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  1. Sep 2, 2023 · Madras Native Organization (MNA) - Established in 1852 - Place: Chennai - Founded by Gajula Lakshminarasu Chetty. - It was the first Indian political association to be formed in the Madras presidency. - It was the political centre of the presidency's landed gentry, who had grievances against Company rule.

  2. Nov 24, 2022 · The decision to pursue an alternative career, however, earned him a name in history as being the founder of the first newspaper in Madras Presidency in 1785, five years after the Bengal Gazette ...

  3. Madras Presidency was an administrative subdivision (presidency) of British India. At its greatest extent, the presidency included most of southern India , including the whole of the Indian states of Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh and parts of Odisha , Kerala , Karnataka , Telangana , and the union territory of Lakshadweep .

  4. Presidents. Madras was elevated to a presidency in 1684 and remained so until 12 February 1785 when new rules and regulations brought by the Pitt's India Act reformed the administration of the East India Company with the exception of a three-year period of French rule from 1746 to 1749 when Madras was a governorship.

  5. Summary. By 1800, the British had acquired most of what was to become their presidency of Madras. They found themselves in possession of a collection of territories which covered about 140,000 square miles and which, between 1870 and 1920, came to contain a population of some 30 to 40 millions. The province was certainly the most artificial of ...

  6. Jun 21, 2023 · The Madras Presidency implemented British legal and administrative frameworks, introducing reforms and institutions that shaped the region’s socio-economic and political landscape. Impact on Indian Society: The presence of the British Factory and the subsequent establishment of the Madras Presidency had a profound impact on Indian society.

  7. The Madras Presidency Association (MPA) was founded on 20 September 1917 at a meeting of non-Brahmin Congress leaders. Prominent leaders of the association were E. V. Ramasamy, V. Kalyanasundaram, P. Varadarajulu Naidu and Gooty Kesava Pillai. Following the passing of the Government of India Act in 1919, the MPA slowly disintegrated.