Ekiti Born First African Professor of Forestry, Kolade Adeyoju, Dies

  • By Demola Atobaba, Ado-EkitiĀ 

The Ekiti State born first Professor of Forestry in Africa, Samuel Kolade Adeyoju, has died.

The news of his demise was made public through a statement signed by a top member of the family, Prof. Babatunde Ajayi, and made available to journalists in Ado Ekiti, on Wednesday, June 26, 2024.

According to the statement made available to TopNews in Ado-Ekiti by the family, Prof. Adeyoju died in Ibadan, on the 19th of June, 2024, at the age of 88.

Kayneylogic

The high profile and revered academic hailed from Ijan Ekiti, in Gbonyin Local Government Area of Ekiti State.

Prof Adeyoju was an alumnus of the prestigious Christ’s School, Ado Ekiti and the London School of Economics, where he bagged his PhD degree.

The statement reads: “With deep sense of honour and great submission to God’s will, we announce the passing of our patriarch and respectable academic, Prof. Kolade Adeyoju, who joined the higher realm on the 19th June, 2024, during a brief illness.

“Until his demise, Prof Kolade Adeyoju was an Emeritus Professor of Forestry at the nation’s Premier University, University of Ibadan, Oyo State, where he had earlier worked and retired without blight or blemish.

“His enormous contributions to the growth of scholarship was superb. His exploits in Forestry Development and Management in Africa and across the globe, garnered wide acknowledgement and applause during his lifetime.

“Prof. Kolade Adeyoju didn’t just blaze the trail as an academic juggernaut, he boldly etched his name in gold and annals of history as the First Professor of Forestry in Africa . This remains our succour at this time.

“He was a pride not only to Ijan Ekiti and Ekiti State, but to Nigeria and Africa at large.

“May his soul find rest in the bosom of God Almighty”, the statement said.

Due to his unquenchable thirst for scholarship, Prof. Adeyoju, was at the Oduduwa College, Ile-Ife, after his secondary education for the Higher School Certificate course. He bagged the B, A. degree programme in geography in 1963, while he capped it up with a doctoral programme from 1963 to 1966 at the London School of Economics, after his Masters of Arts Degree was converted into a PhD due to his exceptional acacdemic brilliancy.

He is survived by his wife, Dr Adeola Adeyoju and highly successful children and grandchildren.

The statement added that his funeral arrangements would be announced later by the family.

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