-European immigrants to the Western World.
Sake Dean Mahomed was an Anglo-Indian traveller,
surgeon and entrepreneur who was one of the most notable early non-European immigrants to the Western World.
That is probably the reason why Maulana Mahomed Ali, a great Indian but a true Muslim,
preferred to be buried in Jerusalem rather than in India.
Hearing this, Ali Mahomed sent his Mehta(Manager) to his Bandra house and got
all the pictures of the saints in his house thrown into the sea.
Before opening his restaurant, Mahomed had worked in London for nabob Basil Cochrane, who had
installed a steam bath for public use in his house in Portman Square and promoted its medical benefits.
The term and
service was introduced in Britain by a Bengali entrepreneur Sake Dean Mahomed in 1814, when Dean,
together with his Irish wife, opened a shampooing bath known as‘Mahomed's Indian Vapour Baths' in Brighton, England.
Once the latter saw it, took it to a photographer and got it enlarged to life-size and distributed copies of the same amongst his relations and friends,
including Ali Mahomed who fixed it up in his Bandra house.