Rawalpindi, being on the highway into India, was a vulnerable possession exposed to attacks of Afghan invaders, but Milkha Singh held his own. He conquered a tract around Rawalpindi worth several lakhs of rupees a year and had won the esteem of the warlike tribes of Hazara. He had adopted the cognomen of Thchpuria from the village he had founded, but in the north he was known as Milkha Singh Pindivala.
Maharaja Ranjit Singh, whom Milkha Singh had joined in his early expeditions, called him Babaji, i.e. the revered grandfather. Milkha Singh died in 1804. Jivan Singh, his only son, who succeeded to his father`s estates, fought in the Maharaja`s Kashmir campaign in 1814, and died the next year. The force which Milkha Singh and Jivan Singh had maintained was transferred to the service of the Sikh State and placed under SardarAtar Singh Sandharivalia, bearing the name of Dora Pindivala.
References :
1. Griffin, Sir Lepel, The Punjab Chiefs. Lahore, 1890