He
attended the Government High School in Nassau, and later entered
the University of Bristol and Inner Temple in the United Kingdom
where he obtained a law degree. He was called to the English Bar
by the Inner Temple and in 1955 was admitted to the Bahamas Bar
as counsel and attorney.
In 1956 Mr. Hanna joined the Progressive Liberal Party (PLP), and
was elected to serve on its Executive Board. In March, 1956, he
was nominated, along with the late Samuel White, to contest a Cat
Island seat in the general election. They lost.
Always an ardent supporter of trade unionism, His Excellency
got an opportunity to use his skills in the 1958 general strike,
giving union leaders freely of his time and counsel and taking
part in the tedious negotiations that eventually led to victory
for the workers.
As a direct result of the strike, Sir Alan Lennox-Boyd, then Secretary
of State for the Colonies, visited The Bahamas to investigate
the grievances by the unions and the opposition PLP. Mr. Hanna
played an important part in the negotiations between the PLP and
the Secretary of State. Critical constitutional advances flowed
from the talks; one was the increase in the number of seats in
New Providence from eight to 12.
Two of the four seats were allocated to the Eastern District,
hiking the number there to four. Nominated by the party to run
in the constituency, Mr. Hanna won easily.
As a member of the Opposition, he constantly flailed the United
Bahamian Party (UBP). His candour and courage in debate led to
his suspension from the House on April 17, 1965, during a debate
on boundary changes. He refused to leave when ordered out, and
had to be evicted bodily by the Sergeant-at-Arms. It as an unprecedented
act in the 236-year history of The Bahamas Parliament. Four days
later, Mr. Hanna was readmitted.
Re-elected in the 1962 general election, he was appointed to the
delegation that represented the PLP at a constitutional conference
in the United Kingdom.
In the 1967 general election he competed for a seat representing
St. Ann’s – a new constituency. He was re-elected
in 1968, 1972, 1977, 1982 and 1987 and served until he lost his
seat in the 1992 General Election.
As a legislator, Mr. Hanna has made a major contribution to the
political and social development of The Bahamas. He is considered
a champion of civil rights, having vigorously opposed any form
of racial discrimination. He is the architect of bahamianzation,
a policy which placed Bahamians first.
After he watched the Union Jack flutter down to be replaced by
the Bahamian standard during the Independence ceremony July 10,
1973, at Clifford Park, he told a friend, “I myself had
only one major political aim and that was to assist this country
achieve complete sovereignty. Everything I did or said was to
this end.”
Mr. Hanna was appointed Deputy Prime Minister and government
leader in the House in 1967 and held the position until his resignation
from Cabinet in 1984. As a member of Cabinet, Mr. Hanna served
as Minister of Education, Minister of Trade and Industry, Minister
of Home Affairs (with responsibility for immigration), and Minister
of Finance (with added responsibility for the public service).
The Governor- General is married to the former Beryl Church.
They have four surviving children, Arthur Dion Jr., Mark Lindsay,
Glenys Hanna-Martin and Dawn Victoria. They were pre-deceased
by another son, Sean David.
Courtesy of The Bahamas Information Services (Reference
Biography Service)