Category: Government


  • Money history in Nigeria predates the colonial era and most of the forms of money met the modern criteria for ‘legal tender’, namely scarcity, intrinsic value, and portability. They came in the form of the Manilla, cowry shells, metal pieces and coins, cloth money, and salt cones. They were in different forms/currencies and could be…

    read more

  • Adunni Oluwole was a Unitarist, and anti-independence activist. Adunni, a small, almost fragile woman, was one of Nigeria’s most colorful female leaders in the decade prior to independence. Adunni did not think Nigeria was ready to attain independence in 1956 when a date in that year was proposed,  and she worked to prolong the British stay. Adunni was…

    read more

  • Adubi Riot was the revolt of June 1918 in Abeokuta, following the discontent inherited from the Egba United Government period, in which about thirty thousand Egba people tore up the railway line and looted stations and trains, leading to the killing of a number of people including an Oba, Osile, and one European. The Alake…

    read more

  • Adetokunbo Lucas is a Nigerian medical doctor, recognized for his international role in fighting neglected tropical diseases, especially in follow-up to the so-called “Guinea worm cease-fire” during Sudan’s civil war in 1995. Ade Lucas was born 1930 in Lagos; living two years of his infancy in the vicarage after his father became in 1936, the…

    read more

  • Abraham Adesanya was a political leader, honored in the line of Obafemi Awolwo and Adekunle Ajasin as Asiwaju of Yorubaland. Adesanya was born on 24 July 1922 in Ijebu Igbo to a popular traditional healer, Ezekiel. His secondary education was at Ijebu Igbo Grammar School. After working briefly as a tutor, he had travelled to…

    read more

  • Egerton Shyngle was the politician who became first party president when in 1923, Herbert Macaulay and his friends formed the Nigeria National Democratic Party that was to dominate Lagos politics for the next fifteen years. Born 15 March 1862 in Barthurst, Gambia, Shyngle’s secondary education was at Freetown Grammar School. He also went to Fourah…

    read more

  • Nigerian Navy Secondary School Abeokuta is a boys only secondary school established on 2 February 1991 as the second Nigerian Navy secondary school. The school is located at the site of the defunt St. Leo’s Teacher Training College in Ibara, Abeokuta. Success of the Ojo Navy school and subsequent upsurge in student population had necessitated…

    read more

  • Nigerian Navy Secondary School Ojo is the first Nigerian Navy secondary school. The Ojo Navy School was established in 1982 originally to educate children of serving and retired Navy personnel. The success of this experiment had inspired the creation of Abeokuta and Ogbomosho schools, among others. This Navy school, located within the Nigerian Navy barracks…

    read more

  • Nigerian Turkish College, established in 1998 as a co-educational secondary school with sister schools in Ogun and Abuja, Kano, Kaduna and Yobe. Nigerian-Turkish international College is run by Surat Education Limited. The school holds an annual national language festival to promote cordiality in Nigeria. The mission statement of the school satisfactorily attests to the clarity…

    read more

  • Obadiah Hutchinson Williams was the founder of the Illiterates Office, which was the forerunner of the Nigerian modern judiciary. He was born in Oyo in 1860 and was educated at the in Abeokuta. Obadiah, a descendant of the Alaafin of Oyo leant carpentry but was appointed a Registrar of the court by commission and worn in…

    read more