Close Menu
    Explore
    • Infoport Debate League
    • Submit a Story
    • Media Coverage
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    INFOPORT
    • HOME
    • NEWS
    • SPORTS
    • STUDENT LIFE
    • ACADEMICS
    • OPINION
    Watch
    INFOPORT
    Home»Opinion»Kwegyir Aggrey and Achimota School’s founding myths – Further Reflections

    Kwegyir Aggrey and Achimota School’s founding myths – Further Reflections

    Daniel SterlingBy Daniel SterlingMay 17, 2026 Opinion
    Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Email
    Kwegyir Aggrey and Achimota School’s founding myths – Further Reflections

    “When the roots are deep, the wind is powerless.”

    A sardonic reviewer of my write-up yesterday accused me of revisionism.

    He had fully swallowed the distorted history long propagated by colonial anthropologists and their intellectual descendants.

    That propaganda, soaked in the distortions of colonial knowledge systems, insists Aggrey was some kind of junior appendage to the Achimota project; a useful African brought in after the real architecture had already been settled.

    But colonial historiography did not always serve fidelity to truth well. Even in 1963, Trevor-Roper could still claim there was no African history worth teaching – only, as he put it, the history of Europeans in Africa. Rather misquided interpretation masquerading as scholarship.

    And this is precisely why the claim that Aggrey was some latter-day addition to the Achimota enterprise cannot survive even the gentlest chronological interrogation.

    Once we abandon sentiment and return to the discipline of sequence, the fog clears.

    By January 1924, Aggrey was already seated near the intellectual centre of the enterprise – meeting Fraser in England at Oldham’s home to determine whether the two could serve together.

    By October 1924, Aggrey, Fraser, and much of the pioneer staff sailed to the Gold Coast on the same voyage, the very journey during which Aggrey endured the racial humiliation over accommodation that is now a somewhat muted part of the school’s own lore.

    And long before that voyage, his Phelps-Stokes work had already helped shape the educational philosophy that became Achimota’s backbone.

    More than that: Guggisberg himself acceded to Aggrey’s specific founding conditions before the project could proceed – equal standing for African staff, appointments at the principal’s discretion rather than the colonial government’s, and education from as young as six.

    That is not the posture of a late addition. That is the posture of a man without whom there was no project to join.

    There is simply no serious temporal space in which he can be described as a “late addition.” That view is not history; it is, with respect, chronological illiteracy dressed up as insight.

    The record, when arranged in order, speaks plainly: Aggrey was present during the formative intellectual conception of the enterprise, present at design, present at deployment, and present at founding.

    He was the only African founder within the conventional colonial definition the school itself still broadly employs – a definition which should itself be interrogated more rigorously.

    And here, Ralph Ellison whispers again across the decades: “I am invisible, understand, simply because people refuse to see me.”

    Aggrey’s story is not one of lateness. It is one of invisibility manufactured by those who never learned to see clearly.

    Source: Yaw Nsarkoh

     

    Related Posts

    BECE examination malpractices: Is there an end in sight?

    May 18, 2026

    Why Africa’s best-educated remain the west’s lowest-paid

    May 18, 2026

    The status of the Ghana Law School Entrance Exams and current routes to being a lawyer

    May 16, 2026
    Editors Picks

    Asiedu Nketiah donates GH¢50,000 to Bii-Kunuto Educational Fund

    May 16, 2026

    PRESEC Old Boys Association launches GH¢600,000 fundraising campaign for 2026 NSMQ contestants.

    May 16, 2026

    Achimota School receives 50 student desks from Ghana-China Business Chamber

    May 13, 2026

    GIMPA elects first female SRC president, Valerie Elikem Kportufe

    May 1, 2026

    Exclusive Offer

    Check out our latest updates and safety tips.

    AD Learn More
    Latest News
    Opinion

    BECE examination malpractices: Is there an end in sight?

    May 18, 2026
    Opinion

    Why Africa’s best-educated remain the west’s lowest-paid

    May 18, 2026
    Opinion

    The status of the Ghana Law School Entrance Exams and current routes to being a lawyer

    May 16, 2026
    Advertisement
    Promotional Advertisement
    Advertisement
    About Us

    Infoport is a digital media brand focused on covering education, student life and academia. Building Africa's leading media space for education, student activities and academia.

    Connect With Us
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • WhatsApp
    Contact

    We're accepting new partnerships and stories right now.

    Email Us: infoportmedia@gmail.com
    Call: +233 506991234

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.