Allur, Nellore district

Allur
అల్లూరు
Alluru
Village

Ramakrishna Junior College Entrance
4
Allur
4
Allur

Location in Andhra Pradesh, India

Coordinates: 14°41′N 80°04′E / 14.68°N 80.06°E / 14.68; 80.06Coordinates: 14°41′N 80°04′E / 14.68°N 80.06°E / 14.68; 80.06
Country  India
State Andhra Pradesh
District Nellore
Area[1]
  Total 30.28 km2 (11.69 sq mi)
Population (2011)[1]
  Total 11,656
  Density 380/km2 (1,000/sq mi)
Languages
  Official Telugu
Time zone IST (UTC+5:30)
PIN 524315
Telephone code +91-8622
Sex ratio 1021:1000 /

Allur is a village in Nellore district of the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. It is the headquarters of Allur Mandal of Kavali revenue division.[1]

Geography

Allur is bounded by Alluru peta, Gogulapalli, Graddagunta, Isakapalli, Indupuru, North Mopuru, Puruni and Singapeta villages.[2][3] It is about 30 km northwest of Nellore and lying between the railroad and seacoast. Allur is located at 14°41′N 80°3′E / 14.683°N 80.050°E / 14.683; 80.050.[3]

Part of the area is served by Pennar canals and the rest of the area is served by rain fed tanks. Most soils are red soils and low in Nitrogen, medium in Phosphorus, high in Carbon and high in Potash.[3]

History

Allur was an important revenue center and also an important station for the American Baptist Missions in the Nellore district.

Freedom movement

Allur along with nearby Gogulapalle village became a venue of Salt Satyagraha in Nellore District and several people were arrested. Mahatma Gandhi visited Allur on December 30, 1933 as part of his coastal Andhra trip after Salt Satyagraha revolution and attended one Panchayat meeting and one public meeting.[4][5]

Demographics

As of 2011 census, Allur had a population of 11,656. The total population constitute, 5,768 males and 5,888 females —a sex ratio of 1021 females per 1000 males. 1,195 children are in the age group of 0–6 years, of which 616 are boys and 579 are girls. The average literacy rate stands at 68.88% with 7,206 literates, lower than the state average of 67.41%.[1][6]

Government

Allur gram panchayat is the local self-government of the village.[7][8] The panchayat is divided into wards and each ward is represented by an elected ward member. The ward members are headed by a sarpanch and the present sarpanch is Kareti Chandra Leelamma.[9][10] K.Vijayaramu is the secretary of the panchayat.[11]

Administration

Allur was under the jurisdiction of Nellore district in Madras state of British India. In the Madras presidency, Allur was also a station of Deputy Tahsildar and Sub-Magistrate.[12][13] A sub registrar office to register documents and deeds was established in 1871 and it was one of the 14 sub registrar offices in the district.

Allur was also originally part of Nellore Taluk. A new Kovur Taluk was created from Nellore in 1910 and Allur became part of it.[12] Taluks were reorganized as Mandals in 1985 and Allur became a mandal.[14]

Politics

Allur was an assembly constituency in Andhra Pradesh from 1978 to 2009. There are 1,36,127 registered voters in Allur constituency in 1999 elections. As part of reorganization in 2009 and Allur mandal became part of Kavali assembly constituency and Bucchi and other areas became part of Kovur assembly constituency.[15]

Economy

Allur was known for its agriculture and nearby Isakapalli salt factory.[13] Allur was one of the chief centers of trade in Nellore District.[12] Rice produced from Allur and nearby villages is exported to neighbouring states such as Tamil Nadu and Karnataka. To distinguish it from other Allur, that was also part of Nellore district before Ongole district was carved, it was called as Pantala Allur or Allur with staple and its namesake was called as Akula Allur or Allur with leaves.[16]

According to gazettes published during the British rule, Allur was the largest land revenue generating town in entire Nellore district with the revenue of ₹ 53,000 in 1901.[16] It was home for 3,677 people in 1873 [12] and the population increased to 5190 by 1881.[16] The population further increased to 7,527 by 1901 and it was considered as the second largest populous town after Nellore in Taluk.[13]

Banking

Education

Allur Ramakrishna Junior College

There were only pial elementary schools that teach Telugu reading, writing, poetry and basic math till 1868. In 1868, the British government established a secondary school starting with 44 students under the 1864 Education Act and a system of payments based on results was introduced to increase school attendance. American Baptist Mission started a middle school around 1878 and maintained till 1927. Boarding school for boys was opened in 1907.[12]

Mr. Madabushi Seshachari who got appointment in the ABM school later urged the riches of allur to start a school so that he can help them by joing the school for the all-round development of school and also to promote educational values in the younger generation of the village. He also took help from Ramakrishna Mission for organising the school and started Ramakirshna Middle School in 1928.[4][17] It was later extended to high school in 1934, to Junior College in 1950 and to Degree College in 1998.

Health Care

The first government aided dispensary was started in 1872. There are two public hospitals run by the government, Allur Government Hospital and Ayurvedic hospital.

Culture

Village has one ancient Siddeshwara temple and one ancient Gopalaswamy or Vishnu temple. There are inscriptions on a pillar in front of the temple of Siddeswara and on the flooring in front of Gopalaswamy temple. A woman called Perantalamma died in a Sati sacrifice and a temple was constructed in her memory.[12]

People of Allur celebrate a special festival honoring Poleramma, village goddess, on a Tuesday of January every year. The floors are decorated with rangavalli and village is decorated with lights and flowers. A heap of cooked rice is offered along with Neem leaves in the morning. The deity is placed in a palanquin on a tiger or a swan and taken in a procession.

Mr. John E. Clough and Dr. Lyman D. Jewett, American Christian missionaries from Boston, visited Allur in 1865.[18] A dwelling house and few acres of land were purchased for ₹ 1100 ($500) and old travelers bungalow was bought for ₹ 350. Allur was chosen as the fourth mission after Nellore, Ramayapatnam and Ongole in the district. An American Baptist church with 44 members was established in 1873 by Mr. Edwin Bullard. He abandoned Allur mission in 1874 and made it as the outstation for Nellore mission.[19][20] [21] Mr. W. S. Davis, missionary from New Jersey, worked there for four decades from 1873 till his return to United States.[22] Resident missionaries were specially appointed to work at church since 1893.[23]

A mosque was built in 1910. Communal troubles arose around 1924 over the right of Hindu processions to play music before the mosque until Hindus got a decree for permission in 1928.[23]

Transport

The best way to reach Allur is by road.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "District Census Handbook – Sri Potti Sriramulu Nellore" (PDF). Census of India. The Registrar General & Census Commissioner. pp. 25,228. Retrieved 27 August 2016.
  2. "Census Maps" (PDF). pp. 197, 231. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  3. 1 2 3 "Falling Rain Genomics". Retrieved 29 August 2016.
  4. 1 2 Somanchi Girija 1990
  5. Mahatma Gandhi 1973
  6. "Literacy of AP (Census 2011)" (PDF). Official Portal of Andhra Pradesh Government. p. 43. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 5 September 2014.
  7. "Allur Village Panchayat". National Panchayat Portal. Retrieved 6 May 2016.
  8. "Gram Panchayat Identification Codes" (PDF). Saakshar Bharat Mission. p. 120. Retrieved 5 July 2016.
  9. Arvind Verma, 2014
  10. "Elected Representatives" (PDF). State Election Commission. Retrieved 5 June 2016.
  11. "Local Body Officials of Allur Grama Panchayat". Employee details. Retrieved 7 May 2016.
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 6 John Alexander Corrie Boswell, 1873
  13. 1 2 3 W. Francis, 1908
  14. "Census Maps" (PDF). p. 25. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  15. Election Commission of AP Assembly results.1978-2004
  16. 1 2 3 W. W. Hunter
  17. South India Teachers's Union, 1934
  18. John E. Clough, 1914.
  19. David Downie David 1893
  20. South India missionary conference
  21. Peniel Rajkumar, 2014
  22. Howard Benjamin Grose, 1933
  23. 1 2 Government of Madras, 1942

Further reading

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