MEET THE FIRST BLACK-AFRICAN WOMAN TO GRADUATE FROM OXFORD UNIVERSITY
An authorized biography of Kofoworola Aina Ademola, Gbemi Rosiji's Portrait of a Pioneer, was published in 1996.
While in Warri with her husband, Ademola was a member of a women's literary circle and was a teacher at Warri College. When she moved Ibadan, she began to cultivate friendship with Elizabeth Adekogbe of the Council of Nigerian Women and Tanimowo Ogunlesi of the Women's Improvement Society. She was a member of the latter and was a bridge linking both organizations and a few others to join hands and form a collective organization. In 1958, when the National Council of Women Societies was formed she was chosen was the first president. As president, she became a board member of the International Council of Women.
Ademola was also a social worker, teacher and educator, she co-founded two schools: the Girls Secondary Modern School in Lagos and New Era Girls' Secondary School, Lagos. She was a director of the board of trustees of UBA and secretary of the Western Region Scholarship Board. She also wrote children's books, many of them based in West African folklore, including Greedy Wife and the Magic Spoon, Ojeje Trader and the Magic Pebbles, Tutu and the Magic Gourds, and Tortoise and the Clever Ant, all part of the "Mudhut Book" series.
She held the chieftaincy titles of the Mojibade of Ake and the Lika of Ijemo.
She was a teacher at Queen’s College Lagos from 1936-1938 and later on became the co-founder and principal of New-Era Girls’ Secondary School, Lagos. She was also a philanthropist and advocate for women empowerment
Lady Kofo Ademola was an educationist and a prolific author of children’s books. She was married to Sir Adetokunbo Ademola who was the first head of judiciary in Nigeria.
Her books are based on teaching children basic moral lessons. She died on the 5th of May
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