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Arthur Porter (historian)

Professor
Arthur Porter
Born Arthur Thomas Daniel Porter III
(1924-10-27) 27 October 1924 (age 92)
Freetown, Sierra Leone
Occupation Historian, Sociologist
Nationality British Subject, Sierra Leonean
Education University of Cambridge, Boston College

Arthur Thomas Daniel Porter III (born 1924) is a retired Creole professor, historian, and author. His book on the Sierra Leone Creole people, Creoledom: A study of the development of Freetown society, examines their society in a way in which few books of their time period had, and it is one of the most quoted books on the Creoles. He has also been published in East Africa and the UK.

Porter was born in 1924 in Freetown, Sierra Leone, to Guy Hardesty Porter and Adelina Porter. Guy Porter was an electrical engineer who died as a civil servant. Adelina Porter was a school teacher at the Freetown Secondary School for Girls, which was attended by Porter's sister, Iyatunde Harriet Maria Palmer (née Porter). Porter attended the Cathedral School in Freetown.

Like many Creoles, Porter is of West Indian, Jamaican Maroon, Liberated African, and Nova Scotian settler descent. His paternal grandfather was Arthur Thomas Porter I (1834-1908), a successful Creole businessman of West Indian and Jamaican Maroon parentage. The father of A.T. Porter I was Guy Porter, a West Indian immigrant to Sierra Leone via England, who became a headman of Kent Village. Guy Porter married a Maroon colonist. The Porter family house owned by A.T. Porter I was at No. 11 Wilberforce Street in the heart of Settler Town and near Zion Methodist Church.

Porter is also of "Settler" or Nova Scotian stock, by way of a Virginian ancestor who had arrived in Sierra Leone via Nova Scotia. The Virginian had occupied a house in what the Nova Scotians called Settler Town, Sierra Leone, and was one of the founders of Freetown.

Porter married a woman from Denmark and had two children, Arthur and Emma. He is the grandfather of four girls: Gemma, Fiona, Adina and Charlotte. He lives in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, and he makes frequent trips back to his homeland, Sierra Leone. Porter's son, Arthur Porter IV, was a Canadian physician and former Director General (CEO) of the McGill University Health Centre.

Porter's work on Sierra Leonean history is considered to be among the most scholarly work done on the people of his native Sierra Leone. Porter's analysis of the stratification of Creole society is considered the most authoritative work on the development of Creole society, and most scholars reference his book when researching the Creole people. The work he accomplished during his tenure at Fourah Bay College has made many look upon Porter as one in the mould of historian Christopher Fyfe, Professor Eldred D. Jones, Professor Akintola J. G. Wyse, and linguist Leo Spitzer.


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