Emmanuel Charles Quist was born in 1880 in Christiansborg, Accra.[3] He was the son of the Rev. Carl Quist (1843 – 99), a Basel Mission minister from Osu, Accra.[3][10] His Ga-Danish mother, Paulina Richter, descended from the Royal House of Anomabo.[3][10] Richter's ancestor was Heinrich Richter (1785–1849), a prominent Euro-African from Osu.[11][12] Richter's descendants also included Philip Christian Richter (b. 1903), an academic and Presbyterian minister and Ernest Richter (b. 1922), a diplomat.[13] Carl Quist was also of Ga-Danish ancestry and a son of one of the three Kvist brothers (anglicised to Quist) who came to the Gold Coast via Holland in 1840.[3][10][14] The brothers, all ethnic Danes, settled separately in Cape Coast, Christiansborg and Keta.[3] E. C. Quist was also related to the historically notable Clerk family of Accra, through his cousin, Anna Alice Meyer (1873 – 1934) whose husband was the theologian and Basel missionary, Nicholas Timothy Clerk (1862 – 1961).[14][15]
On his return from London, Quist enrolled as a barrister in private practice at the Gold Coast Bar, establishing his chambers in Accra.[3] Quist became the first African Crown Counsel in the Gold Coast Civil Service, equivalent to the position of a State Attorney.[3] He resigned from his position as a Crown Counsel within a year to focus on his work as a defence lawyer.[3] He was a member of the Accra Town Council from 1919 to 1929.[3] He was an extraordinary member of the Legislative Council in 1925, serving as a legal advisor to the Eastern Provincial Council of Chiefs. He was elected a member of the Legislative Council, representing the Eastern Province, from 1934 to 1948.[3] He was appointed a member of the Achimota College Council.[3]
A puisne judge at the Cape Coast judicature from 1948 to 1949, E. C. Quist was the first African President of the Legislative Council from May 1949 to 1951, Speaker of the National Assembly of the Gold Coast from 1951 to 1957,[18] and Speaker of the National Assembly of Ghana from March 1957 until his retirement on 14 November 1957.[3][1] During this period, his colleagues in parliament re-elected him as Speaker during the general elections of 1954 and 1956.[3] The elevation of Quist in 1949 happened after the last Governor of the Gold Coast, Sir Charles Arden-Clarke relinquished his concurrent post as the President of the Legislative Council.[3] Quist visited the British House of Commons in 1950.[3] On 26 October 1950, he partook in the Speaker's Procession at the Palace of Westminster, as the official guest of the then Speaker, Douglas Clifton Brown, 1st Viscount Ruffside, during the opening of a new session that year.[3][19] In 1957, he presided over the special state opening of Parliament on Ghana's Independence Day, 6 March, which was witnessed by several visiting international dignitaries including Princess Marina, Duchess of Kent, Queen Elizabeth II's special representative for the occasion as well as the then US Vice President Richard Nixon and the American civil rights activist, Martin Luther King Jr.[3][20][21]
Personal life
On 27 June 1929, Quist married Dinah Nita Bruce of Christiansborg, Accra.[22] Dinah Bruce was from the prominent Bruce family of Accra whose members included Gold Coast physician and journalist, Frederick Nanka-Bruce as well as Ghanaianmusician, King Bruce. Quist had two daughters Paulina Quist (Mrs. Clerk) and Dinah Quist (Mrs. Annang).[22] Emmanuel Quist was a patron of a number of social clubs: the Accra Turf Club, the Rodger Club and the Boy Scouts Movement.[3] Quist was also a member of the District Grand Lodge of Ghana.
Quist was created O.B.E. in 1942, "for public services in the Gold Coast,"[23] and Knighted in 1952.[1][24]"The Speakers' Conference Hall" at the Parliament House has been named after Sir Emmanuel Charles Quist.[25] A commemorative plaque, sponsored by his wife, Lady Dinah Quist, was erected in his memory in the sanctuary of the Ebenezer Presbyterian Church, Osu where he was a congregant.[3][26] The "Sir Emmanuel Charles Quist Street" in Accra was named in his honour.[27]
References
^ abcdMichael R. Doortmont, The Pen-Pictures of Modern Africans and African Celebrities by Charles Francis Hutchison: A Collective Biography of Elite Society in the Gold Coast Colony, Brill, 2005, p. 359
^Justesen, Ole (2003). "Heinrich Richter 1785 - 1849: Trader and Politician in the Danish Settlements on the Gold Coast". Transactions of the Historical Society of Ghana (7): 93–192. ISSN0855-3246. JSTOR41406700.