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Dr. and Mrs. Azikiwe in Britain, 10 July 1961 On 10 July 1961, Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, then Governor-General of Nigeria, arrived in Britain for an official visit at the invitation of Queen Elizabeth II.

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He was accompanied by his wife, Mrs. Flora Azikiwe. Contemporary photo records identify the moment as his arrival in London after travelling from Liverpool, having come in on the liner Apapa.
A press caption associated with the photograph states that the Governor-General “drives away from Euston Station” after arriving for the visit, while another image record notes that he was welcomed at Euston Station by the Duke of Devonshire, Andrew Cavendish, during this same visit. These details strongly support the identification of the image as part of Azikiwe’s July 1961 official trip to Britain.

The visit was especially significant because it came less than a year after Nigeria’s independence. Azikiwe had assumed office as Governor-General in November 1960, becoming the representative of the British monarch in independent Nigeria before later serving as the country’s first ceremonial President. His 1961 journey to Britain therefore symbolised the early diplomatic relationship between newly independent Nigeria and the United Kingdom.

Mrs. Flora Azikiwe’s presence in the photograph adds another layer of historical importance. As the spouse of the Governor-General, she was part of Nigeria’s emerging post-independence public image abroad. Photographs from this period often captured not only political leadership but also the elegance, confidence, and symbolic presence of Nigeria’s new national elite on the international stage.

Taken together, the image of Dr. and Mrs. Azikiwe on 10 July 1961 captures more than a travel moment. It reflects a formative period in Nigerian history, when the country was newly independent and its leaders were representing it on the world stage with confidence and dignity.

The photograph stands as a visual reminder of Azikiwe’s role in shaping Nigeria’s early diplomatic identity and of the public partnership he shared with Flora Azikiwe during that era.

Source: Keystone/Getty

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Highlife musician Chief Inyang Henshaw and dancers at FESTAC ’77, Lagos

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This photograph captures Chief Inyang Henshaw, a Nigerian highlife musician, performing with dancers during the Second World Black and African Festival of Arts and Culture (FESTAC ’77) in Lagos. FESTAC ’77 was held in Lagos in 1977 and was co-organised by the Government of Nigeria and UNESCO as a major celebration of Black and African arts and culture.

Chief Inyang Henshaw belongs to the rich tradition of Nigerian highlife, particularly the southeastern sound that blended local rhythms, dance-band influences and popular social music.

Discographic records identify him as Chief Inyang Nta Henshaw, and his recordings are associated with releases such as Efik Gold, confirming his place in Nigeria’s highlife scene. His music has also appeared in later compilations of Nigerian and West African highlife, showing that his work remained part of the wider historical memory of the genre.

The setting matters just as much as the performer. FESTAC ’77 was one of the biggest cultural gatherings ever hosted on the African continent. It brought together artists, performers, writers and cultural representatives from across Africa and the Black diaspora. The festival served not only as entertainment but as a statement of cultural pride, identity and solidarity, placing Lagos at the centre of a global Black cultural moment in 1977.

A performance image like this reflects what highlife meant in that era. Highlife was more than dance music.

It was part of the soundscape of urban West Africa, thriving in clubs, social events, festivals and public celebrations. Inyang Henshaw’s appearance with dancers at FESTAC suggests the theatrical and communal quality of the genre, where music, costume, rhythm and movement worked together to create a full stage experience. That made highlife a perfect fit for a festival designed to showcase African creativity in its many forms.

Historically, the image also speaks to Cross River and southeastern Nigerian contributions to national culture.

Henshaw’s repertoire, including titles linked to Efik identity, points to the regional depth within Nigerian popular music. Performers like him helped show that Nigerian culture at FESTAC was not a single tradition, but a mosaic of languages, sounds and performance styles.

So, as a historical caption in article style:
This photograph shows Chief Inyang Henshaw, a Nigerian highlife musician, performing with dancers during FESTAC ’77 in Lagos.

The image captures the energy of one of Africa’s most important cultural festivals, where music, dance and identity came together on an international stage. Henshaw’s presence at the festival reflects the important role of Nigerian highlife in the artistic life of the 1970s and highlights the contribution of southeastern performers to the broader story of African popular culture.

Source: UNESCO archive on FESTAC ’77; Discogs discography and release records for Chief Inyang Henshaw.

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Obaro Ikime was only 29 years old when he bagged his PhD at the University of Ibadan, and only 37 years old when he became a full professor of History in the same university. He then retired at 53.

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Born on December 30, 1936, in the village of Anibeze, now Isoko South, Delta State, Obaro Ikime emerged from humble rural roots (his father a fisherman, his mother a farmer), yet rose to become one of Nigeria’s most towering historians.

He attended Government College Ughelli between 1950 and 1956, where early leadership roles foreshadowed a distinguished academic career.

Ikime pursued History at the University of Ibadan, graduating with Second Class Honours (Upper Division), before earning his doctorate by the age of 29. At 37, he became a full professor, head of the Department of History at Ibadan and a pillar of the celebrated Ibadan School of History, known for advancing histories from Nigerian and African perspectives.

Professor Ikime published extensively, authoring and editing foundational works such as Leadership in 19th Century Africa (1974), The Fall of Nigeria (1977), and Groundwork of Nigerian History (1980).

His later books, including History, the Historian, and the Nation (2006) and Can Anything Good Come Out of History? (2018), reflect a deep concern for the role of history in shaping democratic consciousness and national unity.

Beyond scholarship, Ikime served as President of the Historical Society of Nigeria (1984–88), Director of the Institute of African Studies, Dean of Arts at the University of Ibadan, and held visiting professorships at prestigious institutions including UCLA, Berkeley, Harvard, and the University of Benin.

In 1990, the same year he retired, the 53-year-old Ikime was detained by the Babangida military regime for publicly opposing Nigeria’s membership of the Organisation of Islamic States and was in military incarceration for 96 days, where he wore the same clothes all through and slept on the bare floor.

Ikime’s intellectual legacy lies in his belief that the nation cannot succeed without a collective awareness of its past. He championed the teaching of inter‑group relations as a safeguard against ethnic strife, and famously warned against sidelining history in education, a battle eventually won when history re‑entered the national curriculum in 2018 after years of neglect.

Professor Obaro Ikime passed away on April 25, 2023, in Ibadan. He was 86. HistoryVille

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Honourable S. Agbaje’s House, Ibadan, in the 1930s

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The photograph titled “Honourable S. Agbaje’s House, Ibadan, Nigeria, 1930s” points to one of the most striking symbols of wealth, ambition and urban change in colonial Ibadan. The house is generally associated with Chief Salami Agbaje (1880–1953), a renowned businessman and public figure who rose to prominence during the colonial era and became one of the wealthiest men in Ibadan. Historical accounts describe him as a pioneering indigenous entrepreneur whose lifestyle and investments reflected the emergence of a new African elite in southwestern Nigeria.

Salami Agbaje was born in Lagos in 1880 but made his name in Ibadan, where he built a remarkable commercial career. He first worked as a tailor before moving into timber contracting, produce trade and other lines of business that flourished under the colonial economy. Over time, he became one of the city’s most powerful businessmen, with interests that expanded beyond trade into transport and public life. His success placed him among the leading indigenous figures who demonstrated that Africans could compete in sectors often dominated by foreign firms and colonial commercial structures.
His house became famous because it represented more than private comfort. It was widely remembered as a landmark of modernity in Ibadan. Historical references linked to Akinpelu Obisesan’s writings state that Agbaje was the first person in Ibadan to own a cement-built two-storey house and also the first to own a car in the city. In an era when most buildings were still constructed with more traditional materials, a cement two-storey residence stood out as a statement of wealth, innovation and changing taste. The building therefore became part of the story of how Ibadan was transforming from a nineteenth-century war camp into a major colonial city with a growing merchant elite.
The title “Honourable” attached to Agbaje’s name also reflects his growing public standing. He was not only a businessman but also a figure of political and social importance in Ibadan. Sources indicate that he rose within the city’s leadership structure and became an influential public personality. His career illustrates how wealth in colonial Yorubaland could translate into social prestige, civic visibility and political relevance. Men like Agbaje occupied an important place between traditional authority, colonial administration and the new world of commerce that was reshaping urban life.

Seen in this broader context, Agbaje’s house was not simply an elegant residence. It was a visible expression of aspiration and status in a period of transition. In colonial Nigerian cities, architecture often carried symbolic weight. A grand modern house announced not only economic success but also access to new materials, new forms of consumption and a new sense of urban identity. In Ibadan, where lineage compounds and traditional political structures long shaped the cityscape, a building like Agbaje’s stood as evidence that commerce was beginning to redefine prestige. The house therefore belongs to the social history of class formation in western Nigeria as much as it belongs to architectural memory.

Agbaje’s story, however, was not without tension. Historical commentary preserved in studies of Akinpelu Obisesan notes that by the late 1940s he faced criticism from some community leaders, who accused him of hoarding wealth rather than distributing it in ways expected by society. That criticism reveals an important feature of the time: successful African businessmen were admired for enterprise, yet they were also judged by communal expectations about generosity, public responsibility and the use of wealth. In that sense, Agbaje’s mansion could be seen both as a monument to success and as a symbol in debates about inequality, modernity and social obligation.

The postcard or photograph itself appears to have circulated as a real photo postcard, which suggests that the house had enough visual and social importance to be reproduced and sold as an image. Auction and collector listings identify it as “Honourable S.

Agbaje’s House, Ibadan”, confirming that this title has been attached to the image in postcard history. That said, while the association of Salami Agbaje with a famous Ibadan mansion is well supported, the precise documentation for the specific postcard image is thinner than the broader biographical evidence. So the identification is strong and plausible, but the exact photographic chain is less firmly documented in easily accessible scholarly records.

Today, the historical importance of Agbaje’s house lies in what it reveals about Ibadan in the early twentieth century. It speaks to the rise of indigenous capital, the emergence of a new urban elite, and the way architecture became part of public memory. It also helps us understand how individuals like Salami Agbaje shaped the city’s transition into a centre of commerce and influence. Far from being just an old building, the house stands in historical imagination as a marker of an era when private enterprise, prestige and public identity were becoming deeply intertwined in colonial Nigeria.

Source

Akinpelu Obisesan entry, which summarises references to Salami Agbaje’s pioneering status in Ibadan.
Salami Agbaje biographical entry, with references to his life and career in colonial Nigeria.

Collector listing for the postcard titled Nigeria Old Real Photo Postcard Honourable S. Agbaje’s House, Ibadan.

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