Speaking on the occasion, Chairman of Tata Sons Cyrus P Mistry said Jamsetji's focus was two-pronged, each equally important and interconnected.
"The first was the industrialisation of the country and building the requisite human capital. The second was conducting business in a fashion that positively impacted the quality of lives of the people it touched,"
Jamsetji is the first industrialist felicitated by the Indian government in such a manner.
He founded Tata Group, India's largest business conglomerate. He was born on March 3, 1839 in Navsari, a small town in south Gujarat.
Jamsetji Tata founded the Tata group in 1868. He worked for building India that would be an industrial power. The translation of his vision led to creation of India's first integrated steel plant (Tata Steel's Jamshedpur plant - 1907), hydroelectric power plants that service Mumbai's needs till today (Tata Power's Khopoli plant - 1910), and the Indian Institute of Science (1909).
The government had earlier honoured Jamsetji by releasing postal stamps - one in 1958 and another in 1965.
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