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“A Smattering of Education” and Petitions as Sources: A Study of African Slaveholders' Responses to Abolition in the Gold Coast Colony, 1874–1875

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 May 2014

K.O. Akurang-Parry*
Affiliation:
York University

Extract

By the mid-nineteenth century African societies had begun to use petitions as an instrument of agitation for reforms in nascent colonial policies. This was especially true of those societies located in the coastal enclaves where precolonial European and diasporic African influences were markedly profound. Compared with other African responses to European colonial rule, anti-colonial petitions are less spectacular. This explains, perhaps-deservingly so, why petitions or memorials, which also took the form of deputations, as a historical genre have been marginalized in the polemical studies of African responses to colonial rule. Such studies have included militant responses in the form of war, riots, social banditry, millennarianism, arson, strikes, avoidance of conscription, desertion, and mass migration. Other forms of African response, devoid of militancy or overly tumultuous actions, have been aptly described by James C. Scott as the Weapons of the Weak. These have included foot-dragging, the use of songs, and the protest politics of the indigenous African press.

This study deals with how slaveholders in the Gold Coast responded to British abolition of slavery and pawnship in the Gold Coast in 1874-75. Specifically, I examine how the African intelligentsia in the Gold Coast Colony used quasi-legal means, essentially petitions, to oppose abolition and emancipation of slaves and pawns. This opposition was undertaken on behalf of slave/pawnholders, including the indigenous rulers of the coast, especially the Fante region. Additionally, the study draws attention to Africans' use of petitions as an important historical source that can benefit the study of various aspects of colonial rule and facets of African responses.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 2000

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References

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4 See, for example, Vail, Leroy and White, Landeg, “Forms of Resistance: Songs and Perceptions of Power in Colonial Mozambique,” American Historical Review 88 (1983), 883919CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and McGarry, Georgia, Reaction and Protest in the West African Press (Cambridge, 1978).Google Scholar

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6 This group comprised literate Africans and diasporic Africans, including Afro-Caribbeans and African-Brazilians. They were the opinion leaders, described as the new elites, the social elites, and the Western educated elites. See for example, Nadel, S.F., The Concept of the Social Elites, International Social Science Bulletin 3 (1956), 413515Google Scholar; Kimblc, David, A Political History of Ghana 18S0-1928 (Oxford, 1963), 135–41Google Scholar; McCarthy, Mary, Social Change and the Growth of British Potver in the Gold Coast (Lanham, 1983)Google Scholar; Lloyd, P.C., Africa in Social Change (New York, 1967), 125–31Google Scholar; Foster, Philip, Education and Social Change in Ghana (Chicago, 1968), 4869Google Scholar; Following Foster, ibid., 68, the usage of the term “African intelligentsia” does not mean that they were a “relatively homogenous group. My usage suggests “a considerable heterogeneity within the educated group itself.” For the return of diasporic Africans to the coastal areas of West Africa, see for example, Rathbone, , “Gold Coast,” 5762.Google Scholar

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8 See, for example, Kwabena Opare Akurang-Parry, “Slavery and Abolition in the Gold Coast (Southern Ghana): Colonial Modes of Emancipation and African Initiatives,” Ghana Studies, forthcoming.

9 See, for example, Kimble, , Political History, 303–04Google Scholar; Dumett, and Johnson, , “Gold Coast,” 80.Google Scholar For a fuller account see Kwabena Opare Akurang-Parry, “It is a Question Which Must be Dealt with Completely and Thoroughly:' The Gold Coast Colonial Government's Preparations for Abolition of Slavery and Pawnship,” submitted to Legon Journal of Humanities.

10 See for example, C. 1159, Strahan to Carnarvon, 3 January 1875, Encl. in No. 1; and C. 1159, Strahan to Carnarvon, 8 January 1875, Encl. 1 in No. 2 and Encl. 3 in No. 2.

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17 Akurang-Parry, “It is a Question.”

18 Peter Haenger, Slavery and Slave Emancipation in the Gold Coast, forthcoming, Chapter 3.2. I thank Paul Lovejoy of York University for making this unpublished manuscript available to me. It has no pagination, therefore, chapters are cited in this study.

19 See the definition by Coleman, James S., Nigeria: Background to Nationalism (Berkeley, 1958), 178Google Scholar, “particular responses to particular imperial measures deemed oppressive or onerous, rather than fundamental challenges to imperial rule or positive affirmations of the objective of … self-government.” For a comprehensive perspective on protest, see Mazrui, /Rotberg, , Protest and Power, 1185–96.Google Scholar

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25 By the 1870s the West African press had become a booming industry as well as a whetstone of political activity, exemplified by the publication of issues regarding the anti-abolition petitions published in The Gold Coast Times (Cape Coast), 23 February 1875; and Gold Coast Times, 31 March 1875. The history of the West African press dates back to the first decade of the nineteenth century. Initially it functioned under the aegis of European officials and published government or official gazettes. For a historical account of the West African press, see McGarry, , Reaction and Protest, 117Google Scholar; Jones-Quartey, K.A.B., “Thought and Expression in the Gold Coast Press,” Universitas 3 (1958), 72-75, 113–16Google Scholar; idem. History, Politics, and the Early Press in Ghana (Accra, 1975); Omu, Fred, Press and Politics in Nigeria, 1880-1937 (London, 1978)Google Scholar; and Spitzer, Leo, The Creoles of Sierra Leone: Responses to Colonialism, 1870-1945 (Madison, 1974), 108–47.Google Scholar See the petition of the King of Cape Coast to Her Majesty's Secretary of State for the Colonies in African Times, 23 February 1867, 91; and the publication of the Gold Coast anti-abolition petitions, in African Times, 1 March 1875. This issue also contains summaries of the Daily News (London), 8 February 1875Google Scholar; and Daily News, 11 February 1875. See Gold Coast Times, 31 March 1875, for commentaries on the anti-abolition petitions in British newspapers.

26 African Times, 23 April 1868, 115. For an account of the Anglo-Dutch exchange of forts in the Gold Coast and the reaction of the Fante states, see Kimble, , Political History, 222–56.Google Scholar Petition of W.C. Finlason to Governor Blackall, the Governor in Chief of Her Majesty's Possessions in West Africa in African Times, 23 November 1867, 54-55; William Hansen's petition for compensation for losing his slaves in the course of abolition in Gold Coast Despatches from Secretary of State to Governor, 7 July 1877, No. 46, National Archives of Ghana, Accra (hereafter NAG/A) 1/1/44; and Gold Coast Despatches from Governor to Secretary of State, 20 August 1877, No. 206, NAG/A ADM 1/1/21.

27 Petition of W.C. Finlason to Governor Blackall, the Governor in Chief of Her Majesty's Possessions in West Africa in African Times, 23 November 1867, 54-55; William Hansen's petition for compensation for losing his slaves in the course of abolition in Gold Coast Despatches from Secretary of State to Governor, 7 July 1877, No. 46, National Archives of Ghana, Accra (hereafter NAG/A) 1/1/44; and Gold Coast Despatches from Governor to Secretary of State, 20 August 1877, No. 206, NAG/A ADM 1/1/21.

28 African Times, 23 September 1864, 35, the people of Elmina sent a petition, under-signed by the King, chiefs, merchants, and other residents of the town” to “His Grace the Dutch Minister [sic]” in Holland. The petition stated that Hendick Doyer, the new governor, who had replaced the affable Governor Van Hien was not suitable to head the Dutch Government at Elmina. For a second petition on the same subject from the people of Elmina, see African Times, 23 March 1865, 109. For similar collective petitions see Western Echo, 30 January 1886, 4Google Scholar; and Western Echo, 8 May 1886, 4.Google Scholar

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32 African Times, 23 December 1864, 72. For a fuller account see Kimble, , Political History, 344–45.Google ScholarC. 4477, Hood and Others to Lieutenant Governor, 18 January 1884, Encl. in Encl. 1 in No. 27.

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34 African Times, 23 November 1866, 52.

35 African Times, 23 February 1867, 91; and C. 1159, Strahan to Carnarvon, 8 January 1875, Encl. 1 in No. 2; Gold Coast Times, 17 June 1882; Western Echo, 30 January 1886, 4; and Western Echo, 8 May 1886.

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49 African Times, 1 March 1875.

50 See for example, C. 1159, Strahan to Carnarvon, 3 January 1875, Encl. in No. 1.

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54 Haenger, Slavery and Slave Emancipation, chapter 4.1.

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57 Rathbone, , “Gold Coast,” 5763.Google Scholar Within the African-Caribbean groups were repatriated African soldiers who had served in the Dutch East and West Indies. They were “predominantly Moslems” and settled between Elmina and Cape Coast. The African-Caribbean group also included African-Jamaicans recruited by the Basel Mission and Africans drawn from the British Caribbean serving with the British West Indian Regiment. The African-Brazilians included those deported in 1831 and 1835 following a series of slave revolts in Brazil, and who settled between Cape Coast and Winneba. This group also included Christians who intermarried with the local African elites.

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74 For a fuller account see Akurang-Parry, “It is a Question.”

75 C. 1159, Strahan to Carnarvon, 3 January 1875, Encl. in No. 1.

76 The captains were the leaders of the asafo or commoner groups. For a recent study of the asafo in southern Ghana, see Lee, AinsahSocial Protests in the Gold Coast. A Study of the Eastern Province in the Colonial Period,” (Ph.D., University of Toronto, 1993).Google Scholar C. 1159, Strahan to Carnarvon, 3 January 1875, Encl. in No. 1; and C. 1159, Strahan to Carnarvon, 8 January 1875, Encl. 1 in No. 2.

77 African Times, 23 May 1867, 127.Google Scholar

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79 Ibid; C. 1159, Strahan to Carnarvon, 8 January 1875, Encl. 1.

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83 In 1873, during the Anglo-Asante war, the “Native Ladies of Cape Coast” appealed for assistance “for the purchase of arms and munitions of war in order to aid the fighting-men in retaking the field against the enemy; and therefore beg to call on foreign ladies and gentlemen residing here to lend their pecuniary assistance according to their ability.” See African Times, 29 April 1873, 116.Google Scholar See also African Times, 30 June 1873, 142.Google Scholar In the course of the popular opposition to the Lands Bill in 1897, women protested. Gold Coast Methodist Times (Cape Coast), 31 July 1897, 1, quoting the “Somerset Country Gazette newspaper of 5th June” wrote: “When His Excellency W.E. Maxwell was here last, he was obliged to have ‘an armed body guard almost continually with him.’ The reason given for this martial display is that ‘several hundred women dressed in all manner of costumes, and with painted faces marched round the Government Castle at Cape Coast’ that ‘they chanted a dirge using expressions hostile to his excellency’ that ‘after marching round two or three times the women sat down all round the Castle and remained there all day keeping up the dirge the whole time.’ ‘So high was the native feeling “on account of the New Land Bill.” It should be noted that the Gold Coast Methodist Times refuted these details, asserting that the women did march round the Castle, but “paraded some parts of the town from 10 am to 12 and went again at 2pm, that “only one woman painted here face with spots of white and red clay and charcoal,” and that “one woman had on a pair of old trousers and a coat, all the rest were in their usual costumes.”

84 See for example, ibid., discussion of the Ladies' Christian Association that had organized an essay competition.

85 Boahen, , Ghana, 61Google Scholar, shows that in 1897 women of Accra demonstrated against house tax and sent petitions of their grievances to the Colonial Secretary.

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87 C. 1159, Strahan to Carnarvon, 3 January 1875, Encl in No. 1; and C. 1159, Strahan to Carnarvon, 8 January 1875, Encl. 1 in No. 2.

88 Ibid., Strahan to Carnarvon, 8 January 1875, Encl. in No. 3.

89 Ibid., Strahan to Carnarvon, 3 January 1875, Encl in No. 1.

90 Ibid.

91 Ibid.

92 African Times, 1 March 1875. For a fuller account of Brew see Priestley, , West African Trade, 158–73.Google Scholar

93 Kimble, , Political History, 91.Google Scholar

94 In the first issue of the Gold Coast Times, Brew wrote “We have embarked on this undertaking without any previous experience of the dangers and troubles attendant upon Editorship; but, since we have mustered sufficient courage to test them, any apologies on our part would be out of place. Once engaged in an enterprise we hold it our duty not to turn back…” See Gold Coast Times, 28 March 1874; and Jones-Quartey, , “Thought and Expression,” 72.Google Scholar

95 Ibid., 73.

96 Ibid.

97 Priestley, , West African Trade, 166.Google Scholar

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99 C. 1159, Strahan to Carnarvon, 3 January 1875, No. 1.

100 For a detailed account of the Fante Confederation, see Agbodeka, Francis, “The Fanti Confederacy 1865-69Transactions of the Historical Society of Ghana, 7(1964), 82123Google Scholar; idem, African Politics and British Policy in the Gold Coast 1868-1900 (London, 1971), 15-33.

101 Haenger, Slavery and Slave Emancipation, chapter 3.1.

102 African Times, 23 September 1868, 35Google Scholar; and African Times, 23 May 1873, 128.Google Scholar

103 C. 1159, Strahan to Carnarvon, 3 January 1875, No. 1. and C. 1159, Carnarvon to Strahan, 19 February 1875, No. 4. For an account of the Colonial Office's negative opinions of the African intelligentsia in the Gold Coast, niul how it blamed them for opposition to colonial rule in general, see Kimble, , Political History, 87105.Google Scholar

104 Western Echo, 11 July 1886, 4.Google Scholar

105 For the accusations from the Colonial Office, see McSheffrey, , “Slavery,” 351.Google Scholar

106 C. 1159, Strahan to Carnarvon, 3 January 1875, No. 1.

107 Ibid. See also Gold Coast Despatches from Secretary of State to Governor, 7 July 1877, No. 476, NAG/A ADM. 1/1/44.

108 C. 1159, Strahan to Carnarvon, 3 January 1875, Encl. in No. 1. See also Strahan to Carnarvon, 8 January 1875, Encl. 1 in No. 2.

109 When William Hnnsen of Accra in 1877 wrote directly to the Secretary of State for Colonies, his expressed reason, among other things, was that the colonial government would not give him fair hearing. Sec Gold Coast Despatches from Secretary of State to Governor, 7 July 1877, No. 476, NAG/A ADM. 1/1/44.

110 See for example, C. 1159, Strahan to Carnarvon, 8 January 1875, Encl. 1 in No. 2. See also, Gold Coast Despatches from Secretary of State to Governor, 7 July 1877, No. 476, NAG/A ADM, 1/1/44.

111 C. 1159, Strahan to Carnarvon, 8 January 1875, Encl. 1 in No. 2.

112 Ibid.

113 Ibid.

114 Ibid. See also Gold Coast Despatches from Secretary of State to Governor, 7 July 1877, No. 476.

115 C. 1159, Strahan to Carnarvon, 8 January 8, 1875, Encl. 1 in No. 2.

116 Ibid.

117 C. 1159, Strahan to Carnarvon, 8 January 1875, Encl. in No. 3.

118 Ibid.

119 Gold Coast Despatches, from Secretary of State to Governor, 7 July 1877, No. 476, NAG/A ADM. 1/1/44.

120 See Akurang-Parry, “Slavery and Abolition.”

121 Ibid. See also Gold Coast Despatches from Governor to Secretary of State, 20 August 1877, No. 206, NAG/A, ADM. 1/2/21.

122 See for example, Foster, , Education and Social Change, 68.Google Scholar

123 Gold Coast Despatches, from Secretary of State to Governor, 7 July 1877, No. 476, NAG/A ADM. 1/1/44.

124 Ibid. Hansen's submission for compensation was not only based on his loss of slaves. He also traced his family's military and material contributions to the British authorities in the Gold Coast, starting with the Anglo-Asame war of 1824 and his own participation in the Anglo-Asante War of 187.3-74. Also, he pointed out that his family had been instrumental in, preserving the stability of the Gã states during the precolonial period. For example, when George Maclean arrived in 1831, his father “helped [Maclcan] with 50 men (probably slaves) to garrison the forts effectively.”

125 Ibid.

126 Gold Coast Despatches from Governor to Secretary of State, 20 August 1877, No. 206, NAG/A, ADM. 1/2/21.

127 C. 1159, Strahan to Carnarvon, 8 January 1875, No. 1. Sec also, C. 1159, Carnarvon to Strahan, 19 February 1875, No. 4. This view pervaded official thinking, especially in cases where Africans resorted to British constitutional methods to uphold their interests. See for example, Gold Coast Despatches from Governor to Secretary of State, 1880-81, 5 April 1880, No. 100, NAG/A, ADM 1/2/24.

128 C. 1159, Strahan to Carnarvon, 8 January 1875, Encl. 1 in No. 2; and C. 1159, Carnarvon to Strahan, 19 February 1875, No. 4.

129 Gold Coast Times, 23 February 1875; Western Echo, 8 December 1885; Western Echo, 30 June 1886; Western Echo, 23 October 1886 The Gold Coast Express (Accra), 14 December 1895; Gold Coast Express, 14 September 1897; The Gold Coast Chronicle (Accra), 22 December 1894; Gold Coast Chronicle, 12 April 1901; and Gold Coast Aborigines, 29 April 1901.