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William Farquhar Conton

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Ethnicity
  
Creole

Role
  
Novelist

Spouse
  
Bertha Yvonne Thompson

Died
  
2003, Conakry, Guinea


Children
  
Six children

Education
  
Durham University

Name
  
William Conton

Books
  
The Flights

Born
  
William Conton 27 October 1925 Bathurst, Gambia (
1925-10-27
)

Occupation
  
Educationalist, historian, author, writer

Nationality
  
British Subject, Sierra Leonean

William Farquhar Conton (27 October 1925 – July 2002) was a Sierra Leonean educator, historian and novelist.

Contents

Background and early life

William Farquhar Conton was born in Bathurst, Gambia, to the union of Cecil Conton (1885–1926) and Olive Conton, née Farquhar. The Contons and Farquhars were Creole of Caribbean origin who settled in Sierra Leone during the late nineteenth century. Cecil Barger Conton had been born in Bermuda to William A. Conton (b. 1837) and Elizabeth Conton (b. 1857). Olive Farquhar was the daughter of Archdeacon Charles William Farquhar, (d. 1928) of Barbados.

Education

Conton was educated at Durham University in England. After graduating, he taught at Fourah Bay College, and went on to become principal of Accra High School in Ghana. Returning to Sierra Leone, he was principal of two high schools, before rising to be chief education officer in Sierra Leone. He subsequently worked for UNESCO.

Conton's novel The African was the twelfth book published in the important Heinemann's African Writers Series. It treated an England romance between a black African student and a white South African woman, turning autobiographical elements into a call for Africa to move as a continent beyond apartheid. Wole Soyinka criticised its utopian "love optimism", calling the novel's main character, Kamara, an "unbelievable prig".

Personal life

In 1949, William Conton married Bertha Thompson, the daughter of Thomas Josiah Thompson, a Sierra Leonean lawyer, and the couple had six children.

Later years

William Conton died in Conakry, Guinea, in July 2002.

Works

  • The African, 1960. Republished in the African Writers Series, 1964.
  • West Africa in History, 1961
  • The Flights, 1987
  • References

    William Farquhar Conton Wikipedia