The passage, on June 1, 
2012 of foremost banker and traditional ruler of Iloko Ijesa, Osun 
State, Oba Oladele Olasore, is a huge blow to Nigeria, even if this 
great loss was beclouded by the Dana Air tragedy that occurred two days 
after. To us old students of Offa Grammar School, Offa, Kwara State, it 
is a big blow.
Offa Grammar School may not
 be in the class of the Kings, Barewa, and Queens Colleges; or among the
 Methodist Boys High School of this world, but the school has had her 
fair share of quality contribution to the roll call of men and women 
that shaped and are still shaping Nigeria.
From the military are Gen. 
Alani Akinrinade, the man who averted the greater disaster that would 
have followed Bukar Sukar Dimka’s coup of 1976; Gen. David Jemibewon, 
Group Captain S.A. Latinwo, Air Commodore Bayo Lawal and Vice-Admiral 
Ganiyu Adekeye, among others.
From the judiciary, we have
 the likes of Justice Isa Ayo Salami, late Justice M.B. Belgore, and 
Justice Ibrahim Gambari (current Emir of Ilorin) -all of whom were 
former judges of Appeal Court. In the academia, we have the first 
African professor of Geology, M.O. Oyawoye, tops OGS’ list of 
distinguished alumni – a list that has not less than five 
vice-chancellors, including Professors A.B. Oyediran and S.A. Adeyemi, 
former VCs of University of Ibadan and Federal University of Technology,
 Minna, respectively. The list is endless.
But if OGS old students 
were asked to pick at random the greatest product of the school, I guess
 Oba Oladele Olasore will be on top of the chart. That is how much we 
revere this banker, who was not only very active in old students’ 
activities but he was also a former president of the national body.
When the Pa James 
Osanyin-led Offa Grammar School admitted then 16-year-old Olashore into 
the school in 1951, little did they know that a future shining star had 
just been enrolled into the community secondary school.
Olasore was not the 
gentlest pupil in the school, as Chief Emmanuel Adesoye of the Okin 
Biscuits and Adesoye College fame, being a junior to Olasore in OGS, 
narrated how the prince used to send them to buy wine. Interestingly, 
both men are founders of two of the most successful private secondary 
schools in Nigeria: Adesoye College, Offa and Olasore International 
School, Iloko Ijesa.
Olasore completed his 
secondary education in 1956 and proceeded to Ghana and later, England, 
for further schooling. He returned to Nigeria to pick up a job as an 
Accountant in British Petroleum Nigeria Limited, before venturing into 
banking as a director in Central Bank of Nigeria. He rose to become the 
Chief Executive Officer of International Bank for West Africa (later 
known as Afribank and now Mainstreet Bank) before being poached by First
 Bank to continue in the same role.
He was named Nigeria’s 
Banker of the Year in 1988. He went on to found his own bank, Lead 
Merchant Bank. Olasore, who later became Secretary (Minister) of Finance
 during the interim Ernest Shonekan government, was, no doubt, one of 
the finest bankers to have bestridden the financial landscape.
Olasore, even in the midst 
of his very busy personal and official engagements, never forgot his 
alma mater. He was very active in old boys’ activities. Before, during 
and after his tenure as President of OGS Old Students Association, he 
took active interest in the students’ and alumni welfare.
The first time I saw him 
live was in 1995 when I was in JSS2. As the president of the alumni body
 then, he was chairing the national convention holding at the Ludlow 
Hall of the school, while I, alongside other students, watched from the 
back of the hall.
When I was made the pioneer
 President of the 2000 set chapter of OGSOSA a few years after 
graduation and formed our chapter, we made efforts to pay a courtesy 
call to a number of alumni achievers, including Oba Olasore. Still in 
the university and most of us struggling with personal activities, we 
were not able to actualise the Olasore visit plan but we were able to 
see Chief Adesoye in his sprawling mansion in Offa.
Oba Olasore’s death came 
less than four months after we lost another distinguished old boy, a 
banking guru just like Olasore, Dr. Femi Adekanye, CEO of the defunct 
Commerce Bank. When the list of ‘Who is Who’ in Nigeria’s banking 
history is drawn, clearly, these two products of OGS will be right there
 in top spots. All old students of Offa Grammar School are very proud of
 you, gentlemen.
 - Oyewale, an MBA student 
at Edinburgh Business School, is former president of Offa Grammar School
 Old Students Association (2000 set).
 
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