Amjad Baugh, featured in Mahatma Gandhi Ninaivu Malai by S Ambujammal. Pic Courtesy Karthik Bhatt and cleaned digitally by Malvika Mehra.

Conducting a heritage walk in January dedicated to S Ambujammal the patriot I decided to pay a visit to Luz Church 2nd Street and found there was no way of accessing it. This is due to the ongoing Metrorail work which has more or less marooned that cul-de-sac. Now what did this have to do with Ambujammal you may ask. Well, at one time this was no blind alley but the entrance to her father’s bungalow – Amjad Baugh. 

The huge span of Amjad Baugh

Sriman Srinivasa Iyengar was a giant of the Madras Bar who very quickly shot ahead of his illustrious father-in-law Sir V Bhashyam Iyengar. Having qualified in the late 1890s he set up practice and by 1916 had become Advocate General, Govt. of Madras, the youngest ever to do so. A large income as a lawyer also demanded a suitable bungalow in keeping with his status and so he purchased Amjad Baugh with its entrance on Luz Church Road. This was no ordinary residence for apart from the house, it had a garden space spanning a whopping 150 grounds, or eight acres. Ambujammal describes it in her biography as pretty much a forest. Even today, several seemingly unconnected properties in the Luz area trace their origin to Amjad Baugh. 

The Tragedies of Amjad Baugh

For all that it was an enclave by itself, the house had a miasma of sorrow hanging over it, which seemed to affect all its residents, almost like Manderley in Daphne du Maurier’s Rebecca. Sriman Srinivasa Iyengar’s legendary temper did little to ease situations and the fact that his wife, Ranganayaki was of a retiring disposition did not help.  Ambujammal’s marriage, celebrated in style on moving into Amjad Baugh unravelled quickly enough leaving her to tend to a mentally ill husband. Her brother was afflicted with polio and though he overcame that to become a lawyer and later a successful businessman, he had his share of sorrows to contend with including the early death of his wife and the accidental electrocution of a son. 

Gandhi at Amjad Baugh

In all of this the bright ray of light was Mahatma Gandhi. By the 1920s he was a major influence on the household, staying there when he visited Madras. Though Srinivasa Iyengar would have a tempestuous relationship with the Congress and finally leave the party despite Gandhi’s entreaties, Ambujammal remained a firm follower, defying her father in courting arrest and later travelling to Wardha. It was a journey of self-discovery for her, one that would lead her to social service and spiritual uplift.

In later years she would move away from Amjad Baugh, setting up home in neighbouring Alwarpet in a property known as Sudder Gate House which has since made way for a high-rise apartment building called MidTown. The neighbouring streets, much of which was owned by Srinivasa Iyengar, are named after father and daughter.  Ambujammal Street houses the Srinivasa Gandhi Nilayam she founded. It is now run by a dedicated band of volunteers and does social service. 

The end of the garden bungalow

What of Amjad Baugh? Ambujammal’s brother Parthasarathy sold much the surrounding lands which became housing developments. Taking to monkhood in later years he retired to an ashram he founded at Thirumullaivayil which still houses the Vaishnavi temple he established. The main Amjad Baugh building too vanished to make way for blocks of flats a couple of decades back. 

Searching for a photo

I often wondered if there was any photograph of the house. A couple of months ago, Karthik Bhatt, during his indefatigable searches on the internet found it, in a book that Ambujammal penned, titled Mahatma Gandhi Ninaivu Malai. I have since had it digitally cleaned and present it alongside. 

This article appeared in The Hindu dated March 20, 2024 and can be read here

My book, Chennai A Biography can be ordered here