Patrick Kwame Kusi Quaidoo Explained

Patrick Kwame Kusi Quaidoo
Constituency Mp:Amenfi-Aowin
Parliament:Ghana
Term Start:1957
Term End:1961
Successor:James Kwame Twum
Constituency Mp2:Amenfi
Parliament2:Ghana
Term Start2:1969
Term End2:1972
Office3:Minister for Trade and Labour
Term Start3:1957
Term End3:1958
President3:Dr. Kwame Nkrumah
Office4:Minister for Communication
Term Start4:1958
Term End4:1958
Office5:Minister for Commerce and Industry
Term Start5:1958
Term End5:1959
President4:Dr. Kwame Nkrumah
Office6:Minister for Social Welfare
Term Start6:1960
Term End6:1961
President6:Dr. Kwame Nkrumah
Birth Date:15 March 1924
Birth Place:Opon Valley, Gold Coast
Death Place:Accra, Ghana
Citizenship:Ghanaian
Alma Mater:St. Augustine's College, University of Bristol

Patrick Kwame Kusi Quaidoo (1924-2002) was a Ghanaian politician and businessman.[1] He served in various ministerial portfolios in the first republic and also served as a member of parliament in the first and second republic. He was the founder of the Republican Party and a founding member and leader of the All People's Republican Party.[2] [3]

Early life and education

He was born on 15 March 1924 at Opon Valley in the Western Region of Ghana.

His early education begun in 1933 at Dunkwa Catholic School completing in 1940. He entered St. Augustine's College where he had his secondary education from 1941 to 1944. He continued at Achimota College intermediate department from 1946 to 1948. He proceeded to the United Kingdom for his bachelor of arts degree at the University of Bristol.[4] [5] [6] [7]

Career

After his studies at St. Augustine's College, he took up a year teaching appointment in the school prior to his studies at Achimota College. He later returned to teach at St. Augustine's College on two occasions; from 1948 to 1949 and from 1953 to 1954. In 1967 a year after the Nkrumah overthrow, he was appointed Chairman of Black Star Line.[6]

Politics

His political career officially begun in 1954 when he was elected a member of parliament in the pre independent Ghana, he was a backbencher in parliament. He was elected once more in 1957 as a member of parliament representing the Amenfi-Aowin constituency.[8] [9] In 1956 he was appointed ministerial secretary (deputy minister) to the ministry of trade and labour.[10] A year later he was promoted to minister of trade and labour.[11] [12] He served in that capacity for a year. In 1958 he was appointed minister of communications,[13] that same year he was moved to the ministry of Commerce and Industry as its minister. In 1960 he was appointed minister for Social Welfare.[14] During his tenure as the minister for Social Welfare he questioned the press for "immortalising" Nkrumah.[15] [16] He was dismissed on 22 May 1961[17] and incarcerated under the Preventive Detention Act.[18] [19] [20]

Prior to the inception of the second republic in 1969, he together with Dr. John Bilson founded the Third Force Party.[21] Quaidoo broke out of the party due to misunderstandings and internal leadership struggles, he founded the Republican Party a few weeks later.[22] The party merged with Dr. V. C. De Graft Johnson's All People's Party to form the All People's Republican Party.[23] During the 1969 Ghanaian parliamentary election he was the only member of the party to secure a seat in parliament. He represented the Amenfi constituency in parliament[24] and was elected onto the opposition front bench from 1969 until 1972 when the Busia government was overthrown.[6] In 1970, various opposition parties merged to form the Justice Party and he was made deputy chairman of the party.[25] [7]

Honours

He was decorated as a Knight Companion of the Lion of Judah by the late Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia. He was also given the honorary Key to the City of Tokyo.[5]

Personal life

He was married to Victoria Quaidoo (née Wood). Together they had four daughters and two sons. His hobbies included; playing the piano and the violin, and also playing table tennis.[5] [6] He is a Christian.

Death

He died on 1 January 2002 in Accra after a short illness.[7]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Opoku, D. K. . 2010 . The Politics of Government-Business Relations in Ghana, 1982–2008 . 9780230113107 .
  2. Book: Asamoah, Obed . Obed Asamoah

    . Obed Asamoah . 2014 . The Political History of Ghana (1950–2013): The Experience of a Non-Conformist . 146. 9781496985637 .

  3. Book: Adu Boahen . Albert . Albert Adu Boahen . Falola . Toyin . Toyin Falola . 2004 . Africa in the twentieth century: the Adu Boahen reader . 480. 9781592212965 .
  4. Calendar . University of Bristol . 74 . 1953.
  5. Book: Quaidoo, P. K. K. . 1988 . Africa my native land . 132. 9789964301293 .
  6. Book: Danquah, Moses . 1969 . The Birth of the Second Republic . 109.
  7. Web site: P.K.K. Quaidoo passes away . 2019-05-13.
  8. Universitas, Volume 1–2 . University of Ghana . 35 . 1969.
  9. Parliamentary Debates; Official Report, Part 1 . Ghana National Assembly . 1961.
  10. Debates, Part 2 . Information Section, Ghana Office . 10 . 1956.
  11. Ghana Today, Volume 1–2 . Information Section, Ghana Office . 3 . 1957.
  12. Report of the Commission Appointed to Enquire Into the Affairs of the Ghana Timber Marketing Board and the Ghana Timber Co-operative Union . Ministry of Information . 1968.
  13. The Ghanaian, Issues 1–9; Issues 12–18 . Star Publishing Company . 35 . 1958.
  14. Book: Packham, E. S . 2004 . Africa in War and Peace . 160. 9781560729396 .
  15. Book: Finlay . D. J. . Holsti . O. R. . Fagen . R. R. . 1969 . Enemies in politics . 147.
  16. Time, Volume 77, Part 3 . Time Incorporated . 31 . 1961.
  17. Africa Digest, Volume 9 . Africa Publications Trust . 31 . 1961.
  18. Book: Omari, T. P. . 1970 . Kwame Nkrumah: the anatomy of an African dictatorship . 91. 9780900966279 .
  19. Book: Austin, Dennis . 1976 . Ghana Observed: Essays on the Politics of a West African Republic . 98. 9780841902787 .
  20. Book: Pinkney, Robert . 1972 . Ghana Under Military Rule, 1966–1969 . 16. 9780416750805 .
  21. Africa Confidential, Volume 10 . Miramoor Publications Limited . 68 . 1968.
  22. The Legon Observer, Volume 4, Issues 18–26 . Legon Society on National Affairs . 24 . 1969.
  23. Book: Biswal, T. P. . 1992 . Ghana, Political and Constitutional Developments . 110. 9788172110291 .
  24. Parliamentary debates : official report . Ghana Publications Corporation . 437 . 1970.
  25. Africa contemporary record; annual survey and documents. . Africana Publishing Company . B-346 . 1971.