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Gershon Collier

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Gershon Beresford Onesimus Collier
Sierra Leone's first permanent representative to the Headquarters of the United Nations
of  Sierra Leone
to  United Nations
In office
1961 – February 17, 1967
Succeeded byChristopher Okoro Cole
Sierra Leonean Ambassador to the United States [es]
of  Sierra Leone
to  United States
In office
November 20, 1963 – February 17, 1967
Preceded byRichard Edmund Kelfa-Caulker
Succeeded byChristopher Okoro Cole
Chief Justice of Sierra Leone
In office
February 17, 1967 – March 21, 1967
Preceded bySir Samuel Bankole Jones[1]
Succeeded byBanja Tejan-Sie
Personal details
Born(1927-02-16)February 16, 1927
Freetown
DiedMay 25, 1994(1994-05-25) (aged 67)
New York City[citation needed]
SpouseFashn Dora (m. 1954)
Children2
Parents
  • Samuel Adolphus Collier (father)
  • Maria Jeanette Collier (mother)
EducationCMS Grammar School and Fourah Bay College
Alma materstudied law, M.A., B.C.L., B.L.. LL.M., J.S.D. at New York University University.

Gershon Beresford Onesimus Collier (February 16, 1927 – May 25, 1994) was a Sierra Leone Creole diplomat, chief justice of Sierra Leone and educator.

Career

[edit]
  • He was called to the English Bar at the Middle Temple Inns of Court in London.
  • When Albert Margai left the Sierra Leone People's Party in 1958, Gershon Collier was one of the supporters and was a member of that People's National Party's first executive committee.
  • In 1961, he became Sierra Leone's first permanent representative to the Headquarters of the United Nations in New York City.
  • On October 16, 1963, he was designated concurrently ambassador in Washington, D.C., war he was concurrently accredited from November 20, 1963, until February 17, 1967.
  • He got in contact with Gamal Abdel Nasser who became Godparent of his son Gamal.
  • In 1967, Margai arranged his nomination as chief justice of Sierra Leone. However, Margai lost the election in 1967 and Collier lost his office as chief justice.
  • In 1967, Collier migrated to New York City where he took a teaching appointment at New York University.[2]

Collier's granddaughter Napheesa Collier won a gold medal in basketball at the 2020 Summer Olympics.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Samuel Bankole Jones Samuel Bankole Jones
  2. ^ Magbaily C. Fyle, Historical Dictionary of Sierra Leone, p. 38