Gajreport

Charity Zormelo Fiawoo, first woman to graduate from the Gold Coast

Mrs. Charity Zormelo Fiawoo was born in Keta in the Volta Region in 1904. She was the first woman to graduate in the Gold coast and the first woman from English speaking West African countries to earn a Bachelor of Science degree.

She was the daughter of Godfred Nyavor Zormelo, a former North German Mission employee and fishing business proprietor, and Patience Abolitsi Dzokotoe.

She started her elementary education at African Methodist Episcopal Zion School. After completing in 1919, she became a teacher before traveling to the United States for Borden town High school and also continued in the Hampton Institute to study Home economics.

Charity returned to Ghana and became a teacher in Mmofraturo girls boarding School in Kumasi. She again moved to teach at new African University College in Anloga. She influenced a lot of people during her teaching years.

She traveled with her husband Ferdinand Kwasi Fiwoo throughout Gold coast and Togoland. They used the play entitled “Toko Atolia” to educate people.

Intending to return to the United States to continue study after the war, Charity Zormelo Fiawoo died aged 41 on 14 October 1945.

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