Wednesday, 15 July 2026 RSS
People of Mangalore

Stories That Inspire

Remarkable journeys of people from Mangalore and coastal Karnataka who changed lives, broke boundaries, and made their mark on the world.

Social Impact

Born in Mangalore in 1903 to the district's Collector, Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay went on to become the first Indian woman to contest a legislative election, one of the first women arrested in the Salt Satyagraha, and the single most influential figure behind independent India's revival of handicrafts, handlooms and theatre. She built a refugee township, founded institutions that still shape Indian culture today, and largely refused the political rewards offered to her for it.

Inspiration

A Class 10 dropout from a small village near Bantwal, Varanashi Subraya Bhat turned a collapsing areca nut market into CAMPCO, one of India's largest farmer cooperatives. His chocolate factory in Puttur, inaugurated by a sitting President of India, remains a symbol of what Coastal Karnataka's farmers built for themselves.

Inspiration

Prabhakar Kamath — Mangaluru's beloved 'Pabba Maam' — taught himself to make ice cream at home and opened Ideal's first parlour on 1 May 1975 with 14 flavours. A story of quiet enterprise, coastal pride, and lasting sweetness.

Inspiration

Long before social justice became a national conversation, Kudmul Ranga Rao dedicated his life to uplifting the oppressed communities of Dakshina Kannada through education, dignity and reform. Known as the “Poor Man’s Lawyer,” he challenged caste discrimination and laid the foundation for one of coastal Karnataka’s earliest social reform movements.

Inspiration

Discover the inspiring story of R.K. Baliga, the visionary behind Bengaluru’s Electronic City whose foresight helped shape India’s technology revolution.