Gandhi famously led his followers in the Non-cooperation movement that protested the British-imposed salt tax with the 400 km ( 240 mi ) Dandi Salt March in 1930.
22.
Additionally, the National Wildlife Refuges near Galveston s shores, nearby salt marches, and oyster reefs were all in potential danger depending on the extent of the slick s spread.
23.
He returned to India in 1929 . He participated in Salt March of Indian independence movement in 1930 and was imprisoned at Nasik Jail where he met K . M . Munshi.
24.
Many of them are protected as nature reserves, and some are parts of larger conservation areas, incorporating other coastal habitats like salt marches, mud flats, grasslands, scrub and woodland.
25.
Though they did manage to get a few concessions such as those won by the Salt March in 1930, they did not help India much from the point of view of their objective.
26.
In the year 1931, Vedaratnam was conferred with the title of Sardar at the meeting of the Tamil Nadu Agriculturists and labourers at Tirunelveli, for his exploits in the Vedaranyam Salt March.
27.
Thevarthundiyil Titus popularly known as Titusji was the only Christian in the band of 78 inmates selected by Gandhiji from Sabarmati Ashram for breaking the salt law at Dandi in 1930 ( Popularly known as Salt March ).
28.
Examples of tax resistance campaigns include those advocating home rule, such as the Salt March led by Mahatma Gandhi, and those promoting women's suffrage, such as the Women's Tax Resistance League.
29.
Today, a larger representation of the three monkeys is prominently displayed at the Sabarmati Ashram in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, where Gandhi lived from 1915 to 1930 and from where he departed on his famous salt march.
30.
His close associate C . Rajagopalachari, who would later become independent India's first carried out a salt march in parallel, on the east coast starting from Trichonopoly ( modern day Tiruchirappalli ) in Vedaranyam.