Appointment against
Gandhi He had not been Governor General of Canada for five years before Willingdon received word that he was to be sent back to India as that country's
viceroy and governor general. After being appointed to the
British Privy Council on 20 March 1931, he was sworn in as such on 18 April 1931, merely two weeks after he was replaced in Canada by
the Earl of Bessborough. When Willingdon arrived again in India, the country was gripped by the
Great Depression and was soon leading Britain's departure from the
gold standard, seeing thousands of tonnes of gold shipped to the United Kingdom through the port of Bombay. Of this, Willingdon said: "For the first time in history, owing to the economic situation, Indians are disgorging gold. We have sent to London in the past two or three months, £25,000,000 sterling and I hope that the process will continue."
Jailing leaders of Congress Simultaneously, Willingdon found himself dealing with the consequences of the nationalistic movements that
Gandhi had earlier started when Willingdon was Governor of Bombay and then Madras. The
India Office told Willingdon that he should conciliate only those elements of Indian opinion that were willing to work with the Raj. That did not include
Nehru and the
Indian National Congress, which launched its Civil Disobedience Movement on 4 January 1932. Therefore, Willingdon took decisive action. He imprisoned Gandhi. He outlawed the Congress, he rounded up all members of the
Working Committee and the
Provincial Committees and imprisoned them, and banned
Congress youth organisations. In total, he imprisoned 80,000 Indian activists. Without most of their leaders, protests were uneven and disorganized, boycotts were ineffective, illegal youth organisations proliferated but were ineffective, more women became involved, and there was terrorism, especially in the
North-West Frontier Province. Gandhi remained in prison until 1933. Willingdon relied on his military secretary,
Hastings Ismay, for his personal safety.
Construction projects It was also by Willingdon's hand, as Governor-in-Council, that the
Lloyd Barrage was commissioned, seeing £20 million put into the construction of the
barrage across the mouth of the
Indus River, which not only provided labour but also brought millions of hectares of land in the
Thar Desert under
irrigation. Further, Willingdon established the
Willingdon Airfield (now known as Safdarjung Airport) in
Delhi and, after he was denied entry to the
Royal Bombay Yacht Club because he was accompanied by Indian friends, despite his being the Governor of Bombay, Willingdon was motivated to establish the
Willingdon Sports Club, with membership open to both Indians and British and which still operates today. As he had been in Canada, Willingdon acted for India as
Chief Scout of the
Bharat Scouts and Guides and took this role as more than an
ex-officio title. Convinced that
Scouting would contribute greatly to the welfare of India, he promoted the organisation, especially in rural villages, and requested that
J. S. Wilson pay special attention to cooperation between Scouting and village development. The
Construction of New Delhi also took place under his rule. ==Post-viceregal life==