Introduction
The biography of His Royal Majesty Alayeluwa Oba Jimoh Oladunni Oyewumi Ajagungbade III JP, CON, the immediate past Soun of Ogbomosoland is an interesting one.
To be born into royal lineage does not confer automatic kingship status on all princes, princes are born but kings are made through divine intervention. His Royal Majesty Oba Jimoh Oladunni Oyewumi Ajagungbade III JP, CON, Soun of Ogbomosholand was born on May 27, 1926- a month after the birth of another monarch, Queen Elizabeth II of England.
His father was His Royal Highness Oba Bello Afolabi Oyewumi Ajagungbade II (the Baale of Ogbomoso from 1916 to 1940), and Ayaba Selia Olatundun Adunni Oyewumi of Arowomole compound of Arowomole, Ogbomoso. He was the youngest of his mother’s three male children. His father had many wives and 63 children.
Because of his mother’s proclivity to give birth to male children in a household where other queens had a preponderance of female children, she found herself in the midst of envy and discrimination from the other wives.
It was rumoured that Oba Oyewumi’s mother when she was pregnant with the now monarch consulted an Ifa priest to make an attempt to change his sex to a female in the womb but this failed, the other Ayabas having threatened her against giving birth to another male child. Therefore, the mother and child were much travailed after the prince was born.
Prince Oladunni Oyewumi was the youngest of his mother’s three male children, a development which attracted open rivalry, serious recriminations, and unpretentious jealousy among the other olori (wives) whose children are mainly female.
After the birth of Prince Oladunni, many troubles began to brew in the palace while Olori Olatundun was abandoned with her fate.
To escape the unabated animosity directed against them, his mother, taking him along left the palace first for her family house at Arowomole and then for Ibadan and then relocated to Ibadan with an uncle domiciled in that city.
After about six years in Ibadan, Prince Oladunni started his elementary education at St Patrick’s School, Oke Padre, Ibadan.
Early Struggles
Prince Jimoh Oladunni started his educational career at St. Patrick’s School, Oke-Padre, Ibadan. But the death of his father in 1940 meant that a return to Ogbomoso with his mother for the wife to mourn her husband was imperative.
At the time, Oladunni was a mere 14-year-old boy. He thus continued his education at the (now defunct) Ogbomoso Peoples Institute headed by Professor Eyo Ita and pioneered by Professor N.D Oyerinde, the First Nigerian Professor and proud Ogbomoso son.
The school was the precursor of Ogbomoso Grammar School. With his mother, he had relocated to the Arowomole compound since the household of the deceased Oba had to leave the palace. Eventually, his dream of schooling was aborted due to financial constraints.
There was no help so, he reluctantly became a farm help, under one of his brothers, Dawodu Laleye, who initially promised to assist with his education.
His brother was supposed to fund his education but he kept on stalling and so one day, he fled to an Ijesa community to try his hand at gold mining.
But there, all he could lay his hand on was cloth weaving. But the spirit of hard work and determination that would later mark his adult life manifested from this time and so he was able to save some money from this business.
He decided to return to Ogbomoso in 1943 but on the trip back he lost all his savings to money doublers and gamblers at Ede. Thus, he arrived in Ogbomoso penniless. He was not down nonetheless.
He went back to the cloth-weaving business and had a stall at Arowomole market. He used to ride a rickety bicycle to Ilorin to buy cotton for his business but he never minded, he was focused on success.
Then, in 1944, a window of opportunity opened for him as a maternal uncle living in Jos, who came to Ogbomoso to get married, took him along while returning to his abode in Jos.
He arrived in the tin city of Jos on May 17, 1944, where he soon began to assist his elder brother (of the same mother), Prince Moses Oyelowo Oyewumi, a tailor, who already was living in Jos, to sell clothes.
He later convinced his brother to let him practice cloth-weaving, the products of which they sold. The business prospered though at great exertion because he used to trek long distances to sell the woven clothes at mining sites all around Jos.
He served his brother with devotion and was exceedingly honest. Even when Oyelowo went back to Ogbomoso to get married in 1945 and was stranded back home for six months due to a workers’ strike, Oyelowo returned to see the products well kept and his business intact. A rare thing today!
In 1946 nevertheless, the spirit of self-actualization overwhelmed the young Oladunni and he decided to be independent. He received the blessing of his brother, who gave him an old sewing machine and a sum of two pounds, sixteen shillings to start off.
He bought and sewed clothes which he sold. Because he poured his heart into the work and turned out exquisite designs, his business witnessed a tremendous spike and he began to flourish.
Oladunni, the businessman now really began to unravel.
Career And Accomplishments
The then Prince Oyewumi now set his eyes on real success. At just 20, he began the journey to the top. He took his savings of about 50 pounds to start trading in bicycles, specifically, double spring Raleigh, which he sourced from Lagos, and he began to make money.
However, life is always full of twists and turns. He soon fell victim to fraudsters; he trusted someone who assured him he would help buy the products directly from the UAC at very cheap rates.
So, they went together to the company; he handed the money to the man who pretended to go into an office but bolted away through an exit door unknown to the young prince. He had lost four pounds, fifty shillings.
It was a crushing blow but he soon gathered himself and the dream of being educated, he enrolled for evening classes at St. Paul’s School in Jos.
While doing this, he did not lose sight of his goal, and one day, he walked into the GB Olivant to look over the shop, While there, he came across a manager in the company, a certain Mr. Smith, who was a Scot national. They bonded and became friends.
Over time, Mr Smith offered Prince Oyewumi an attractive business deal, which involved being given goods on credit and making payment after sales, an opportunity he grabbed with both hands.
This opened a new vista of prospects for him which he masterfully explored. He continued to have a robust relationship with Mr. Smith and this association helped him a lot to hone his business skills.
He continued to grow and would later do business with other conglomerates like PZ, SCOA, and CFAO.
His association with Smith was a real blessing to him, he was to Prince Oladunni what some people call “destiny helper” today.
Smith introduced him to other expatriates who also found his honesty and entrepreneurial acumen worthy.
He met Mr. Holford, the manager of the then Barclay’s Bank, through Smith; he opened an account with the bank which began to advance him credit facilities with which he expanded his business.
By 1950, Prince Oyewumi had become sufficiently established in his trading business that he decided to get married. He got married to his most senior wife Olori Igbayilola Oyewumi.
In 1954, he was made the sole distributor for CFAO in Jos. He now became a big-time businessman and travelled to France in 1958 and to some other European countries including Germany, where he was appointed as the distributor of Becks beer in Nigeria.
He made some other business deals across Europe which entrenched his international status as a businessman.
He also consolidated in Nigeria and became a charming prince dashing across Nigerian cities to forge new business deals. But fate had a greater role for him.
His fame soared across Nigeria, becoming widely known as the “The Prince.” His business interests cut across many sectors. in the 1950s, He built the very popular Terminus Hotel, in Jos, and later in Osogbo before that of Ogbomoso.
The area where his Terminus Hotel, Jos Plateau state stands is now one of the most popular and busiest areas in Jos to date.
By 1958, the wealthy prince had started showing interest in estate development and property acquisition, and in that same year, the Prince met a European who so much admired his entrepreneurial ability that he offered to take him on a business vacation trip to the continent of Europe upon which they travel to France, Paris and United kingdom.
ASCENSION TO THE THRONE
In 1973 the Oyo state military governor invited the Gbagun ruling house to present a candidate for the appointment as Soun of Ogbomosoland after the passing away of the former king.
Ninety-four members who were of the Gbagun ruling house met and two candidates emerged to contest for the vacant stool but it turned out that 90 out of the 94 decision-makers favoured the candidacy of Prince Jimoh Oladunni Oyewumi.
With such majority support the then Prince Oladunni became the Soun to the delight and acceptance of his people.
He was traditionally installed on December 14, 1973, as the 20th Soun of Ogbomoso and coronated on January 12, 1973.
Meanwhile, The Late Oba Jimoh Oladunni Oyewumi’s installation as Soun instigated a major crisis in 1973.
This is because he dared to do what his predecessors did not do – wearing a beaded crown because the stool was considered that of Baale.
Yoruba Obas were alarmed, from Ife to Oyo, to Abeokuta, to Orangun-Ila and so on, there were hurried meetings to plan how to forestall “this upstart from committing a sacrilege.”
They cried foul that as Soun he was not entitled to wear a beaded crown, They conspired with the governor of the then Western State, Brigadier Oluwole Rotimi to thwart the move but he was adamant in the true spirit of his Ajagungbade cognomen.
His grandfather Gbagunboye Ajamasa Ondugbe (1870 – 1877) became known as Ajagungbade I after his heroics in battles.
It was at a battle in Ilesa in 1870s, where he led Ogbomoso warriors, that he reportedly beheaded a sovereign and took his crown as his own!
Then, Soun had his reasons, if he was constantly greeted, “K’ade pe lori, ki bata pelese,” but he had no crown to show for it, it amounted to a mockery of his position.
He further claimed that his grandfather – Gbagun – fought gallantly to win that crown earning him the appellation, Ajagungbade literally meaning the one who fought in battle and claimed the crown.
His grandfather despite being regarded and acknowledged as Ajagungbade I in the 1870s and the size and fame of Ogbomoso as home of the brave From the time of the first Soun, Ogunlola Ogundiran to Jogioro, to Kumoyede to Toyeje Akanni, Ogbomoso’s stool was still not upgraded to the status of Oba.
Late Oba Jimoh Oyewumi’s own father Baale Afolabi Bello Alabi Oyewumi (1916 – 1940) despite being the Ajagungbade II was not also upgraded to the status of an Oba.
This simply can’t continue now.
“Ajagungbade III is an Oba, the Soun, not a Baale”. The late Soun insisted and so it remained till date.
His traducers asked him to name the Oba from which Gbagun claimed the crown but he strongly countered: “Name the Oba that lost his crown and I will tell from whom he gained the crown!”
They had no answer to this. The ding-dong persisted. The Military Governor also warned him sternly against the act but he was undaunted.
He is bold, and courageous and his nerves are made of steel.
That saved the day for him. He dared the whole establishment and came out victorious.
He wore the beaded crown both at the installation and coronation ceremonies on December 14, 1973, and January 12, 1974, respectively.
The local council had also threatened not to fund the installation ceremony if he insisted on wearing the much-vaunted beaded crown, but he called its bluff and funded the ceremony from his purse.
Oba Oladunni Oyewumi is an example of the indomitable spirit of the ancient Ogbomoso warlord, which made a difference during the Fulani onslaught against Yorubaland in the 1800s.
That was the first of his numerous accomplishments for Ogbomoso.
An untoward consequence of this plot against him according to him is the loss of the prescribing authority of the Obas to determine who wears a beaded crown to the government.
LEGACY AND ACCOMPLISHMENTS
The contributions of Oba Oladunni Oyewumi to the growth and development of Ogbomoso cannot be exhausted in volumes of books not to talk of a website like johnsonokunade.com.
He had breathed into the city his adventurous spirit and cosmopolitan outlook to make an unbelievable impact. He is the monarch who built a semi-town into a metropolis of no mean value.
He is the overlord who overnight changed the status of his stool, from Baale to Oba. Many of us, who walk the streets of Ogbomoso today, filled with pleasure about its magnificence, would have been confronted with a bucolic community.
This traditional ruler has something in him, his wide connections coupled with his charming personality often stand him in good stead in attracting development.
He is the monarch who restored Ogbomoso’s boundaries and thrust it to its greatest apogee. When he assumed the stool, Ogbomoso had only three taxi cabs, only three secondary schools, lopsided electricity, limited telephone facilities, poor infrastructures especially in respect to roads, and so on.
We are all witnesses to how the narrative has changed today. One may think that any Oba who sits on the throne would have done the same, but this is a wrong assumption.
He is a man of great assets, in terms of wealth and personality, these are at his beck and call to facilitate developments, particularly at the inception of his reign.
It was his persona that made Ogbomoso a kingdom today ruled over by a king, Had it been someone else, who lacked grains of courage, knowledge, and wherewithal, the migration to the status of Oba wouldn’t have occurred in time.
In 1976, in fact, his struggles ensured that the Soun became an Oba officially. It is on record that the agitation of Oba Oyewumi facilitated this upgrading, which rubbed off well on the Ibadan traditional stool too for the stool was that of a Baale
He brought immense prestige to the throne of Soun and it was him that made it rank with the highest-ranked across the country today.
Also to his eternal glory, he caused the rebuilding of Ogbomoso palace to a befitting one after he ascended to the throne.
The old building consisting of a rustic upstairs built of mud was pulled down for the masterpiece that is Ogbomoso Palace today.
It was officially opened in March 1978. Furthermore, he spearheaded the legal battle over the boundary of Ogbomoso and Oyo. While Alaafin claimed the boundary was at Odo-Oba, Soun insisted it was at Ipeba.
It should be noted that this struggle spanned many decades, about 75 years. Oba Oladunni Oyewumi reopened it and it ended in victory for Ogbomoso in 1984 when the city claimed victory at the Supreme Court.
In that fashion, Ogbomoso won back many of its communities and lands.
The siting of a university and two teaching hospitals, a good network of roads, a television and two radio stations, a Federal Government College, a Government Technical College, numerous secondary schools (both public and private), several commercial and microfinance banks including a branch of the Bank of Agriculture, dual carriage roads, stadium, police area command and many more are some of the legacies that will forever define his reign.
The beautiful thing about all this is that upon mounting the saddle, he approached the right authorities to bring these things.
For instance, he just invited old acquaintances who headed NITEL and the electricity company at Osogbo at the time to significantly improve their services in his domain and these were affected.
So is the case with the upgrading of the Ogbomoso command to an area command.
Also, many indigenes of the city continue to rise in status in their careers occupying eminent positions that buoy the prestige of the community in the comity of communities.
late Soun Ajagungbade III bagged many awards and recognitions including being conferred with the prestigious national awards of Commander of the Order of Niger (CON) and Commander of the Federal Republic (CFR), the second being the highest conferred on any traditional ruler.
He was the Chancellor of Plateau State University till his death and he is a highly revered traditional ruler.
He has his flaws no doubt but the greatness he impacted on Ogbomoso is evidence of his own greatness. On a personal level, he is a job creator in Ogbomoso, his interests cover oil and gas, real estate, hospitality, etc.
Old age eventually set in, and his vitality and agility were reduced, slowing him down significantly but the sharpness and clearness of his mind till his final breath were still with him and in his head was continuously conjured the bright things he desired for his kingdom.
One can conveniently say that in terms of accomplishments for Ogbomoso, only his great ancestors – Soun Olabanjo Ogundiran Ogunlola, Baale/Kakanfo Toyeje Akanni Alebiosu, and Baale Oluwusi Aremu could rival him.
The Soun of Ogbomoso, His Royal Majesty Oba Jimoh Oladunni Oyewumi Ajagungbade III JP, CON, joined his ancestors in the wee hours of Sunday, 12th December 2021 at the very ripe age of 95 and impactful 48 long years of serving Ogbomoso people diligently; the longest-reigning monarch of the 27 rulers Ogbomoso ever had.
May his soul rest in peace.
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