CCJ pays tribute to first female resident magistrate in Jamaica
PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad (CMC) – The Trinidad-based Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) Friday, described Ena Collymore-Woodstock as an exemplary barrister and magistrate from Jamaica whose career broke barriers for women throughout the region.
Collymore-Woodstock died on December 2, at the age of 108.
She was appointed as Jamaica’s first female resident magistrate in 1959 and during her career, she chaired the Juvenile Court and was also appointed the Senior Resident Magistrate before retiring in 1977.
Her work was not only localised to Jamaica but also realised throughout the Caribbean and beyond. She was awarded on the national and international levels for her contributions to the judicial sphere and society, including the Order of Distinction from the Jamaican Government and the Order of the British Empire from the United Kingdom.
In 2021, Collymore-Woodstock was named a Pioneering Caribbean Woman Jurist by the CCJ Academy for Law.
“Mrs Collymore-Woodstock was a true pioneer. Her legacy resonates in every courtroom where a female judicial officer presides and in the heart of every individual who values justice and equity,” said the Jamaican-born CCJ President, Justice Winston Anderson.
“She has served as an inspiration for many in the legal sector and beyond. We are truly in her debt for her contributions, he added.
The CCJ said it hopes that her “long life exemplify a legacy of service, advocacy, and leadership, and will continue to inspire generations to come.”