James Vivian Clinton
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James Vivian Clinton | |
|---|---|
| Born | 6 February 1902 |
| Died | 18 May 1973 (aged 71) Lagos, Nigeria |
| Occupation | Journalist |
James Vivian Clinton (6 February 1902 – 18 May 1973) was a Gold Coast-born Sierra Leonean journalist and expatriate to Nigeria who came from a Sierra Leone Creole family of West Indian, Liberated African, and European origins that moved freely between many parts of West Africa. Although he maintained strong connections to the Sierra Leone Creole community, he eventually settled in Calabar in Nigeria and was awarded an OBE in 1949.[1][2][3][4]
Clinton was born on 6 February 1902 at Axim in Gold Coast. His grandfather, James Clerk Clinton, was a West Indian from St. Vincent, who had settled in Sierra Leone with his family and was a pioneer of the Mahogany trade in the Gold Coast, Liberia and Ivory Coast, and his father Charles Warner Clinton, who was born in Liberia, and received his early education in Sierra Leone, practised Law in Calabar, where he was also a member of the Legislative Council from 1928 to 1938. His mother, Muriel Clinton, a Sierra Leone Creole was born in Sierra Leone, and was a daughter of the Sierra Leone Creole Attorney-General of the then Gold Coast, now Ghana.[1][3]
Education
Clinton began his elementary schooling at Calabar in 1910 and went to a private preparatory school at Bexhill in Sussex and then at Taunton School in Somerset. He went on to Cambridge University where he obtained the B.A in History and Law. He was called to the bar at Lincoln's Inn Field in 1924.[1][2][3]