Florence Mahoney


Asi Florence Peters Mahoney is a Gambian Creole or "Aku" author and historian, and was the first Gambian woman to be awarded a PhD.

Background and early life

Florence Mahoney was born in 1929 in Bathurst, Gambia, to Lenrie Ernest Ingram Peters and Kezia Rosemary. Lenrie was a Sierra Leone Creole, while Rosemary was a Gambian Creole or Aku. Because Gambian Creoles or Akus are descendants of Sierra Leonean Creoles who worked and settled in The Gambia, Mahoney has ties on both sides to Sierra Leone. The Peters family was of West Indian or, more likely, Nova Scotian Settler descent. The family was also related to the prominent Sierra Leonean Creole Maxwell family that produced Joseph Renner Maxwell, the first African graduate of the University of Oxford, and the son of a colonial chaplain. Florence was one of five children, including the late Dr Lenrie Peters and actor Dennis Alaba Peters, whose parents had met in the 1920s and married within the same decade. Her father, Lenrie Ingram, was a graduate of Fourah Bay College and because of that institution's affiliation with Durham University was also a graduate of the latter university. Peters was the longest serving editor for the Gambian Echo and a staunch advocate for the rights of indigenous Gambians. He was a pan-Africanist and used to read poetry to Lenrie Jr. as a child.

Education

Mahoney attended St. Mary's Anglican Primary and then the Methodist Girls' High School and passed her Senior Cambridge School Certificate. Mahoney was then sent to St Elphin's Boarding School for girls in Derbyshire, England. After finishing, Mahoney attended Westfield College and received a bachelor's degree with honours in History in 1951. Mahoney then attended the University of Oxford's St Hilda's College], Oxford|St Hilda's College, where she obtained a postgraduate degree in Education in 1952. Mahoney later studied at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, where she obtained a PhD in History in 1963 with her dissertation "Government and Public Opinion in the Gambia, 1816–1914". Mahoney was the first Gambian woman ever to be awarded a PhD.

Return to the Gambia and educationalist work

In 1953 Mahoney returned to the Gambia and married John Mahoney Jr. John Mahoney was the son of Sir John Mahoney, a member of an influential and prominent Gambian Creole family that was active in colonial politics. Dr John Mahoney's sister, Hannah Augusta Darling Mahoney, married Sir Dawda Kairaba Jawara, the first leader of the Gambian Republic following independence on 18 February 1965.
In 1972, Mahoney was made a "Fulbright Professor of African history" and she has lectured at Spelman College, Atlanta, Georgia. In 1973 she returned to the Gambia but shortly thereafter she went back to the United States in March 1974 to lecture at the Pacific School of Religion in Berkeley, California. Mahoney taught "History and Religion" before rejoining her husband in Congo Brazzaville after her classes had ended.
She is the author of four books: Stories of Senegambia, The Liberated Slaves and the Return to Africa, Creole Saga: The Gambia's Liberated African Community in the Nineteenth Century, and the essay collection Gambian Studies.

Family

Florence Mahoney has three children from her marriage to Dr John Andrew Mahoney.

Selected works