MAPS OF HISTORY · ON THIS DAY · April 6 · 1930
ON THIS DAY · 6 APRIL 1930
Dandi — the salt is lifted

6 Apr 1930 — After 240 miles and 24 days, before the world’s cameras, Gandhi picks up a handful of salt mud on the shore. Within weeks some 60,000 are in jail for making salt. The tax is trivial; the theatre is total.
THE MOMENT IN CONTEXT
Follow the red arrow down the Gujarat coast — 240 miles, 24 days, on foot. Congress has declared purna swaraj, complete independence (26 January 1930, a date the republic keeps), and Gandhi has chosen his ground with a strategist’s eye for the absurd: the salt tax. Every Indian eats salt; the Raj monopolizes it and taxes it; the sea makes it free. On 12 March he leaves Sabarmati ashram (the marker) with 78 chosen marchers, having written to the Viceroy first — politely, in full — to say exactly what he will do. The march gathers crowds, correspondents and newsreel cameras village by village; on 6 April at Dandi (the marker) he stoops on the shore and lifts a handful of salt mud. The signal releases the country: illegal salt pans on every coast, boycotts of cloth and liquor, no-tax campaigns, and — the movement’s quiet revolution — women by the tens of thousands, picketing shops, making salt, going to jail, in public politics for the first time. Some 60,000 arrests follow within months; the jails become the movement’s finishing school.
From Chapter 6 — Salt of Indian Independence & Partition, 1905–1948 (APR 1930).
OPEN THE INTERACTIVE MAP →New here? Chapters 1–2 of every atlas are free to sample, and the WW2 atlas is free in full. One membership opens all thirteen — the Cartographer’s Circle.
TEACH THIS IN 5 MINUTES
- Why it happened — Why salt was the perfect target. The tax was small, universal and indefensible — it fell hardest on the poorest, it monetized a gift of the sea, and breaking it required no…
- The turn — Dandi, 6 April 1930. A sixty-one-year-old man picks up salt from a beach, and the act — petty larceny, on the statute book — reorders the politics of a fifth of…
- What it changed — Negotiation as recognition. The Gandhi–Irwin Pact settled little on paper — prisoners released, the march’s gains half-kept — but the fact of it changed the grammar: the Raj…
Then ask the room: Civil disobedience never militarily threatened the Raj, and the Round Table Conference failed. In what sense did the salt campaign succeed? The argued answer is on the chapter page →
THE ATLAS THAT SHOWS IT
THE DISPATCH
One short letter when a new atlas opens — and the printable study guide for Indian Independence & Partition is yours now, free.
NO TRACKING · YOUR ADDRESS IS USED FOR THE DISPATCH AND NOTHING ELSE · UNSUBSCRIBE ANYTIME
