Edna Elliott-Horton
Edna Elliott-Horton | |
|---|---|
| Born | Edna Elliott 13 September 1904 Freetown, British Sierra Leone |
| Died | 26 March 1994 (aged 89) Freetown, Sierra Leone |
| Occupation | Political activist |
| Nationality | British Subject, Sierra Leonean |
| Education | Howard University |
Edna Elliott-Horton (13 September 1904 – 26 March 1994) was the second West African woman from a British colony to receive a university degree after the Nigerian physician Agnes Yewande Savage, who received a medical degree from the University of Edinburgh in 1929. A Sierra Leonean, Elliott-Horton became the first West African woman to complete a BA degree in the liberal arts, after graduating from Howard University in 1932, where Dr. Edward Mayfield Boyle, her maternal uncle, had graduated as a medical doctor. Elliott-Horton was a political activist who challenged the colonial authorities in Sierra Leone through her participation in the West African Youth League which was formally established in her living-room.