GH Newspapers Editorial Team

GH Newspapers Editorial Team is the collective newsroom of GHNewspapers.com, dedicated to factual, independent, and historically grounded journalism in Ghana and across Africa. Our reporting follows strict editorial standards, prioritizing accuracy, context, and public interest.

How the Press Announced Ghana to the World

The emergence of Ghana as an independent nation in 1957 was not only a political milestone but also a global media event. Newspapers—both local and international—played a decisive role in announcing the birth of the new state to the world. Through headlines, editorials, photographs, and diplomatic reporting, the press transformed Ghana’s independence from a regional…

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Media Portrayal of Kwame Nkrumah as National Hero

The portrayal of Kwame Nkrumah as a national hero was not simply a spontaneous public perception—it was carefully shaped, amplified, and sustained through newspapers and other media channels during the late colonial and early post-independence periods. In the Gold Coast, now Ghana, the press played a decisive role in constructing Nkrumah’s public image as a…

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Education as a Gateway to Newspaper Consumption

The development of newspaper culture in the Gold Coast—today known as Ghana—was inseparable from the spread of formal education during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Education did far more than teach reading and writing; it fundamentally reshaped social structures, created new intellectual classes, and fostered habits of information consumption. As literacy expanded through mission…

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How Colonial Governors Used Newspapers to Control Information

During the colonial period in the Gold Coast—modern-day Ghana—newspapers were not merely instruments of public communication; they were powerful tools of governance and political control. Colonial governors recognized early that controlling the flow of information was essential for maintaining authority, shaping public opinion, and managing resistance. Through censorship laws, strategic propaganda, selective reporting, and alliances…

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Media Framing of African Chiefs’ Consent

The concept of “chiefs’ consent” occupies a central place in the colonial history of the Gold Coast, present-day Ghana. Throughout the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, colonial authorities frequently claimed that African chiefs willingly agreed to treaties, land concessions, and administrative reforms that facilitated British control. Newspapers—both colonial and African-run—played a decisive role in shaping…

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Mission Schools and Their Influence on Newspaper Readership

The growth of newspaper readership in the Gold Coast—modern-day Ghana—cannot be understood without examining the critical role played by nineteenth-century mission schools. These educational institutions, established by European Christian missions, were not only centers of religious instruction but also engines of literacy, intellectual transformation, and political awareness. By producing a new class of literate Africans,…

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Selective Reporting on the End of the Slave Trade

The end of the trans-Atlantic slave trade in the nineteenth century is often presented in historical narratives as a clear moral victory led by European abolitionists. However, in reality, the process was complex, uneven, and frequently misrepresented—particularly in early newspapers and colonial reports. In the region now known as Ghana, selective reporting played a crucial…

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Black Stars Qualifying for the 2006 FIFA World Cup: The Full Historical Journey

The qualification of the Ghana national football team — popularly known as the Black Stars — for the 2006 FIFA World Cup stands as one of the most transformative milestones in Ghana’s sporting and national history. It was not merely a football achievement; it was the culmination of decades of ambition, near misses, institutional reforms,…

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Slavery, Abolition, and How Newspapers Framed the Narrative

The history of slavery and abolition in the area now known as Ghana is deeply intertwined with global economic systems, imperial expansion, African political structures, and the emergence of print journalism as a powerful instrument of public opinion. From the fifteenth century through the nineteenth century, slavery evolved from localized systems of servitude into a…

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Fintech Revolution: How Digital Finance Changed Ghana More Than Any Bank Ever Did

Few modern technologies have transformed Ghana as deeply and as quickly as financial technology (fintech). What began as simple mobile phone services has grown into a digital financial ecosystem that reshaped banking, trade, and daily survival for millions of Ghanaians. Before Fintech: A Cash-Heavy Economy (Pre-2000s) For decades after independence, Ghana’s financial system revolved around…

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Mid-19th Century Press Expansion (1858–1874)

In 1858, Charles Bannerman — the son of a British lieutenant governor and an Asante princess — founded the Accra Herald, recognized as the first African-produced newspaper in West Africa. Unlike the colonial-run press, this handwritten paper reached primarily African readers, circulating among some 300 subscribers. It focused on local issues, social commentary, and matters…

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Early newspapers in Africa

The first English newspaper on the continent of Africa was published in Cape Town in 1800. The following year in Sierra Leone, The Royal Gazette and Sierra Leone Advertiser were published in Freetown. Both were European undertakings concerned with matters of government. In 1826, Charles Force, an American freed slave, published the Liberia Herald. He…

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The Bond of 1844 and the Establishment of British Judicial Authority in the Gold Coast

📰 Covered later by: Gold Coast Gazette, missionary newsletters The signing of the Bond of 1844 between Fante chiefs and the British Crown formalized colonial judicial authority in the Gold Coast. Though newspapers were limited at the time, later colonial press publications referenced the Bond as the legal cornerstone of British rule, shaping editorial narratives…

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1822 — Birth of the Gold Coast Press

Royal Gold Coast Gazette & Commercial Intelligencer 📰 Newspaper: Royal Gold Coast Gazette📍 Location: Cape Coast In 1822, the British colonial administration introduced the Royal Gold Coast Gazette & Commercial Intelligencer, marking the birth of journalism in the Gold Coast. The handwritten paper served colonial officers, merchants, and missionaries, publishing shipping schedules, trade notices, and…

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The Struggle for Self-Governance — Ghana’s Most Important Idea from the Gold Coast Era to Today

If there is one idea that has mattered more to Ghana than any other from the Gold Coast era to the present, it is the struggle for self-governance and accountable leadership. From colonial domination to modern democracy, Ghana’s history has been shaped by a single, powerful question: Who governs us, and in whose interest? This…

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