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Triennial Award |
Personalities
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Dame Hilda Bynoe
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Dame
Hilda Bynoe is well known throughout the
Caribbean as the first woman Governor
in the British Commonwealth and the first
native Governor of her island home of
Grenada.
The first few years of her adulthood were
spent as a Teacher at the St. Joseph's
Convent in San Fernando and at Bishop's
Anstey High School in Port of Spain, Trinidad,
as a Science Student; and afterwards at
her Alma Mater as a Teacher. In 1944 she
left for Europe to study Medicine and
graduated from London University, Royal
Free Hospital, then the London School
of Medicine for Women in 1951. While still
a student, she met and married Peter Bynoe,
a Trinidadian, R.A.F. Officer and student
of Architecture; and it was there that
her two sons Roland and Michael were born.
The Bynoes returned to the West Indies
in 1953 and Dr. Hilda Bynoe served in
various disciplines of Medicine in Guyana
and in Trinidad and Tobago for the next
fifteen years.
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Her life was to service in the teaching and medical professions to family
and community. Her appointment as Governor of the Associated States
of Grenada, Carriacou and Petite Martinique in 1968 was no surprise
and gave tangible proof of the esteem in which she was held. She was
made a Dame Commander of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth II in
1969 and retired from the duties of Office in February, 1974.
It was in Grenada that Dame Hilda first began to write her poems and
short stories, her essays and vignettes and she continued off and on
with these after she returned to Trinidad in 1974 to resume her medical
practice and her community service.
In 1990, she retired to continue her writing and to assist in the care
of her grand-daughters, Olukemi and Nandi Peta. She continues her Patronage
of a number of organizations , including that of The Caribbean College
of Family Physicians, The John Hayes Memorial Kidney Foundation and
The Caribbean Women’s Association. She is a member of the Academic Board
of St George’s University.
Her book "I Woke at Dawn" was published in 1996.
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