Talk:Tomáš Baťa/Archive 1

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BetacommandBot (talk) 02:41, 12 February 2008 (UTC)

Language
This (or at least parts, didn't check it all) could use a rewrite in better English. No offense against my fellow Czechs (who else would contribute to a page about Baťa, eh?), but unless we want to shift this to Simple English, something should be done about the grammar. It's a shame, too, it's a nice long page for someone who was mostly active outside the English-speaking world (granted, he had factories and shops everywhere, but himself pretty much stayed in Zlín, then-Czechoslovakia). I'd do it myself, and if I remember I will, but right now I'm swamped in work that has to get precedence. 89.102.231.111 (talk) 23:15, 16 May 2011 (UTC) User:Misacek01 currently logged out

Listing (moved to the talk page)
Following is listing of key building and urban development carried by the Bata group.
 * In Czechoslovakia;
 * Zlin, Czech Republic (Tomas and Jan Bata)
 * Otrokovice – Batov, Czech Republic(1930–1934)
 * Trebíc, Czech Republic (1933)
 * Factory and small colony in Bošany, Slovakia (1931–1934)
 * SVIT, Slovakia (1934)
 * Bata Canal 60 Kilometers, Slovakia (1935)
 * Nové Zámky (1935)
 * Liptovský sv. Mikuláš, Slovakia: (1938) [factory and small colony]
 * Batovany (Present Partizánske), Slovakia (1938)
 * Zruc nad Sázavou (1938),
 * Sezimovo Ústí (1939)


 * In Europe;
 * Chelmek, Poland (1932)
 * Möhlin, Switzerland (1933)
 * Best The Netherlands, (1933–1934)
 * East Tilbury (England, 1933–1934)
 * Hellocourt, France, (1933–1935)
 * Vernon, France (1935)
 * Borovo, Croatia (1931–1945)
 * Belgium (1937)
 * Neuvic, Dordogne, France (1939)
 * Martfü, Hungary (1941)


 * Outside Europe;
 * Batanagar, India (1934-1935) - In 1931, Tomas Bata, the Czech shoe tycoon, established his first Indian operation at Konnagar. By 1936 the Konnegar plan was phased out. In May 1931, Tomas sold his business interests to his brother Jan Antonin Bata who established Batanagar, Bata's first permanent shoe factory in India. The company first established itself  in India in 1931 by renting a building to start an experimental shoe production plant in Konnagar, West Bengal with 75 Czech experts. It was Jan Antonin Bata’s administration that designed, developed and built the industrial city called Batanagar in 1934. Jan Bata also build factories in Digha near Patna, and elsewhere in India, employing more than 7,000 people. Batanagar, under Jan Bata's ideals became one of the bigger suburban towns near Kolkata.
 * Belcamp, Maryland USA, (1936–1939)
 * Batawa, Canada (1938–1939), founded by Jan Antonin Bata and taken over by Tomas J. Bata.
 * Boucherieth, Syria (1934)
 * Iraq, Baghdad (1934)
 * Klang, Malaya (1935)
 * Mansurieh (suburb of Alexandria), Egypt (1936)
 * Gwelo formerly Rhodesia, later Modrat, Zimbabwe, (1937)
 * Indonesia (1938),
 * Peru, Lima (1939)
 * Chile, Batafler (1939)
 * Java Island, Batavia Kalibata (1939)
 * Kenya, Nairobi/Limuru (1939)
 * Pakistan, Lahore (1939)
 * Morocco, Casablanca (1939)
 * Belgian Congo (1940)
 * Bolivia, Quillacollo (1940)
 * Senegal, Dakar French West Africa (1940)
 * Guatemala (1940)
 * Haiti, Port-au-Prince (1940)
 * Vietnam, Haiphong (1940)
 * Philippines (1940)
 * Bata factory in Digha near Patna, India


 * In Brazil;
 * Batatuba (1939)
 * Mariapolis, Brazil (1941)
 * Bataguassu (1953)
 * Nova Andradina (1958)
 * Município de Anaurilândia (1963)
 * Município de Batayporã (1963)

Further comment
It must be clear that this "listing of key building and urban development carried by the Bata group" has some connecting to the bata group, but is inappropriate in a biographical article. -- 21:08, 15 October 2013 (UTC)