Abstract The current research paper discusses the historic incident of the three-day local independence of Solapur and the Martial Law in 1930 as an important local manifestation of the Indian Civil Disobedience Movement. Solapur holds a special status in the Indian freedom movement since the city experienced stiff opposition in the form of popular action following the arrest of Mahatma Gandhi in May 1930. The reaction at Solapur was not restricted to political leadership or official Congress workers, but that of textile workers, traders, youth, students, volunteers and ordinary citizens. They shut down mills and markets, held processions, public displays of nationalist symbols and tried to keep civic order through the efforts of local volunteers. This momentary claim of power of people is remembered as the three days independence of Solapur. The British colonial government retaliated by brutally suppressing and imposing Martial Law. The hanging of Jagannath Shinde, Mallappa Dhanshetty, Kisan Sarada and Kurban Hussain transformed Solapur into a strong symbol of martyrdom of the Indian freedom movement. This paper believes that the events of 1930 cannot be explained solely by disorder, violence or administrative crisis. They should be examined as a people-focused, society-based and locally based manifestation of anti-colonialism. It follows a socio-historical and alternative historiographical approach relying on Solapur-focused historical literature, Martial Law narratives, newspaper reports and local memory. It draws the conclusion that the experience of Solapur in 1930 is a unique case when the national concept of swaraj, satyagraha and civil disobedience were turned into local action, civic assertion and mass resistance. Keywords: Solapur, three day independence, Martial Law, Civil Disobedience Movement, four martyrs, local history, social history, freedom movement.
Kolekar et al. (Thu,) studied this question.