Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Smith family (Sierra Leone)

Genealogy From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

The Smith family is a Sierra Leone Creole family of English, Jamaican Maroon and Liberated African descent based in Freetown, Sierra Leone. The Smiths were first-generation Sierra Leone Creoles of Gold Coast Euro-African and Caribbean origin who settled in Sierra Leone during the early 19th century. There are several descendants of the family in the United Kingdom and the United States, as well as in the Ghanaian cities of Accra and Cape Coast. Several members of the family were active in business, women's education, civil administration, the arts, medicine, poetry, the judiciary, cultural studies, Pan-Africanism and anti-colonial activism.

Remove ads

Prominent members

Remove ads

Other descendants

Charlotte Macaulay and William Smith Jr., had seven children, William Henry, Robert, Philippa, Mary, John Frederick, Francis, and Charlotte (who died at the age of 36).[25] Mary Smith was married to William Broughton Davies (1831–1906), a Creole physician of Yoruba Liberated African stock.

The children of William Smith Jr., by his second wife included Joseph Spilsbury, Thomas, Emma, Casely, Elizabeth, Hannah, Adelaide, and Annette. Adelaide married and was later known as Adelaide Casely-Hayford. Elizabeth and Hannah married noted brothers William and Peter of the prominent Awoonor-Renner family. Annette married prominent doctor John Farrell Easmon.[26] After Anne's death in 1875, Smith married a third time.[1]

Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads