Thomas Hodson was a Wesleyan Missionary, who served in India, in the Wesleyan Canarese Mission, at the Bangalore Petah and Gubbi. He helped in running the first Wesleyan Mission Canarese school in the erstwhile Mysore State. Hodson was a linguist and a Kannada scholar, and was also fluent in Tamil and Bengali. He helped in establishing the Wesleyan Canarese Chapel at Nagarthpete in the Bangalore Petah. In 1864, Hodson wrote An Elementary Grammar of the Kannada, or Canarese Language, a treatise on the grammar of the Kannada language.
Wesleyan Wayside Canarese Chapel at the Bangalore Petah (1856)
Missionary (Hodson) preaching near entrance to Goobbe, 1836 (Hodson, 1877, p. 33)
Goobee Mission cottage (Hodson, 1877, p. 46)
Gobbee Chapel (Hodson, 1877, p. 78)
Bengaluru Pete is the area of Bangalore city which was established by Kempegowda I in 1537 with roads laid out in the cardinal directions, and entrance gates at the end of each road. Kempegowda also termed the Pete he built as his "gandu bhoomi" or "Land of Heroes". Pete forms a well–defined body of markets which were associated with various trades and professions of the populace in the locality markets and given the names of trades pursued in such markets. The well known markets are the Tharagupete–market for grains, the Balepete – for Bangles and musical instruments, the Chikkapete and the Nagarthpete for textile trade, the Ballapurpete and the Ganigarapete market where oil is extracted by people of the Ganiga community, the Tigalarapete–flower market of gardeners, the Cubbonpete – textile manufacture by people of the Devanga community.
Bengaluru Pete
Kempegowda I, builder of Bangalore or Bengaluru pete, his statue oppostite the Bangalore Corporation office
The Doddapete (now called Avenue road) crossing with Chickpete
The ancient Hanuman temple built by Kempegowdas at the Avenue road crossing