About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 40. Chapters: I. T. A. Wallace-Johnson, Edward Wilmot Blyden III, Al Bangura, Nicholas G.J. Ballanta, Roda Antar, Albert Jarrett, Jamil Sahid Mohamed, Rodney Strasser, Valentine Strasser, Madieu Williams, Eunice Barber, Gibril Wilson, Mustapha Sama, Kewullay Conteh, Sheriff Suma, Teteh Bangura, Sylvia Blyden, Adelaide Casely-Hayford, Obi Metzger, Horace Dove-Edwin, Sulaiman Sesay Fullah, Sidney Kargbo, Abioseh Nicol, Ibrahim Kargbo, Sallieu Bundu, Ibrahim Khalil Tahini, Abdul Kallon, Abdul Thompson Conteh, Kabba Samura, Ibrahima Camara, Emerson, Mohamed Kanu, Patricia Piccinini, Muhammad Lamin Conteh Al-Hidayah, Winstanley Bankole Johnson, Julia Armstrong, Issa Sesay, Faisal Antar, Monty Jones, Alimamy Sesay, Michael Tommy, Christian Caulker, List of people from Freetown, B. J. Tucker, Muwahid Sesay, Sarway Dollar, Abel Nathaniel Bankole Stronge, Benjamin Sesay, Samuel Lewis, John Taylor, Henry Josiah Lightfoot Boston, Albert Cole, Ali Hijazi, Andrew Juxon-Smith, Yussuf Sindeh, Nahim Khadi, Ibrahim Kabia, Hawanatu Bangura, Ade Renner Thomas, Salia Jusu-Sheriff, Farid Raymond-Anthony, Kadijatu Kebbay, Eustace Henry Taylor Cummings, Tom Carew, Mariama Elaiza Webby, Herbert George-Williams. Excerpt: Isaac Theophilus Akunna Wallace-Johnson (1895 - 10 May 1965) was a Sierra Leonean and British West African workers' leader, journalist, activist and politician. Born into a poor Creole family in Sierra Leone, he emerged as a natural leader in school. After attending United Methodist Collegiate School for two years, he dropped out and took a job as an officer in the customs department in 1913. He was dismissed for helping organize a labor strike, but later reinstated to his position a year later. After resigning from his job, he enlisted as a clerk with the Carrier Corps during World War I. After being demobilized in 1920, Wallace-Johnson...