ਅੰਗ੍ਰੇਜ਼ੀ ਰਾਜ ਵਿਚੱ ਪ੍ਰਜਾ ਦੁਖ ਦੀ ਕਹਾਣੀ
This free pamphlet, published by the Hindustan Gadar Press and circulated at Yugantar Ashram, details the finances and tax practices of the British colonial administration in India. Also included are income statistics for government and agriculture, as well as casualty reports from military operations and public health crises.
ਗ਼ਦਰ ਦੀ ਗੂੰਜ
Ghadar di gunj ("Echoes of Mutiny") is an anthology of nationalist and socialist poetry, here in its Punjabi edition.
British Terror in India
Pamphlet published in 1920 and written by Surendra Karr which attempts to record the "red months of India passed through in 1919" and expose "the naked truth of British character in exercising unlicensed criminalities." Includes three images: the first, two childern imprisoned for "waging war against Britain," the second, a British soldier whipping a "Sikh student-shoulder," and the third, two In
India Against Britain
Pamphlet dated November 1, 1916 that collects various editorials by Ram Chandra, editor of the Gadar newspaper, in which he responded in U.S.
غدر دی گونج
Ghadar di Gunj ("Echoes of Mutiny") is a compilation of nationalist and socialist poetry, here in its Urdu edition. The cover features an illustration of the national personification "Mother India."
Sudhindra Bose, "Some Aspects of British Rule in India" (1916)
Research Bulletin in Social Sciences from the University of Iowa (Vol. 5, No. 1) published on August 15, 1916. The Bulletin includes a long study of British Rule in India written by Bose, during his tenure as a Lecturer on Oriental Politics at the University of Iowa.
A Few Facts About British Rule in India
Pamphlet dated July 1915 announcing its purpose in the opening page: "Why does India hate the British? The answer follows." The pamphlet contains a list of "facts concerning the effect of British rule in India" culled from the writings of British officials, and various other sources. Among the British officials included are C.A. Elliott, W.W.
"Indian Students Abroad" (1911)
Short biography in the September 1911 issue of Modern Review of Benoy Bhusan Bose from Dhaka, and his educational career in science and industry in Tokyo and the U.S. The biography mentions Bose's work with the Detroit India Society, "founded for the furtherance of Indian National Education," and lectures at Unitarian Churches in Iowa, Ann Arbor, and Detroit.
Maud Ralston, "The India Society of Detroit" (1911)
Article from September 1911 issue of Modern Review written by Maud Ralston on the India Society of Detroit. Ralston explains that the membership of the India Society of Detroit is primarily Hindu students at the University of Michigan, earning a technical education.