Sarangadhar Das (1886—1957) was an Indian nationalist revolutionary and Orissa politician.[1][2] Das fought against the feudal chiefs in Orissa (present day Odisha) and, post-independence, was a member of India's Constituent Assembly, a Member of Parliament, and a leader of the Socialist Party.
Early life
Sarangadhar Das was born in Dhenkanal in 1886, the son of Harekrishna Sumanta Patnaik.[2]
In 1909,[citation needed] he traveled to the United States, where he studied sugar technology at the University of California, Berkeley.[2] He then worked as a chief chemist at a sugar factory in Honolulu, Hawaii.[citation needed] In 1911, while in Berkeley, he published an informational document called "Information for Indian Students Intending to Come to the Pacific Coast of the United States", that contained practical information and advice about student life for Indians in the United States.[3]
Return to India
After returning to India, Sarangadhar tried establishing a sugar factory in Orissa, but failed. He then worked as an activist against the feudal chiefs who held power at the time.[citation needed]
Political life
From 1937 to 1946, he was the General Secretary of the Orissa States People's Conference.[2] He was President of the Orissa and C.P. States Regional Council from 1946 to 1947.[2] He was also a member of the Standing Committee of the All India States People's Conference from 1939-1943, and its General Secretary from 1947-1948.[2]
His political career included both the Congress Party and the socialist parties. He was a member of the AICC from 1939 to 1945, and of the Orissa Legislative Assembly from 1946 to 1949.[2] He then resigned from Congress and joined the Socialist Party.[2]
He served as Chairman of the Socialist Party (Utkal) from 1951 to 1952, and Deputy Leader of the Praja Socialist Party in the House of the People, from 1952 to 1953.[2]
He remained with the Socialist Party until his death in 1957.[4]
According to his Lok Sabha profile, his areas of interest included "basic education and work among Adivasis and Harijans, and the education of peasants and labourers."[2]
Publications
"Information for Indian Students Intending to Come to the Pacific Coast of the United States" (1909)[3]