Augustus Molade Akiwumi | |
Honorific-Prefix: | The Right Honourable |
Honorific-Suffix: | |
Office: | 2nd Speaker of the Parliament of Ghana |
Term Start: | February 1958 |
Term End: | June 1960 |
Predecessor: | Sir Emannuel C. Quist |
Successor: | Joseph Richard Asiedu |
Order2: | Justice of the Supreme Court of Ghana |
Term Start2: | July 1960 |
Term End2: | April 1961 |
Birth Date: | 1891 4, df=y |
Birth Place: | Lagos, Nigeria[1] |
Death Place: | Accra, Ghana |
Party: | Convention People's Party |
Children: | 8, |
Residence: | Farrar Avenue, Adabraka, Accra, Ghana |
Alma Mater: | Queen's College, Taunton Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge Lincoln's Inn |
Augustus Molade Akiwumi (7 April 1891 – 1985) was a barrister and judge who became the second Speaker of the Parliament of Ghana from 1958 and 1960 and an inaugural Justice of the Supreme Court of Ghana between 1960 and 1961.[2] [3]
Augustus Akiwumi was born in Lagos, Nigeria to a large Yoruba family of twelve children. He became a naturalised Ghanaian, after he relocated to the Gold Coast as a child with his father, S. O. Akiwumi.[4] S. O. Akiwumi was the vice president of the Red Cross League. In 1910, Augustus Akiwumi was sent to live with guardians, a Smith family of Crosby, Cumbria in England. He attended Queen's College, Taunton, Somerset.[4] Seven of his other siblings also attended boarding school in England. He proceeded to Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge, where he studied law.[4] He also trained as a banker at the Midland Bank, Ludgate Hill, London, prior to his return to Ghana.
He was called to the bar at the Honourable Society of Lincoln's Inn in 1921.[4] In 1964, while he was a High Court Judge in Ghana, he was appointed Legal Secretary in the East African Common Service Organisation.[5] He was elected Speaker of the Parliament in February 1958 in the Dominion of Ghana.[6] He became a judge in Ghana and was later appointed a Supreme Court Judge from July 1960 until his retirement from the bench in April 1961.[7]
Akiwumi married Grace Aryee and, subsequently, Helen Kabuki Ocansey, both Ghanaians.