Adelaide Casely-Hayford, born on the 2nd of June in 1868, was a Sierra Leone Creole Pan-African feminist, educator, and author. Hayford established a vocational school for young girls in Sierra Leone that emphasized racial and cultural pride.

Hayford was born into an elite Sierra Leone family in Freetown, British Sierra Leone. She spent much of her youth in England and studying throughout the West, also studying music in Germany at the age of 17.

While in England, Adelaide married West African author and Pan-Africanist J. E. Casely Hayford (also known as Ekra-Agiman). Their marriage may have influenced her transformation into a cultural nationalist.

In May 1914, Hayford returned to Sierra Leone, dedicating the rest of her life to educating African girls. In October 1923, she established the Girls’ Vocational School, one of the first educational institutions in Sierra Leone to provide young girls with an African-centered education, according to historian Keisha N. Blain.

Hayford frequently traveled throughout the world, giving a speaking tour in the United States on misconceptions about Africa. Author Brittany Rogers notes that these travels also exposed her to the exploitation of black female labor throughout the world.

Although her educational concept for young girls had a Victorian-influenced, middle class domesticity in mind, Rogers writes that these travels led Hayford to begin writing and speaking on matters of labor as well. Hayford died in her hometown of Freetown, Sierra Leone in 1960.

“Instantly my eyes were opened to the fact that the education meted out to [African people] had…taught us to despise ourselves. Our immediate need was an education which would instill into us a love of country, a pride of race, an enthusiasm for the black man’s capabilities, and a genuine admiration for Africa’s wonderful art work.”

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      • Black_Mald_Futures [any]@hexbear.net
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        30 days ago

        I already did 14 years ago except it was more like i went to the doctor and said “i don’t read so good no more” and he went “sounds like the adhd to me” and gave me amphetamines and they kinda fucked up my time in college

        now i have no healthcare and no amphetamines

        • Frank [he/him, he/him]@hexbear.net
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          30 days ago

          Yeah, stimulants often have a calming effect on ADHD people. Some of my favorite “And then I learned I had ADHD” are people who do coke at a party and then spend several hours calmly sitting on the couch petting the cat while everyone else is going a mile a minute.

          • SoylentSnake [he/him, they/them]@hexbear.net
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            30 days ago

            hm this is interestinb b/c i was diagnosed with adhd when i was a teen and still fit the bill on certain symptoms but when i took illicit adderall in college to get papers done i felt INSANE does that say anything about where im at with stuff or not enough data 2 really say? edit: i will add dosages were prob not super controlled and my body didn’t really have time to adjust or w/e it was always one offs to get a specific task done