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Tunji Sowande

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Tunji Sowande
Background information
Born1912
Lagos, Nigeria
Died1996
GenresClassical, choral, jazz
Occupation(s)Lawyer, musician

Tunji Sowande (1912 – 1996) was a Nigerian-born British lawyer and musician.

Early life

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Tunji Sowande was born in Lagos, Nigeria, in 1912 to a well-off and musical family. His brother was Fela Sowande. His father was the Anglican priest, Emmanuel Sowande, a pioneer of church music in Lagos and a contemporary of the classical composer and organist Ekundayo Phillips.[1]

Tunji Sowande was educated at the CMS Anglican Grammar School in Lagos and the Yaba Higher College, where he obtained a diploma in pharmacy in about 1940. He worked with the public health department in Lagos as a dispensing pharmacist for a number of years.[2] His contemporary was the late Adeyinka Oyekan, who was to become the Oba (king) of Lagos. He is said to have set up a private Pharmacy business alongside Oyekan.[citation needed]

Tunji was a baritone singer, organist, and later a jazz drummer and saxophonist.[2] He played in the conservative surroundings of the Anglican Cathedral in Lagos in his spare time.

He married in 1938 and had two children, Ayo and Tunde, who joined him in the UK, where they were educated, before returning to Nigeria as adults.

Education in the UK

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In 1945, Sowande decided to travel to the United Kingdom to pursue a career in Law, though his personal account was more to the effect that he wanted a change of scene to pursue his musical skills, with legal studies being an adjunct to his genuine quest.[citation needed]

He studied law at King's College London and took and passed the Bar Finals at Lincoln's Inn.

Sowande occupied himself primarily playing around the UK, supporting several acts both Jazz, Classical and Choral. He collaborated on live sets with several contemporaries including Johnny Dankworth, Ronnie Scott, Paul Robeson and Afro-Caribbean icons like Ambrose Campbell and Edmundo Ros.[citation needed]

Sowande formed a long-standing partnership with the hugely popular pioneering Black Singer and Pianist Rita Cann, who he mentored, and was part of the group of Black Intellectuals and musicians who met at African-American musician John Payne's Regent's Park flat.[3]

Sowande also recorded at least one single on the Afro-Caribbean Melodisc label, the track being "Ihin Rere" and Igi T'Olorun". He is also reputed to have dedicated a substantial part of his musical career to playing for charity entertaining an elderly audience- as a duo with Rita Cann, travelling around the UK for this purpose. His other compositions including the song Ara Eyo.[citation needed]

He was also reputed to have written several short plays.[citation needed]

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Tunji Sowande was called to the Bar in February 1952[4] and upon completing his pupillage, was informed by his mentor and Master of Chambers, Jeffrey Howard (later Judge Jeffrey Howard) that he had been offered a full tenancy at the prestigious 3 Kings Bench Walk chambers.[5] This was unexpected. Tenancies in prestigious Chambers were not available to Black Barristers due to a colour bar effectively operating. Sowande had aimed to pursue his musical career on completion of his studies and initially refused but subsequently accepted after pressure from his Pupil Master.[citation needed]

Sowande went on to pursue a career at the Bar, specialising in criminal law. His only other Black contemporary at the Bar at the time being the Caribbean barrister Learie Constantine, who was a professional cricketer but practised law and had sued and won compensation from the Imperial Hotel, London in 1944 for barring him "on the grounds of colour". Constantine later became Trinidadian High Commissioner to London and the UK's first Black Peer.[citation needed]

Sowande handled a large number of complex criminal matters in the course of his career. He was often at the Central Criminal Court, Quarter Sessions, Chelmsford, St Albans, Hereford, Middlesex and others and was on the county prosecutors list in Essex.[citation needed]

He rose to the rank of Head of Chambers at 3 Kings Bench Walk after several years in 1968, making him the first Black Head of a major Barrister's Chambers.[4][6] In addition in April 1978, he became the first Black Deputy Circuit Judge (assistant Recorder)[7][8][4] sitting initially at Snaresbrook and thereafter at 24 of the crown courts including Croydon, Inner London and Knightsbridge.

In 1986 Sowande was recorded as a Bencher of the Inner Temple.[4] Sowande was appointed a Recorder (Judge) of the Crown Court, from where he retired on or about 1989. This certainly is the authoritative view thus contradicting the Black Lawyers Directory claim that Dr John Roberts was the first Black Judge, since his appointment was only in 1985, whereas Sowande became a Deputy Recorder seven years prior to this. Roberts was most certainly the first Black Queen's Counsel, a rank which Sowande had striven for but did not attain before his death.[citation needed]

Tunji Sowande assisted the careers of several Lawyers from minority backgrounds, including Kim Hollis QC, who was given her opportunity of Tenancy by Tunji Sowande and mentored her in the early stages of her career.[citation needed]

Personal life and death

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Socially, he was an active a member of the Hurlingham Club, Justice, Concert Artiste's Association, several Theatrical Societies, lifelong member of Marylebone Cricket Club and Crystal Palace Football Club.

He died in 1996 at the age of 84.[2]

Commemoration

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In 2017, a play about Sowande, Just an Ordinary Lawyer, was created by Tayo Aluko.[9][10]

References

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  1. ^ Edward Keazor (10 June 2007). "Tunji Sowande". Retrieved 10 October 2009.
  2. ^ a b c Chamberlain, Adrian (2 February 2017). "Ordinary lawyer became a celebrated legal figure". Times - Colonist. Victoria, B.C. pp. C6.
  3. ^ Val Wilmer, ‘Cann, Rita Evelyn (1911–2001)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Jan 2005; online edn, Jan 2009 accessed 18 Feb 2017
  4. ^ a b c d Celebrating Black History at the Inns of Court (PDF). London: Inner Temple. October 2021.
  5. ^ Pinnock, Earl; Schofield, Thomas (October 2022). "Building on Sowande's Legacy". Counsel. UK: Relx. Retrieved 17 September 2024.
  6. ^ "An Interview with Tayo Aluko, performer behind 'Just an Ordinary Lawyer'". The Honourable Society of Lincoln's Inn. 27 April 2023. Retrieved 17 September 2024.
  7. ^ Wilson, Alexandra (13 August 2020). In Black and White: A Young Barrister's Story of Race and Class in a Broken Justice System. Octopus. ISBN 978-1-913068-30-1.
  8. ^ "Myths in law". Open Learning. Retrieved 17 September 2024.
  9. ^ Billington, Michael (13 January 2017). "Just an Ordinary Lawyer review – solo show honours Britain's first black judge". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 18 September 2024.
  10. ^ Aluko, Tayo (June 2021). Just an Ordinary Lawyer. Playdead Press. ISBN 978-1-910067-44-4.