From Jamestown to the World: The Ghanaian Roots of the First Black Football Pioneer

When people discuss the early history of football, the narrative often begins in Britain and gradually expands to the rest of the world. Rarely, however, does the conversation turn toward West Africa—particularly the historic Gold Coast, present-day Ghana. Yet one of the most remarkable pioneers of the sport, widely regarded as the first Black professional…

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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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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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Recreational Canoe Racing Among Early Coastal Settlements in the Pre-Colonial Gold Coast

The Atlantic as Living Arena Along the Atlantic edge of the pre-colonial Gold Coast, long before European forts punctuated the shoreline, the sea was already a theatre of movement, daring, and communal pride. The coastal societies of present-day Ghana—particularly the Fante, Ga, and related Akan maritime communities—did not encounter the ocean as a boundary. They…

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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 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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How Cocoa Built Ghana’s Economy from the Gold Coast Era to Today

Few business stories have shaped Ghana as deeply and enduringly as cocoa. From a small agricultural experiment in the late 19th century to becoming the backbone of the national economy, cocoa transformed the Gold Coast into one of the world’s most important producers and laid the foundation for modern Ghana’s economic identity. The Birth of…

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