Exclusion of Hindus from America Due to British Influence
A 1916 pamphlet collecting editorials on discrimination against South Asian ("Hindu") immigrants, authored by Ram Chandra Bharadwaj, president of the San-Francisco based Gadar Party.
The Balance Sheet of British Rule in India
Broadside published by the Gadar party outlining eleven ways in which the British exploit colonial India. Penciled on the back of the broadside is a note which reads, "Dayton Morning Journal, Jan 25 1917 issue, contains 'A Lot of Bla' on 'India's Loyalty to England.'"
Har Dayal, "India in America" (1911)
Article from the July 1911 issue of Calcutta-based Modern Review written by Har Dayal, one of the founders of the Gadar Party. Dayal describes the lives of Indians in the United States, with an emphasis on four classes of persons: "the Sikhs, the Swamis and the Students, with the Spies as an abnormal gang." The article is signed off "Berkeley, (Cal.), U.S.A., April 28, 1911."
"The Call of the Martyrs"
Bulletin of the Hindustan Gadar Party Memorial Committee (Vol. 3, No. 10) dated August 1967, with a front page story on Bhagat Singh Thind.
The United States of India (July 1923)
The inaugural issue of The United States of India, dubbed "A Monthly Review of Political, Economic, Social and Intellectual Independence of India," was published in July 1923 from the Gadar Party headquarters in No. 5 Wood Street, San Francisco. The title "Pacific Coast Hindustani Association" was used in place for Gadar Party.
The United States of India (August 1923)
The August 1923 issue of the United States of India (Vol. 1, No. 2) published from the Gadar headquarters on No. 5 Wood Street, San Francisco featured the following articles: "Mr. C.S.
The United States of India (October 1923)
The October 1923 issue of the United States of India (Vol. 1, No. 4) published from the Gadar headquarters on No. 5 Wood Street, San Francisco featured the following articles: ""Modernizing Religion," "What India Needs Most Today" by T.M. Karr, "Asian Independence Discussed in the Institute of Politics," "Russia's New Foreign Policy," "Forced Abdication of the Maharajah of Nabha".
The United States of India (December 1923)
The December 1923 issue of the United States of India (Vol. 1, No. 5) published from the headquarters of the "Pacific Coast Hindustani Association" at No. 5 Wood Street, San Francisco featured the following articles: ""A Novel Law in India," "An Englishman on British Rule" by W.S. Blunt, "Hiram W. Johnson, U.S.
The United States of India (January 1924)
The January 1924 issue of the United States of India (Vol. 1, No. 6) published from the headquarters of the "Pacific Coast Hindustani Association" at No. 5 Wood Street, San Francisco featured the following articles: "False Notions About India Explained," and the poem "Rob Him For His Good" by Bertrand Shadwell.
The United States of India (March 1924)
The March 1924 issue of the United States of India (Vol. 1, No. 8) published from the headquarters of the "Pacific Coast Hindustani Association" at No. 5 Wood Street, San Francisco focused primarily on the Akali movement. A Gurdwara reform movement, the Akalis aimed to reclaim historic Gurdwaras from British-supported Mahants. A lengthy essay titled "Who Are the Akalis?