Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Tanimowo Ogunlesi
Nigerian activist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Tanimowo Ogunlesi who was born in 1908 and died in 2002[1] was a Nigerian women's rights activist and the leader of the Women's Improvement League.[2][3] She was one of the leading women activists of her era and co-founded the National Council of Women's Societies, the country's leading women's rights organization.
Remove ads
Life
Summarize
Perspective
Tanimowo Ogunlesi was born on 1 December 1908. She attended Kudeti Girls School Ibadan, Oyo State, and attended United Missionary College (UMC) for her teacher's training qualifications. She started teaching in Lagos at CMS Girls’ Seminary School in 1934. She married J.S. Ogunlesi, who was also a teacher, in 1934. Her husband received a scholarship to study in London, which gave her opportunities to relocate to London too. She then continued her education at the nursery school in St. Andrew’s University in Scotland, in 1946. Tanimowo and her husband returned back to Nigeria in 1947, after her husband was appointed as the Adult Education Officer of the Western Region. She was the first person to establish an elementary boarding school in Ibadan (Children Home School) in 1948.[citation needed]
She became the first president of the National Council of Women's Societies in 1959.[4] She dealt largely on the rights of women to vote and to have access to educational facilities but like most women nationalists of the era, she never really questioned the male dominance of the Nigerian household. She was part of a movement to increase domestic science training in Nigeria when she opened a home training school.[5][6]
Remove ads
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads