"The Life & Times Of Adelaide Casely-Hayford" By Adelaide Casely-Hayford Read By Akua Bobson (Ghana) by Library Of Africa and The African Diaspora published on 2021-04-23T12:27:47Z ADELAIDE CASELY-HAYFORD (2 June 1868 – 24 January 1960), was a Sierra Leone Creole advocate, an activist for cultural nationalism, educator, short story writer, and feminist. She was born to an elite family in Freetown, British Sierra Leone, to a mixed-race father (William Smith Jr, of English and royal Fanti parentage) from the Gold Coast and a Creole mother, Anne Spilsbury, of English, Jamaican Maroon, and Sierra Leone Liberated African ancestry. Casely-Hayford was committed to public service and worked to improve the conditions of black men and women. As a pioneer of women's education in Sierra Leone, she played a key role in popularizing Pan-Africanist and feminist politics during the early nineteen hundreds. She established a school for girls in 1923 called Girl's Vocational and Training School in Freetown, to instill cultural and racial pride for Sierra Leoneans during the years of colonial rule. Promoting the preservation of Sierra Leone national identity and cultural heritage, in 1925 she wore a traditional African costume to attend a reception in honor of the Prince of Wales, where she created a sensation. AEKUA BOBSON is a doctoral candidate at the Department of English at the University of Ghana. She runs women's book clubs. Genre Storytelling