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Stella Thomas

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Stella Jane Thomas (later Stella Marke) (1906 – 1974) was a Nigerian of Sierra Leonian descent. She received a law degree from Oxford University and in 1943 became the first woman magistrate in Nigeria.

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Early life and education

Stella Thomas was born in 1906, in Lagos, the daughter of Peter John Claudius Thomas, a Nigerian businessman of Sierra Leonian heritage. Her father was the first African to head the Lagos Chamber of Commerce. She attended the Annie Walsh Memorial School in Freetown, Sierra Leone, "the oldest secondary school for girls in West Africa." Her brother Peter Thomas became the first West African pilot commissioned in the Royal Air Force during World War II.

While she studied law at Oxford and was a member of the Middle Temple in London, she was active with the West African Student Union, and a founding member of the League of Coloured Peoples, organized by Harold Moody. She lived in Bloomsbury, and starred in a production of Jamaican poet Una Marson's first play At What a Price put on by the league at London's Scala Theatre.

Career

Thomas was the first African woman called to the bar in Great Britain, in 1933. In 1934, she was the only African woman to participate in a discussion with Margery Perham at the Royal Society of Arts, and she took the opportunity to criticize Lord Lugard and African colonialism before an influential audience. When she returned to West Africa, she was the first woman lawyer in the region. In 1943, she became West Africa's first woman magistrate. She retired as a magistrate in Sierra Leone in 1971.

Personal life

In 1944, Stella Thomas married a fellow legal professional, Richard Bright Marke, in Freetown. She died in 1974, aged 68 years.

References

Stella Thomas Wikipedia