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Murietta Olu-Williams

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Murietta Patricia Olu-Williams, OBE (née Metzger; born 15 December 1923) was a Sierra Leonean civil servant, the first woman in Africa to achieve the rank of Permanent Secretary in the Civil Service.

Life

Murietta Olu-Williams was born on 15 December 1923, the only daughter of Dr. G. N. Metzger, a Freetown doctor of Creole heritage. She was educated at the Freetown Secondary School for Girls, where she was a pupil of Hannah Benka-Coker.

In 1950 she joined the Civil Service as a supervising teacher for the Sierra Leonean Ministry of Education. In 1962 she transferred from the professional to the administrative service, becoming the first female Permanent Secretary. She served in three ministries in this capacity. While at the Ministry of Transport and Communication, she pioneered the creation of parastatals: the Road Transport Co-operation and the Sierra Leone Ports Authority.

In 1966 she was awarded an OBE for her services as Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Transport and Communications. On 25 August 1969 she was admitted to the Middle Temple.

References

  1. ^ Kenneth Little (1973). African Women in Towns: An Aspect of Africa's Social Revolution. CUP Archive. pp. 207–8. ISBN 978-0-521-09819-9.
  2. 'Portrait', West Africa, 3 August 1963, p.857
  3. ^ Register of Admissions to the Honourable Society of the Middle Temple, Vol. 5, p.48. Accessed 1 July 2020.
  4. ^ Christiana A. M. Thorpe, The Rebel War Years were Catalytic to Development in Social Advancement of Women in Post-War Sierra Leone, PhD Thesis, St Clements University, 2006, pp. 21-2
  5. "No. 43857". The London Gazette. 1 January 1966. p. 45.
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