Modupe Omo-Eboh | |
Birth Name: | Modupe Omo-Eboh |
Birth Date: | 1922 |
Birth Place: | Lagos State |
Occupation: | A lawyer |
Modupe Omo-Eboh (1922 – 25 February 2002) was a Nigerian lawyer and jurist who was the country's first female judge.
Modupe Akingbehin was born in Lagos State in 1922. Her mother was a granddaughter of the Lagos aristocrat Oshodi Tapa and a great granddaughter of Bishop Samuel Ajayi Crowther, who was himself a descendant of King Abiodun of Oyo. The nationalist Herbert Macaulay was her maternal great-uncle.[1] She attended Queen's College, Lagos before studying law in London.[2]
Omo-Eboh was called to the English bar at Lincoln's Inn on 14 March 1953.[1] [3] She worked as a lawyer, Magistrate, Chief Magistrate, Administrator-General and Public Trustee, Director of Public Prosecutions and Acting Solicitor-General before she became a judge in Benin City on Thursday 13 November 1969,[1] the first woman appointed to the High Courts of Nigeria.[1] [4] In 1976, she was appointed to the Lagos judiciary.[5]
Omo-Eboh died on 25 February 2002.[6]
There is a Justice Modupe Omo-Eboh Street in Lagos named after her.
Omo-Eboh's husband was a Justice of the Court of Appeal from Edo State.[3]