V. K. Rao
Valluri Kameswara Rao was an Indian Civil Service officer and Chief Secretary of Andhra Pradesh, and the oldest living officer of the Indian Civil Service at the time of his death. He served in the civil service of the British Raj as a collector and magistrate. After Independence Rao joined the Indian government's finance department and transferred into the newly founded Indian Administrative Service. He transferred to Andhra State after it was founded in 1953. After the founding of Andhra Pradesh in 1956 Rao became that state's first secretary of public works. He later served the central government on the Planning Commission before returning to Andhra Pradesh as its chief secretary. Rao was principal secretary to the President of India Neelam Sanjiva Reddy from 1981 to 1982.
Early life and career
Rao was born in a small village in the Godavari District of the Madras Presidency, the present-day East Godavari District of Andhra Pradesh. He had five siblings, three brothers and two sisters. His oldest brother Valluri Parthasarathi was a judge of Andhra Pradesh High Court. He got married at the age of 18 to Nidamarthi Prabhavathi in the year 1932. Rao's son Valluri Narayan is a retired IAS officer, he retired as member secretary, Expenditure Reform Commission. After completing high school in Razole, he took a bachelor's degree in Mathematics from Sidney Sussex College at the University of Cambridge. At his father's insistence, he then sat the Indian Civil Service examinations in London, succeeding on his second attempt. He was appointed to the ICS on 29 September 1937, and was confirmed in his appointment on 9 September 1938.Arriving in India in October 1938, Rao was initially posted to Midnapore in the Bengal Presidency as an assistant collector and magistrate, and was promoted to joint magistrate and deputy collector in May 1941, receiving an appointment as under-secretary to the Finance Department in August. He witnessed the Bengal famine of 1943, and was appointed deputy controller in May 1944, with a subsequent appointment as deputy director of supply. He was in Bengal on the Direct Action Day of 16 August 1946, which led to widespread communal riots, and was a joint magistrate and collector at the time of Indian independence.