First Republic Day was celebrated at Irwin Amphitheatre, 100 fighter planes, 3 thousand soldiers paraded
Today India is celebrating its 76th Republic Day. But do you know how the country's first Republic Day celebration was?
Republic Day 2025: Today India is celebrating its 76th Republic Day. Prime Minister Narendra Modi, President Draupadi Murmu and Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto will be part of the celebrations. Huge banners with tricolor theme have been put up on Kartavya Path. The theme of this year's tableau is 'Swarnim Bharat: Heritage and Development', which focuses on the completion of 75 years of the Constitution coming into force. But do you know how the first Republic Day parade ... President took charge with 31-gun salute The first celebration of the Republic of India was not held at Rajpath (now Kartavya Path). It was held at the Irwin Amphitheatre in the 1930s, after the country got its first president. Indonesia's first president Sukarno was the chief guest at India's first Republic Day celebration in 1950 and 75 years later, Indonesia's president Prabowo Subianto will be the chief guest at this year's ceremonial parade, which will also feature a marching contingent and a band contingent from that country. On the night of January 26, 1950, iconic public buildings, parks and railway stations were lit up, making the capital city sparkle. The Constitution then declared that India, that is, Bharat, would be a union of states, comprising within the Union the territories hitherto designated as Governors' Provinces, Indian States and Chief Commissioners' Provinces. The President then took the oath and delivered a brief speech first in Hindi and then in English. On the occasion of the first Republic Day, 3,000 officers and men of the three services and police paraded in ceremonial parade accompanied by massed bands. The amphitheatre with a capacity of 15,000 people staged one of the most spectacular military parades in India's recent history. The venue was beautifully decorated, and the stands were decked out in their finest attire. Seven massed bands representing the three-armed forces and the police entertained the audience while army units and local contingents and regiments made the solemn occasion colourful and precise. The countrymen celebrated after the President's celebration President Prasad said in his historic speech, "Today, for the first time in our long and eventful history, we find that this vast territory from Kashmir in the north to Cape Comorin in the south, from Kathiawar and Kutch in the west to Coconada and Kamrup in the east has come under the jurisdiction of one constitution and one union, which takes responsibility for the welfare of more than 320 million men and women living here." Soon after Prasad took oath as the first President of India, there was a festive atmosphere in the country. About the first Republic Day celebrations, the more than 100-year-old Fauji Akhbar had said, "The President At 2:30 p.m. sharp he left the Government House (now Rashtrapati Bhavan) with full state honours, in a 35-year-old carriage specially renovated for the occasion, bearing the new Ashoka capital and drawn by six sturdy Australian horses at a slow pace. As the procession passed the Irwin Amphitheatre, shouts of "Jai" filled the streets and people from trees, rooftops and every possible vantage point broke out in cheers.