Umaidpur

[3] The current history can be traced back to the end of the 16th century when the area was a part of Singh Dynasty.

Chullahai Hazari was the Brahil, whose responsibility was to inform villagers to come at the Jeth Rayait's house to pay land revenues.

When the British left India, they sold all their land possessions to Janak Kishore Prasad, including Harsinghpur Kothi.

Umaidpur is located in the far south-west of Samastipur District, bordered to the north and east by Naua Chak village, to the south by Jitwarpur Kumhara and in the west by Morwa.

[10] Sub-district/district/state: Morwa/Samastipur/Bihar School address: Umaidpur, Morwa, Samastipur, Bihar - 848135 Public/private: Public Year of establishment : 1965 Medium: Hindi Based on India Census 2011, the female literacy rate is 42.76%, whereas the male literacy rate is 51.0%.

According to the Imperial Gazetteer of India, sugar-cane, indigo and poppy were grown in Umaidpur and the adjacent villages during and before British rule.

[4] The principal exports were rice, indigo, gram, pulses, linseed, mustard seed, saltpetre, tobacco, hides, and ghee; and the principal imports were rice and other food-grains, salt, kerosene oil, gunny-bags, coal and coke, European cotton piece-goods, and raw cotton.

Gram, pulses, and oilseeds were chiefly sent to Calcutta, and rice and other food-grains to Saran and Muzaffarpur.

The imports of food-grains came for the most part from Bhagalpur and Nepal, coal and coke from Burdwary kerosene oil from the Twenty-four Parganas, and salt and piece-goods from Calcutta.

[4] The most fertile part of the village were used to produce the most valuable rabi and bhadoi crops.

[4] Villages like Umaidpur were chiefly dependent on the Aghani (or winter) rabi and bhadoi harvests.

Nunia caste from the neighbouring village, Nauachak, used to extract saltpetere in the summer after rabi crop from these lands for their living.

In Bhith land, wheat, maize, and miscellaneous food-grains which consisted chiefly of khesari, rahari, masuri, urd, mung, janera, and oats.

[4] When this area was taken over by the British in 1765, it was included in Silbah Bihar and formed with the greater part of Muzaffarpur District, the Sarkar of Tirhut.

Bihar was retained as an independent revenue division, and in 1782 Tirhut (including Hajipur) was made into a Collectorate.

[4] The governance of the Umiadpur village is run through community development block program administered by a Morwa Block Development Officer,[11] Morwa Dakshin Panchayat headed by Mukhiya, and a local administrative unit at the village level.