Jhumri Telaiya is a town in Jharkhand’s Koderma district. The town was once famous for the number of song requests it sent to Radio Ceylon and Vividh Bharati radio stations every month. Its real fame was, however, due to mica, the shimmery, translucent mineral that drove the economy of the sleepy town and made many of its people millionaires. Jhumri Telaiya (also spelled as Jhumri Tilaiya or Jhumri Talaiya) is a city in the Koderma subdivision of the Koderma District of Jharkhand, India. Jhumri Telaiya is also the most populus city in the Koderma District. Jhumri Telaiya is a town in state of Jharkhand, India. It is arranged in the Damodar Valley. Elective English transliterations of the town's name incorporate Jhumri Tilaiya, Jhumari Talaiya, and Jhumri Tilaiya. Jhumri is the name of the first town in the zone, which is presently situated in the city. "Telaiya" is the Hindi dialect word for a little lake the Tilaiya Dam store. Jhumari is likewise said to be a nearby people move. Jhumri Telaiya was at one time a noteworthy mica mining focus ... An enlightened person, Late Jagannath Jain of Jhumri Telaiya was the biggest contributor in the establishment of the college. Hence, the college was named after him.