Herbert Christian Bankole-Bright was a well-known politician in Sierra Leone.
Background
Herbert Bankole-Bright was born in Okrika, Nigeria, on 23 August 1883, the son of Jacob Galba Bright and his wife Letitia (née Williams), descendants of Sierra Leone Liberated Africans. Bright"s paternal grandfather, John Bright, was an ex-slave who had been liberated off a slave ship with his mother in 1823.
Education
Bright was educated at the Wesleyan Boys" High School in Freetown (1898–1904), and then studied medicine at Edinburgh University (1905-1910), before setting up a practice in Freetown.
Career
At Edinburgh, he become "politically awake" and was involved in a number of student activist debates and policies. In 1918, Bright set up the Aurora newspaper, which he edited until 1925. With Ernest Beoku-Betts, he campaigned for increased suffrage and against racism, without success.
In 1939, following a feud with Isaac Wallace-Johnson, Bright supported government measures to limit the activities of Johnson"s Youth Leagues.
This alienated many of Bright"s supporters, and he temporarily stepped down from politics. In the 1940s, Bright founded the National Council of Sierra Leone, and it became the main opposition at the Sierra Leonean general election, 1951.
After spending the next six years attempting to obstruct all government activities, the National Council lost all its seats at the 1957 election.