C. T. Nylander Explained

Clarkson Thomas Nylander
Office:Member of Parliament for Ablekuma[1]
Term Start:1969
Term End:1972
Predecessor:Sophia Doku[2]
Successor:Adotey Nelson-Cofie[3]
Office2:Ambassador of Ghana to Liberia
Term Start2:1966
Term End2:1969
President2:Joseph Arthur Ankrah
Predecessor2:H. A. H. Grant[4]
Successor2:C. O. C. Amate[5]
Office3:Ambassador of Ghana to Yugoslavia
Term Start3:1964
Term End3:1966
President3:Dr. Kwame Nkrumah
Predecessor3:S. W. Kumah[6]
Successor3:K. B. Griwa[7]
Office4:Ghana High Commissioner to Canada[8]
Term Start4:1961
Term End4:1964
President4:Dr. Kwame Nkrumah
Successor4:S. P. O. Kumi[9]
Office5:Minister of Education
Term Start5:1958
Term End5:1959
President5:Dr. Kwame Nkrumah
Predecessor5:John Bogolo Erzuah
Successor5:Kofi Baako (Minister for Information and Education)
Office6:Member of Parliament for Ga Rural[10]
Term Start6:1956
Term End6:1961
Predecessor6:Mabel Dove Danquah[11]
Successor6:Tawia Adamafio
Office7:Member of Parliament for Dangbe-Shai
Term Start7:1954
Term End7:1956
Successor7:Edward Ago Ackam[12]
Birth Date:1905
Birth Name:Clarkson Thomas Nylander
Nationality:Ghanaian

Clarkson Thomas Nylander was a Ghanaian educationist, diplomat and politician. He served as a minister of state and a member of parliament during the first republic. He was a minister of education and minister of state for defence. He was also a member of parliament for the Dangbe-Shai electoral district and later the Ga Rural electoral district. He later represented Ghana in various foreign missions from 1961 to 1969.

Early life and education

Nylander was born in 1905 in the Gold Coast. He had his early education at the Accra Methodist School and in Government schools in Accra and Kumasi. He continued at the Government Training College in Accra in 1925 as a foremost student to train as a teacher.[13] [14] [15]

Career and politics

Nylander begun teaching at Achimota School from 1926 to 1953. He was appointed an assistant education officer in 1952. Nylander gave up teaching to pursue a career in politics. In 1954 he was elected as a member of the Legislative Assembly for the Dangbe-Shai electoral district on the ticket of the Convention People's Party.[11] He was re-elected in 1956, this time as a member for the Ga Rural electoral district.[16] He served in this capacity for the district until 1961 when he was absorbed into foreign service. In 1956 he was appointed Ministerial Secretary (deputy minister) for the Ministry of Interior[17] [15] and a year later he was appointed as Minister of Education.[18] He served in this capacity for about two years and in 1959 he was made a Minister of State for Defence.[16] [13] During the elections of the second republic he stood for the Ablekuma seat on the ticket of the National Alliance of Liberals and won.[19] [14] He served in this capacity until 1972 when the Busia government was overthrown.

Ambassadorial duties

He was appointed Ghana's High Commissioner to Canada in 1961.[20] [21] He served in this capacity for about three years. In 1964 he was made Ghana's ambassador to Yugoslavia.[22]  He served in this capacity until 1966 when the Nkrumah government was overthrown. He remained in foreign service serving as Ghana's ambassador to Liberia[23] from 1966 to 1969 when the NLC government handed over power to a civilian regime.[14]

Personal life

He married Florence Nylander in January 1931. Together they had seven children. He is the father of Ladi Nylander, who was a member of the Convention People's Party (CPP) Central Committee between 2004 and 2011.[24] He is also the father of the late Mrs. Doris Naa Lamiley Asherker Decker (née Nylander), who was formerly of the Ghana Library Board.[25] His hobbies included music and singing.[13]

Notes and References

  1. Ghana Year Book . Graphic Corporation . 56 . 1970.
  2. Parliamentary Debates; Official Report, Part 2 . 8 . Ghana National Assembly . 1965.
  3. West Africa, Issues 3233–3258 . Afrimedia International . 1910 . 1979.
  4. Book: Steinburg, S. . 1965 . The Statesman's Year-Book 1966–67: The One-Volume ENCYCLOPAEDIA of all nations . 471. 9780230270954 .
  5. Book: Steinburg, S. . 1965 . The Statesman's Year-Book 1970–71: The One-Volume ENCYCLOPAEDIA of all nations . 408. 9780230270992 .
  6. Book: Steinburg, S. . 1965 . The Statesman's Year-Book 1970–71: The One-Volume ENCYCLOPAEDIA of all nations . 515. 9780230270923 .
  7. Book: Steinburg, S. . 1965 . The Statesman's Year-Book 1967–68: The One-Volume ENCYCLOPAEDIA of all nations . 457. 9780230270961 .
  8. Ghana Year Book . Daily Graphic . 42 . 1964.
  9. Book: Steinburg, S. . 1965 . The Statesman's Year-Book 1965–66: The One-Volume ENCYCLOPAEDIA of all nations . 470. 9780230270947 .
  10. Ghana Year Book. Graphic Corporation . 17 . 1961.
  11. Michael Eli Dokosi,"The electoral victories and shock losses of the 1954 Gold Coast election", blakkpepper, 2 July 2016.
  12. Ghana Year Book. Graphic Corporation . 12 . 1961.
  13. 1960 . Ghana Year Book . Google books . Graphic Corporation . 202.
  14. Book: Danquah, Moses . 1969 . The Birth of the Second Republic . 107.
  15. Ghana Year Book . Daily Graphic . 152 . 1956.
  16. 1960 . Ghana Year Book . Google books . Graphic Corporation . 7 and 11.
  17. 1957 . Ghana Year Book . Google books . Graphic Corporation . 7.
  18. 1958 . Ghana Year Book . Google books . Graphic Corporation . 13.
  19. 1971 . Ghana Year Book . Google books . Graphic Corporation . 56.
  20. 1962 . Ghana Year Book . Google books . Graphic Corporation . 68.
  21. 1963 . Ghana Gazette . Google books . National government publication . 123.
  22. 1965 . Asia & Africa Review, Volumes 5–6 . Google books . Independent Publishing Company.
  23. Book: Steinburg, S. . 1965 . The Statesman's Year-Book 1967–68: The One-Volume ENCYCLOPAEDIA of all nations . 457.
  24. Razak El-Alawa,"'The other side of Ladi Nylander", Graphic Online, 27 January 2018.
  25. Web site: Mrs. Doris Naa Lamiley Asherker Decker passes on . Audrey Quaye. 29 April 2016. GhanaDot.com . 11 October 2019.