| The Savoy at night. Photo: Puneet Paliwal. |
I had been to Mussoorie twice before. But this time, instead of coming to an end at Library Chowk, the Mall seemed to lead further up the hill, into the mist. A steep driveway curved into the massive grounds of what could well have been a castle. The taxi driver looked a bit sceptical when Puneet, the photographer, and I said this was indeed our hotel. One couldn’t really blame him. With the Savoy’s fairy-tale turrets as backdrop, we looked even scruffier than we were.
And yet, the Savoy isn’t quite the daunting place you think it might be. That might have much to do with Mussoorie itself. Unlike a Shimla, where the official presence of colonial government meant that Appearances had to be Maintained, Mussoorie-Landour was always an unstuffy place. Reputed as a place for romantic assignations, Mussoorie was all about being British without the stiff upper lip. And the Savoy was at the centre of the party. Travel writer Lowell Thomas, in India: Land of the Black Pagoda (1930), described the Savoy’s (in)famous Separation Bell: “There is a hotel in Mussoorie where they ring a bell just before dawn so that the pious may say their prayers and the impious get back to their own beds.” As Hyder’s short story has it: “In the ballroom of the Savoy the Anglo-Indian crooner and his band will soon start ‘Enjoy yourself, it’s later than you think.’”
Standing in the overhanging gallery, I first ask about the Savoy ghosts. Like Mussoorie itself, the hotel has long had a reputation for haunters. The most famous of these is Lady Frances Garnett-Orme, a 49-year-old spiritualist who was found dead in her room at the Savoy in 1910. The cause of death was poisoning, but the poisoner was never caught. But the technique—adding bromides to the lady’s own bottle of medicine to cause the strychnine already in it to sink to the bottom, where it was consumed by the victim herself in one single lethal dose—was so convolutedly foolproof that Rudyard Kipling apparently wrote to Arthur Conan Doyle, suggesting that he incorporate it in a story. He didn’t, but Agatha Christie did. In The Mysterious Affair at Styles, Christie had her English country-house murder of one Lady Inglethorpe achieved by the same method, to be solved by Hercule Poirot in his first-ever fictional appearance.
| Photo: Puneet Paliwal |
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The information
Getting there
Mussoorie is
around 32km from Dehradun Railway Station and 55km from Jolly Grant
Airport. The best overnight train is the New Delhi-Dehradun AC Express,
which leaves New Delhi at midnight and reaches Dehradun at 5.40am the
next day. The Dehradun Shatabdi is another option.
The Savoy
The Savoy
(+91-135-2637000, is located at the Library end of the Mall Road. It has
50 rooms available in three categories: Savoy Chambers, Fortune
Exclusive Rooms and Fortune Suites. All rooms open out onto the large
front balcony, but the small individual wooden sit-outs at the back have
better views. Weekday packages range from Rs 8,499 to Rs 14,999 per
night (plus taxes). Weekend packages range from Rs 10,499 to Rs 16,4999
per night (plus taxes). Breakfast is complimentary. The Savoy Christmas
package (2 nights, 3 days) starts at Rs 26,555. The New Year’s Eve
package (2 nights, 3 days) starts at Rs 41,999.
What to see & do
The walk
from Library Bazaar up to the Savoy is short but steep, and goes past
the Savoy Post Office—this is probably the only hotel in the world to
have its own post office. Mussoorie is very much a walking town. You can
amble down the Mall, eating momos, buying woollen socks at streetside
stalls and stopping off at the Aquarium. You can also take a long and
pleasant walk down the Camel’s Back Road: look out for the point from
which you can see the rock shaped like a camel’s hump that gives the
road its name.
Mussoorie’s two other old colonial hotels still exist, but barely: the Hakman’s Grand Hotel on the Mall has gone to seed, while the Charleville Hotel in Happy Valley has become the Lal Bahadur Shastri National Academy, where Indian civil servants are trained. In Landour, inspect St Paul’s Church, where Jim Corbett’s parents were married, and the cemeteries. Look out for the houses of Landour’s famous residents: the writer Ruskin Bond, the actor Victor Banerjee, Tom Alter and Vishal Bhardwaj. It is traditional to buy jam from Prakash Brothers at Sisters Bazaar, and stop for waffles at Char Dukaan. For great Tibetan food in cheery surroundings, try Doma’s Inn (Ivy Cottage Landour Cantt, 0135-2634873). For a posher (very good) meal, stop by the restored Rokeby Manor hotel.