from 24th September 1947 to 22nd March 1952 D. S. Senanayake, (born Oct. 20, 1884,
http://www.britannica.com/place/Colombo" class="md-crosslink autoxref" data-show-preview="true">Colombo,
http://www.britannica.com/place/Sri-Lanka" class="md-crosslink autoxref" data-show-preview="true">Ceylon [now Sri Lanka]—died March 22, 1952, Colombo), first
http://www.britannica.com/topic/prime-minister" class="md-crosslink autoxref" data-show-preview="true">prime minister of Ceylon (1947–52) when the
http://www.britannica.com/topic/nation-state" class="md-crosslink autoxref" data-show-preview="true">country became independent of Great Britain. Brought up as a devout Buddhist, Senanayake remained in that faith but was educated at the Anglican St. Thomas College in Colombo. After a brief period as a clerk in the surveyor general’s office, he turned to rubber planting on his father’s estate. Senanayake entered the Legislative Council in 1922 and in 1931 was elected to the State Council and appointed minister for agriculture and lands, a post he was to hold for 15 years. Within two years he had put through the Land Development Ordinance, which brought barren lands into cultivation through irrigation schemes. During
http://www.britannica.com/event/World-War-II" class="md-crosslink autoxref" data-show-preview="true">World War II, faced with reduced foreign rice supplies, Senanayake opened new trade with Egypt and Brazil and increased imports of less scarce wheat flour tenfold. Having founded Ceylon’s cooperative-society movement in 1923, he emphasized the development of cooperatives and attempted agricultural modernization. He refused a knighthood in 1946 but expressed gratitude for British goodwill and cooperation. As prime minister (from 1947) he gained respect from Ceylon’s
http://www.britannica.com/topic/Sinhalese" class="md-crosslink autoxref" data-show-preview="true">Sinhalese, Tamil, and European
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/communities" class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="communities" data-type="MW">communities and was able to maintain the morale of the
http://www.britannica.com/topic/civil-service" class="md-crosslink autoxref" data-show-preview="true">civil service during the transition period, despite its loss of British personnel. His Gal Oya multipurpose scheme to colonize uninhabited areas resettled 250,000 people. In a country without coal, oil, or gas deposits, he encouraged hydroelectric-power development. Already heading the ministries of defense and external affairs, he also assumed the ministry of health and local government in 1951.