Charlotte Obasa
Charlotte Olajumoke Obasa was a Nigerian socialite and philanthropist. She was the daughter of the merchant R. B. Blaize and the wife of the physician, Orisadipe Obasa.
Life
A Saro, Obasa was born as one of the children of Richard Beale Blaize, and his wife, Emily Cole Blaize. Her formative years were spent in Lagos, where her father published the nationalist newspapers The Lagos Times and Gold Coast Colony Advertiser and The Lagos Weekly Times. She was very well educated, first at what is today the Anglican Girls' School in Lagos, then at an institution in England.In 1902, she married the Saro prince Orisadipe Obasa. Her father gave the couple a new house as a wedding present; it eventually came to be called Babafunmi House as a result. Obasa and her husband went on to have five children together.
An aunt of Kofo, Lady Ademola, Obasa was an entrepreneur and philanthropist who championed women's rights and education. In 1907, the Lagos School for Girls was opened through her efforts in a property she lent the school. In 1913, she founded the first motor transport company in Lagos, the Anfani bus service, and had three trucks, three taxis and six buses in operation by 1915.
Obasa also served as a prominent esotericist. In 1914, she co-founded the Reformed Ogboni Fraternity, and was recognized as its first Iya Abiye, or lady master, in the same year.
In 1922, Obasa commissioned a portrait from the Nigerian artist Chief Aina Onabolu. More than a century later, it was part of the Nigerian Modernism exhibition at Tate Modern in Britain.
She died in 1953.