MY WALL OF FAME: IYALODE WURAOLA ESAN, NIGERIA’S FIRST FEMALE SENATOR
IYALODE WURAOLA ESAN, NIGERIA’S FIRST FEMALE SENATOR
Chief Wuraola Adepeju Esan was a pioneering Nigerian women’s
rights activist, educator, and nationalist. She was a teacher, feminist and
politician. She combined her political ambitions with those of a traditional
aristocrat by serving as the iyalode of Ibadan.
In 1960, she became the first woman member of the Nigerian
Senate in the First Republic after she was appointed by the Western Region
under Awolowo’s Action Group party.
Wuraola was born in March 1909 in Calabar to the Ojo-badan
family of Ibadan. Her father, Thomas Ojo-Ade, was a veteran soldier of World
War I and fifth in the line of succession to the Ibadan throne. Her mother,
Ajike Ojo Aina, popularly called Iya Gbogbo (mother of all), was a self-made
businesswoman.
While in Lagos, Esan was deeply inspired by the Lagos
Women’s League which gave active support for the education of girls. Her
political activism gained its momentum when she and some other women played
active roles in the Nigerian Youth Movement and the National Council of Nigeria
and Cameroons (NCNC), which were very active in the politics of Lagos at the
time.
On 27 April 1938, she got married to Victor Owolabi Esan, a civil servant at the Ibadan City Council. After her marriage, she resigned from MGHS and moved to Ibadan.
In the 1950s, Esan entered partisan politics and was a
member of the women’s wing of Awolowo’s Action Group (AG) where she worked
closely with another women’s rights activist, Tanimowo Ogunlesi. Though the
women in the party were important instruments to garner votes, few were
accorded official power and party-wide responsibility.
In 1954, she took a chieftaincy title and in 1958, she was
elected to the Ibadan Urban District Council.
In 1960, Esan became the first woman member of the Nigerian
Senate in the First Republic after she was appointed by the Western Region
under the AG party.
The Premier of the Region, Samuel Ladoke Akintola appointed
12 Senators. They included Olajide Somolu, Chief Sanmi Esangbedo, Dalton
Asemota, Chief Solomon Huponu-Wusu, M.G Ejaife, E.A Lagunju, Wuraola Esan,
Chief T.A Odutola, Chief J.S Olayeye, P.A Ogundipe, S.A Eyitayo, Dr. J.O
Omitowoju. The Oba of Lagos, Oba Adeniji Adele was also appointed to represent
Lagos as the Federal territory.
Wuraola thus became the first woman to become Senator, a
distinction that placed her among 47 male Senators throughout the period she
was at the Senate from 1960 – 1964.
Esan was also a founding member of the National Council of
Women Societies and was also deeply involved in community political activities.
Throughout her life, she campaigned for women and girls’
education. In the 1940s, she established the Ibadan People’s Girls Grammar
School in Molete, Ibadan. Esan’s
‘initiatives and sacrifices were aimed at promoting the education of girls,
thus liberating the womenfolk from ignorance and societal discrimination.
She impacted positively on the growth and development of
vocational, technical and commercial education in Nigeria.
Iyalode Wuraola Adepeju Esan died on 01 January 1985 aged 75
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