Latest Headlines
FAREWELL, OMOLOLU OLUNLOYO
AJIBOLA OGUNSHOLA pays tribute to Dr Olunloyo, a man of exceptional brilliance and former governor of Oyo State
Although I did not meet Dr. Omololu Olunloyo until early 1962, it was only a matter
of time for that to happen because he, Dr. Lekan Are (whose mother was from the
Aboderin family), and my own maternal brother, Chief Olubunmi Aboderin, had
known each other before they entered secondary school. Both Olunloyo and Aboderin
families had Kudeti origins.
Omololu Olunloyo and Lekan Are entered Government College, Ibadan in 1948 while
Olu Aboderin entered Ibadan Grammar School in 1949. The three friends sometimes
spent parts of their school holidays together, or severally, at the Oke-Bola residence of
Mr. (later Chief) Moyosore Aboderin, a wealthy man who they recognised as a “big
Brother”. He was about 15 years older than them.
Omololu Olunloyo had lost his father in December 1948, the year he entered GCI.
All of them grew up to attain heights of achievements and became recognised names
in the Nigerian firmament.
Dr. Omololu Olunloyo’s younger paternal brother by eight years, Olusegun Olunloyo
(“Segun”) attended Igbobi College, Lagos. We became friends from early 1962 during
our first year in the Higher School Certificate, he at Igbobi, and I at Government
College. His subjects, and mine, were Pure Mathematics, Applied Mathematics and
Physics. Our first meeting was in the middle of 1961.
As friends, we together visited his elder brother, Dr. Omololu (“Brother Mololu”)
from time to time during the school holidays, which he invariably (to my knowledge)
spent at the residence of their “baba”, Canon Olunloyo, at Ekotedo in Ibadan. Baba
Canon must have been much older than their own father as he appeared to be in his
70’s or early 80’s while their own father, Horatio Sowemimo Olunloyo, was born in
1906 and would have been less than 60 years old in 1962 had he been alive.
Somehow, word got round about Segun’s elder brother, the young, new, brilliant
mathematics lecturer who also rode an unusual type of car: the Citroen, with a unique
shape and hydraulic system.
For me, the attraction was his being an Ibadan man and old boy of Government
College who had won laurels in mechanical engineering at graduation and completed
his Ph.D in applied mathematics at University of St. Andrews in Scotland in minimum
time of two years.
I attended with Segun in 1962 the wedding ceremony of a relation of the Olunloyos,
Mr. Lere Adeyemo, who was also an old boy of Government College. My recollection
is that, that was probably where “Brother Mololu”, met his future wife, Miss Funlayo
Akinyemi, who was the chief bridesmaid at that wedding, which he also attended.
Perhaps he was even the bestman at the occasion. He was at the time the
commissioner for Education in the old Western Region when the region was under
“emergency government” headed by Dr. Majekodunmi during 1962.
Not long after, Brother Mololu and Miss Akinyemi got married, and Segun and I
donned our best agbada dresses to the event.
While he held the office, his official residence was directly opposite the “Premier’s
Lodge”, the official residence of the premier of the region, at Iyaganku GRA, which
late Chief S.L. Akintola occupied before and after the emergency administration until
his assassination in January 1966 by the military.
Segun spent part of his 1962 “summer” holiday there and I stayed overnight with him
on one occasion. The following morning, during one of our frequent tripartite discussions on
mathematics, he showed us his Ph.D thesis, opened it, and tried to, in the simplest
terms, explain the broad nature of the work. Not unexpectedly, we could not
understand it but I committed to memory till today the words of the closing paragraph
of the thesis where he wrote: “the message this example transmits is both salient and
powerful, and brings to a dramatic close this thesis, dramatic in a way all its own”.
He read it aloud with some excitement in his voice and on his face, and Segun and I
chorused in excited approbation.
I became quite close to him, especially after Segun travelled to the US in the middle
of 1964 to read mechanical engineering at Cornell University, while I went to Ibadan
in September to read mathematics. On his return to Nigeria in 1973, Segun joined the
academia, rose to preeminence in his field but, sadly, died on the 13th October 2017,
at the age of 74 years.
Brother Mololu treated me like his own blood brother in those days and I am grateful
to him. He took me along with him to several places. On one particular occasion, we
went from Ibadan together to Lagos to visit at his residence his uncle (his father’s
younger brother), Mr. Akinniran Olunloyo, who was the proprietor of Paramount
Photos. He was unwell, he said, spoke of his struggle with hypertension, and then
added in a loud note of defiance “but it can’t kill all of us!!”. That was in obvious
reference to the 1948 fate of his own elder brother, Mr. Horatio Olunloyo, who was
Brother Mololu’s own father, and who had died of hypertension at the age of 42.
Uncle Akinniran died not very long after our visit. The possibility of his own early
death from hypertension haunted Brother Mololu in those years, which was why he
sometimes discussed with me the disease of hypertension and the subject of death,
young though I was at the time. And he himself certainly did not then have the
disease. We also discussed prostate issues in later years. Which is why, although he
succeeded mightily in the longevity marathon of the human race, I nevertheless felt a
tinge of unhappiness that he missed by just eight days the attainment of the age of 90!
Horatio Olunloyo was among the Ibadan notables of his time and age; his facility with
various musical instruments (he had grown up under the guidance of his uncle who
was a vicar), his achievement as the first Ibadan man to pass Intermediate B.A, and
Intermediate LLB examinations by private study at home, his appointment as
Treasurer at Ibadan Native Authority, made him famous in elite circles. He also
socialised and entertained with choice drinks. Segun had reported that he was about to
travel to the United Kingdom to complete the bachelor’s degree in law when he
suddenly died.
I have recently read one or two reports after Dr. Olunloyo’s death, stating that Horatio
Olunloyo spent only one night at his new Molete residence before he died – on
December 29, 1948. However, my own father (Chief J.L. Ogunsola) recorded in his
diary on Saturday, 26th April, 1947 that he “attended the opening of the house of Mr.
Sowemimo Olunloyo” which suggests that he may have celebrated the opening of his
house almost 20 months before he actually started to live there. Chief Ogunsola was
chief-in-charge-of-tax at Ibadan Native Authority at the time.
My home visits to Dr. Olunloyo became far less frequent when I entered University
of Ibadan as I was now a student in the mathematics department where he was a senior
lecturer. I became more and more interested in European classical music which he
had from 1962 introduced to Segun and I.
In my final year at the University (1966-67), I took one of his courses and I therefore
became his student and he my teacher in Abstract Algebra.
In quality of teaching, he was clearly the best in the department among those to whom
I was exposed as he went to great lengths to ensure that his students understood the
subjects he taught. The students admired him for this.
His Nigerian colleagues in the mathematics department in my time were Professor
Adegoke Olubunmo, Professor J.O.C. Ezeilo, Professor Sowunmi, and, later,
Professor H. Tejumola.
My personal contacts with him after university became infrequent as I went abroad
almost immediately for five years and, on return, in 1972, have lived and worked
continuously in Lagos axis. There were no mobile phones then and land lines were as
scarce as gold, even in Lagos. He himself had become more and more involved in
governance and politics; his family setup had also enlarged.
At all times, we held opposing political views and we both knew it but because he was
deeply into politics, held high political office and contested elections, while I was not
a politician, we both avoided having political arguments in order to safeguard the
brotherly relationship. The long standing political predilections of my elder maternal,
brothers, late Chief Moyo Aboderin, late Chief Olu Aboderin and myself were,
broadly speaking, pro-Awolowo, in contradistinction to his own.
Iyabo and I commiserate with ‘Sister’ Mrs. Funlayo Olunloyo and Mrs. Ronke
Olunloyo, and with all his children; also with his sisters, ‘Sister’ Molara (Mrs.
Balogun) and ‘Sister’ Bisi.
May they all be consoled by the fact that he was widely recognised as a man with
exceptional brilliance and thirst for knowledge, who held several high political offices
without stain, and whose stay on this earth was more than twice as long as his father’s.
Chief Ogunshola is former Chairman of Punch Newspapers







