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Raosaheb Gogte was born on 16 September, 1916 in Tembhu, Bombay Presidency, British India, is an Indian industrialist (1916–2000). Discover Raosaheb Gogte's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 83 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation Industrialist, philanthropist, educationist, lawyer
Age 83 years old
Zodiac Sign Virgo
Born 16 September, 1916
Birthday 16 September
Birthplace Tembhu, Bombay Presidency, British India
Date of death 26 February, 2000
Died Place Belgaum, Karnataka, India
Nationality India

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 16 September. He is a member of famous lawyer with the age 83 years old group.

Raosaheb Gogte Height, Weight & Measurements

At 83 years old, Raosaheb Gogte height not available right now. We will update Raosaheb Gogte's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

Physical Status
Height Not Available
Weight Not Available
Body Measurements Not Available
Eye Color Not Available
Hair Color Not Available

Who Is Raosaheb Gogte's Wife?

His wife is Ushatai Chiplunkar (m. 1943)

Family
Parents Not Available
Wife Ushatai Chiplunkar (m. 1943)
Sibling Not Available
Children 3

Raosaheb Gogte Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Raosaheb Gogte worth at the age of 83 years old? Raosaheb Gogte’s income source is mostly from being a successful lawyer. He is from India. We have estimated Raosaheb Gogte's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2024 Under Review
Net Worth in 2023 Pending
Salary in 2023 Under Review
House Not Available
Cars Not Available
Source of Income lawyer

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Timeline

1795

Gogte's father was a practicing Surgeon in Karad, with an L. M. & S. from the National Medical College in Calcutta, while his mother hailed from the aristocratic Latey (Bhagwat) family who had been hereditary castellans of the Sadashivgad in Karad under the Peshwas since the Battle of Kharda in 1795.

Gogte was born the eldest of five children, he had two younger brothers and two younger sisters.

Through his brother Vaman, Gogte was a paternal uncle to Anjali Dandekar, the first wife of Kokuyo Camlin head Dilip Dandekar, and to Jayant, husband of academician Jyoti Gogte.

Through his brother Vasudev, Gogte was a paternal uncle to Rekha Agashe, the wife of BCCI vice-president Dnyaneshwar Agashe, and thus a great-uncle to Mandar, Ashutosh and Sheetal Agashe.

He was also a great-uncle of poet Rashmi Parekh, the granddaughter of his brother Vasudev through his second daughter Madhuri.

1916

Balkrishna Mahadev Gogte (IAST: Bāḷakr̥shṇa Mahādeva Gogaṭe; 16 September 1916 – 26 February 2000), known colloquially as Raosaheb Gogte (IAST: Rāvasāheba Gogaṭe), was an Indian lawyer, industrialist, philanthropist and educationist.

Gogte was the founder of the Gogte Group of companies, involved in mining, minerals, salts and textiles.

He gave his name to the Gogte Institute of Technology, Gogte College of Commerce, the Gogte Hall at the Shivaji Park Gymkhana in Dadar, Mumbai, the Gogte Suite at the Oberoi Hotel in Mumbai, the Gogte Hall at the Belgaum Chamber of Commerce, and the Gogte Circle in Belgaum.

Gogte was born on 16 September 1916 at Tembhu, at the time a part of the Bombay Presidency, to Dr. Mahadev Gogte (1891–1953) and Kamlabai Gogte (née Ambutai Latey).

Their family was Chitpavan brahmin, and was established as the gharana at Karad since Gogte's grandfather's time.

1925

Beginning in 1925, Gogte began his education at the Tilak High School in Karad, before he was sent to Jalgaon in 1926, to be educated under his paternal uncle Narayanrao Gogte, who was headmaster at the New English School there.

1928

In 1928, he accompanied his uncle to Chalisgaon, where they would be members of the Gandhi Ashram there, alongside Hari Vinayak Pataskar.

1929

In 1929, he returned to Karad to continue his education at the Tilak High School, and while there, was a classmate of Yashwantrao Chavan till 1930.

1930

By the early 1930s, both his father and uncle had joined the Indian independence movement as Gandhians.

1931

By 1931, Gogte's father moved their family to Belgaum, where Gogte continued his education at the Chintamanrao High School at Shahapur, then in the Princely State of Sangli.

While at school at Shahapur, Gogte was distinguished at elocution, was elected as general secretary of the student body, and took part in several civil unrests as part of the Indian freedom movement and was once arrested for reading out an Indian National Congress bulletin in public.

1932

In early 1932, at sixteen, he survived an assassination attempt from two students at his school, who bombed the venue of the event where Gogte and a few other students were staging Govind Ballal Deval's 1916 play Samshay Kallol.

1933

Though of noble origin as descendants of chieftains from the Peshwai, the family was relatively impoverished, and in 1933, Gogte's father abandoned his medical practice to establish a flour mill.

1935

That same year, aged seventeen, he matriculated from school by passing his University of Bombay examinations, and went on to study law, graduating his high court pleader's examination in 1935, aged nineteen.

He then moved to Mumbai to work at the Bombay High Court for a year.

1936

While a guest at his maternal first cousin Laxman "Rajabhau" Bhave's residence in Mumbai in 1936, Gogte became acquainted with Ushatai Chiplunkar.

She was the younger sister of his cousin's wife, and they were engaged shortly after their acquaintance.

In 1936, at the age of twenty one, Gogte began his practice as an advocate in Belgaum.

One of his first notable cases was that of two cutler women from Baluchistan who had been charged with cheating, criminal intimidation and affray.

His defense got them acquitted, but Gogte's failure to secure the fees for his service led the women to offer him two Rampuri knives they had made as payment.

This incident, alongside the moniker the two women addressed him with (Raosaheb) was widely circulated in legal circles and press, resulting in the colloquial name by which he would be known the rest of his professional and personal life.

Beginning in 1936, Gogte taught law at the Karnatak Law Society, alongside his advocacy work, and would go on to form the Belgaum District Students Conference.

Around this time, Gogte was acquitted on a false charge of misappropriating sheets of irons given to him by the Iron and Steel Controller of Belgaum.

1939

When the Motor Vehicles Act was amended in 1939, he was appointed to be the Honorary Secretary of the Bus Operators' Union of Belgaum by Keshavrao Gokhale of the Bombay Legislative Assembly, where he was involved in several cases of accident insurance, route allocation, and interstate road tax negotiations with the Princely States of Sangli and Kolhapur.

During such a time, when negotiations for route allocations crossing interstate lines, between the union and the Princely States came to an impasse, Gogte was warranted for arrest by the Chief Minister of the Kolhapur State, but evaded arrest by boarding a train bound for Miraj dressed as a woman, after being informed by the private secretary of Shivaji VII, the Maharaja of Kolhapur at the time.

After this incidence, the negotiations between the union and the States were formally taken up and resolved by the Deccan States Agency and the Government of Bombay.

1942

By the end of 1942, Gogte had organised the All India Motor Union Congress and was engaged as the chief counsel for all cases between the union and the Bombay Government.

1943

The couple married on 7 June 1943, and would go on to have three sons, Arvind (b. 1944), Anand (b. 1946) and Shirish (b. 1950).

By 1943, Gogte was engaged as chief counsel for cases between bus operators' unions in Belgaum, Pune, Nashik and Ahmedabad and their respective Regional Transport Authorities.

1944

By 1944, Gogte had secured loans for his own trucking business.

When India's involvement in the Second World War led to petrol rationing, he decided to emulate a British company in Madras, and establish a Gas-fired power plant that used charcoal to generate fuel for his trucking vehicles.

This venture proved unsuccessful.

1945

In between 1945 and 1948, Gogte next ventured, yet again unsuccessfully, into setting up a Steel rolling mill in Karad.

1950

He would continue to legally represent various sectors of the transport industry into the 1950s.

1952

In 1952, Gogte got involved in the business of transporting mackerel from the coasts of Karwar to inner Maharashtra and Karnataka.