Background
Doctor Abayomi-Cole was born in 1848 in Abeokuta, Ogun State in southwest Nigeria to Creole parents from Sierra Leone who were living in Nigeria as missionaries.
Doctor Abayomi-Cole was born in 1848 in Abeokuta, Ogun State in southwest Nigeria to Creole parents from Sierra Leone who were living in Nigeria as missionaries.
In Freetown he was put under the tutelage of the great American Broadcasting Company Sibthorpe at Hastings, a suburb of Freetown and was later sent to the Church Missionary Society while in Freetown, he attended the Grammar School where he completed his secondary education.
He is widely considered as one of the best doctors to ever come out of West Africa. When Archdeacon Robbin parents returned to Freetown, they brought the four-year-old Abayomi-Cole with them. He received a Bachelors degree in Medicine from the Fourah Bay College in Freetown.
He later qualified as a medical doctor and became a Fellow of the Society of Apothecaries (Federal Security Agency) of the United States.
Shortly thereafter, he became an affiliate of the National Association of Medical Herbalists in the United Kingdom. Combining his scientific training with a wealth of knowledge on the healing properties of traditional herbs, roots and leaves, Doctor Abayomi-Cole"s fame soon spread to all parts of Sierra Leone, and even to neighbouring Liberia.
His cures were a mixture of the orthodox and the traditional. He cured rheumatic pains, skin diseases such as "alay", nervous and eye diseases, et cetera
During the 1918 Spanish influenza epidemic, he invented a preparation of "tea-bush", "camphor", lime and spirit which saved many lives at a time when the influenza death toll was so high that people were buried in trenches in Freetown and other areas in Sierra Leone.
One of his well-known preparations as an antidote for poison, "ekpa", is still used in Krio villages homes in the Western Area. lieutenant is also used as a remedy for various stomach disorders. Doctor Abayomi-Cole"s herbal practice became more popular and lucrative than those of medical practitioners who had studied orthodox medicine in Britain, and he became a scientific and medical adviser to Governor Sir Leslie Probyn.
At the turn of the century, malaria was the greatest scourge of West Africa, and was taking a deadly toll particularly of Europeans living in West Africa.
Doctor Abayomi-Cole was called upon by the Colonial Government to help combat the disease. He made an effective preparation of herbs, containing as its main ingredients "broomstone" leaves and "agiri".
But he found that his cured patients returned within a few weeks with the same symptoms. Through intensive medical research, he was able to establish that poor environmental sanitation was the root cause of the relapse — mosquitoes were breeding in stagnant pools of water around houses.
He organised groups of voluntary workers known as "mosquito missionaries" who went from compound to compound advising people on the necessity of keeping their living areas clean.
The scheme worked so well that the Colonial Government later paid the volunteers monthly. Doctor John Augustus Abayomi-Cole died in 1943 at the great age of ninety-two years.