S. E. Runganadhan
Dewan Bahadur Sir Samuel Ebenezer Runganadhan (also Ranganathan) (30 December 1877 - December 1966)[1] was an Indian educationist who served successively as Vice-Chancellor of Annamalai University and Madras University and as the last High Commissioner for India from 1943 to 1947.[2]
Life
Runganadhan was born to Reverend C. Runganadhan of the London Missionary Society, and entered the Indian Educational Service in 1921. He married one Leila Rau, daughter of K. Krishna Rau of Madras, and had a son and a daughter. From 1929 to 1935, he served as Vice-Chancellor of Annamalai University, in which capacity he was a delegate to the Congress of the Universities of the Empire, held in Edinburgh in 1931. He was subsequently Vice-Chancellor of Madras University from 1937 to 1940. He was president of the Indian Christian Association of Madras and vice-president of the All-India Christian Conference. In 1938, he was elected a member of the upper house of the Legislative Council of the Madras Presidency, serving until 1940, when he became the adviser to the Secretary of State for India. In 1938-1939, he was the Chairman of the Inter-Universities Board of India.[3]
Conferred the title of Diwan Bahadur, Runganadhan was knighted in the 1943 New Year Honours list and appointed the last High Commissioner for India in May 1943.[4][5] He was a delegate to the Conference of the Institute of Pacific Relations in December 1942, and the leader of the Indian delegations to the 1945 International Labour Conference (Paris), the 1946 Conference (Montreal) and to the Paris Peace Conference in 1946.[6] He retired as High Commissioner in April 1947, shortly before Indian independence, and died in Bangalore, aged 88.
References
- ↑ National Portrait Gallery
- ↑ "The British Commonwealth - India and Dependencies: Government and Constitution," pg. 112, The Statesman's Year Book, 1946, Epstein. Macmillan. London 1946
- ↑ pg 2631, Who's Who, 1960
- ↑ The London Gazette, 1 January 1943
- ↑ "The British Commonwealth - India and Dependencies: Government and Constitution," pg. 112, The Statesman's Year Book, 1946, Epstein. Macmillan. London 1946
- ↑ pg 2631, Who's Who, 1960