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1946 AFRICAN ACHIEVEMENT British West Africa ACCRA Gold Coast GAMBIA Nigeria

$ 13.19

Availability: 97 in stock
  • Location: British West Africa
  • Condition: Please see all photos and contact us with any questions. Thank you!
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Type: Booklet
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
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  • Return shipping will be paid by: Seller

    Description

    AFRICAN ACHIEVEMENT: BUILDING TOMORROW IN BRITISH WEST AFRICA
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    20-page illustrated booklet dated 1946 and published by British Information Services, "African Achievement: Building Tomorrow in British West Africa."
    We ship worldwide! Please see all pictures and visit
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    British West Africa was the collective name for British colonies in West Africa during the colonial period, either in the general geographical sense or the formal colonial administrative entity. The United Kingdom held varying parts of these territories or the whole throughout the 19th century. From west to east, the colonies became the independent countries of the Gambia, Sierra Leone, Ghana and Nigeria. Until independence, Ghana was referred to as Gold Coast.
    British West Africa, or the British West African Settlements, constituted during two periods (17 October 1821, until its first dissolution on 13 January 1850, and again 19 February 1866, until its final demise on 24 November 1888) an administrative entity under a governor-in-chief (comparable in rank to a Governor-general), an office vested in the governor of Sierra Leone (at Freetown).[citation needed]
    The other colonies originally included in the jurisdiction were the Gambia and the British Gold Coast (modern Ghana). Also western Nigeria, eastern Nigeria and northern Nigeria.
    Flag of the British West Africa Settlements
    Social and cultural development
    British West Africa's present makeup includes Ghana, Sierra Leone, Gambia, Western Nigeria, Eastern Nigeria and Northern Nigeria. Each of these countries and areas are a post-colonial period, or what the Ghanaian writer Kwame Appiah dubs neo-colonialism.
    British West Africa's development was solely based on modernization, and autonomous educational systems were the first step to modernising indigenous culture. Cultures and interests of indigenous peoples were ignored. A new social order, as well as European influences within schools and local traditions, helped mould British West Africa's culture. Significant was the British West African colonial school curriculum. Local elites developed, with new values and philosophies, who changed the overall cultural development.
    In terms of social issues with British West Africa; sex and race usually conflicted each other (Carina E. Ray called it the "White Wife Problem"). During British West Africa's history, interracial relations were frowned upon, and couples might be discriminated against. There were even certain policies that deported the wives of these relationships back to Britain and denied them access to any of these colonies.[citation needed]
    Economic development
    Colonial banks might develop monopolies to control competition, at the expense of British West African citizens. There were only two major banks that operated in British West Africa: Barclays and the Bank of British West Africa. They had major economic and financial influence in British West Africa from about 1916 to 1960. From a dependency theory view point, these banks took advantage through price fixing and certain unfair regulations.
    Coverage of West African economics by historians, mostly British, has left a legacy of controversy. Three historians, in particular, were accused by Adu Boahen for inaccurate reportage, mainly of Gold Coast and Ghana: William Walton Claridge, in A History of the Gold Coast and Ashanti (1915, reprint by Frank Cass in 1964); William Ernest Frank Ward in History of the Gold Coast (1940, published 1948, as A History of Ghana in 1958); and John Donnelly Fage in Ghana, An Historical Interpretation.
    Economic development was mostly attributed to each region's agricultural developments. Development of the financial markets through colonial banking often disadvantaged the colonies as producers of commodities.
    Aftermath
    Even after its final dissolution, a single currency, the British West African pound, was in effect throughout the region—including Nigeria—from 1907 to 1962.
    Nigeria gained independence in 1960. Sierra Leone was self-governing by 1958 and gained independence in 1961. Gambia gained independence in 1965. In 1954, the British Gold Coast was allowed by Britain to self-govern and in 1957, the Gold Coast was given independence from Britain, under the name Ghana.
    See also
    British colonisation in Africa
    British Togoland
    Colonial Nigeria
    Gold Coast (British colony)
    Gambia Colony and Protectorate
    Royal West African Frontier Force
    Sierra Leone Colony and Protectorate
    European colonisation in Africa
    Danish Gold Coast
    Dutch Gold Coast
    Portuguese Gold Coast
    Scramble for Africa
    West Africa cricket team
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