Ernest James Hayford
Ernest James Hayford | |
---|---|
Rayuwa | |
Haihuwa | Anomabu, 23 ga Afirilu, 1858 |
Mutuwa | 6 ga Augusta, 1913 |
Sana'a | |
Sana'a | Lauya |
Ernest James Hayford (23 ga Afrilu 1858, Anomabu - 6 Agusta 1913, London) likita ne kuma lauya a cikin Gold Coast.[1][2] Shi ne ɗan Afirka na biyu a yankin Gold Coast da ya zama likitan likitanci bayan Benjamin Quartey-Papafio.[1][2]
Rayuwa
[gyara sashe | gyara masomin]Ernest James Hayford shine babban ɗan Rev. Joseph de Graft Hayford, minista Methodist da Mary Brew. J. E. Casely Hayford da Mark Christian Hayford ƙannen sa ne. Ya yi karatu a Anomabu, a Cape Coast, da kuma makarantar sakandare ta Wesleyan a Freetown, Saliyo. Ya zama mataimakin mishan kuma babban malami a cocin Methodist na Wesleyan da makaranta a Elmina, kuma shugaban makarantar Boys Government Boys School a 1882. Bayan binciken likitanci mai zaman kansa daga 1882 zuwa 1884, ya karanci likitanci a asibitin St Thomas da ke Landan daga 1884 zuwa 1888. Kwararre kan ilimin mata a asibitin Rotunda da ke Dublin, ya koma aikin zaman kansa a Cape Coast.[1]
Babban memba na Kungiyar Kare Hakkokin Aborigines ta Gold Coast, sha’awar sa a siyasa ta sa ya yi karatun doka a kebe sannan a Lincoln's Inn da ke Landan daga 1910 zuwa 1913. An kira shi zuwa mashaya a watan Yuni 1913, ya mutu a London daga baya wannan bazara .[1]
Hayford ya yi aure sau da yawa: akwai rubutattun takardu na aure biyu - ga Anna Vitringa Coulon (c. 1855–1912), 'yar Julius Vitringa Coulon, da Maria Hoogen (1835-1916) - da al'adar baka ta wasu aure uku. Akwai yara daga kowane aure kuma daga wata dangantaka.[1] Duk zuriyarsa memba ne na abin da aka sani da dangin Casely-Hayford.
Manazarta
[gyara sashe | gyara masomin]- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Michael R. Doortmont, The Pen-Pictures of Modern Africans and African Celebrities by Charles Francis Hutchison: A Collective Biography of Elite Society in the Gold Coast Colony, Brill, 2005, p. 251
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Tetty, Charles (1985). "Medical Practitioners of African Descent in Colonial Ghana". The International Journal of African Historical Studies. 18 (1): 139–144. doi:10.2307/217977. JSTOR 217977. PMID 11617203. S2CID 7298703.