Asi Archibong-Arikpo (12 November 1919 – 22 November 2005) was a Nigerian midwife, politician, and fashion designer.

Asi Archibong-Arikpo
Hon. Elder (Chief) Mrs. Asi Archibong-Arikpo
Born
Asi Archibong

12 November 1919
Died22 November 2005(2005-11-22) (aged 86)
NationalityNigerian
EducationDublin, Ireland
Occupation(s)midwife, politician, and fashion designer
TitleHon. Elder
SpouseOkoi Arikpo
Children1

Early life

edit

Asi Archibong was born in Calabar, the daughter of William Archibong Young and Umo Archibong Young, parents of the Efik ethnic group. She attended Duke Town Presbyterian School in Calabar, and trained in Dublin, Ireland as a midwife.[1]

Career

edit

Archibong-Arikpo was the head of a maternity hospital in Ugep, Nigeria, for two years. Archibong-Arikpo also pursued a career in fashion design. In 1963, she said she was working on a national bridal dress for Nigeria.[2] Her gowns were often blue and gold, colors she associated with the Presbyterian Church. She sold her dresses to raise funds for church mission activities.[1]

In 1969, she was ordained as a ruling elder in the Presbyterian Church of Nigeria. In 1975, she was elected president of the Presbyterian Women's Guild in Nigeria, a role she filled until 1982. As a politician, she was elected to the Calabar Municipal Council in 1977, and served in the Cross River State legislature from 1979 to 1983.[1]

She visited the United States with her husband in 1963 and spoke to reporters about her own work as an midwife and designer.[2] She went to North America again in 1969, with her husband, who was addressing the United Nations.[3]

For her lifetime of diverse achievements, she was honored with a chieftaincy in 1975, and named "National Grandmother" by the Christian Girls in Training in 1990.[1]

Personal life

edit

Asi Archibong met Okoi Arikpo in London when he was a doctoral student; they married in London in 1950. They had a daughter, Itam. Asi Archibong-Arikpo was widowed when her husband died in 1995. She died ten years later, at age 86.[1]

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d e William Arikpo, "Hon. Elder (Chief) Mrs. Asi Archibong-Arikpo" Archived 2016-10-19 at the Wayback Machine Nigerian Chronicle (25 August 2015).
  2. ^ a b Bonnie Seymour, "Too Much Time or Not Enough?" The Fresno Bee (16 November 1963): 7. via Newspapers.com 
  3. ^ Ethel L. Payne, "So This is Washington" Pittsburgh Courier (1 November 1969): 7. via Newspapers.com