The failure of the Cripps mission, along with the ravages of World War II, caused enormous unhappiness in India. This prompted Gandhi and other famous leaders to initiate the Quit India Movement asking for the British to leave India entirely.
Indian Revolution
Mangal Pandey, a sepoy, attacked British official individuals at the military station in Barrackpore in the latter days of March 1857. In the early days of April, he was apprehended and murdered by British forces. Later that month, sepoy soldiers at Meerut refused to accept the Enfield cartridges. They were sentenced to severe prison terms as a consequence and were constrained, and jailed. This infuriated their fellow countrymen, who rose up on May 10 and shot their individual British leaders before moving to Delhi. There were no European soldiers present there. The ancient pensionary Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah II had been formally restored to authority by such a split army, with the provincial sepoy garrison backing the Meerut men. The capture of Delhi served as a focal point for the entire insurrection that swept over northern India. Except for the Mughals, none of India’s great emperors backed the rebel leaders.Campaigns Of Indian Revolution
The Indian Revolution, commonly known as the Sepoy Mutiny or the First War of Independence, took place in 1857–59 and was a huge but ultimately failed insurrection against British rule in India. With Indian sepoys working in the British East India Company, it began at Meerut and extended to Delhi, Kanpur, Lucknow, and Agra. Mohandas K. Gandhi led and supervised three main operations during the Indian Independence Movement:- Non-cooperation from 1919 to 1922
- Civil disobedience and the Salt Satyagraha from 1930 to 1931
- Quit India movement from roughly 1940 to 1942