Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 May 2019
This study assesses the agricultural sector under the government of Kwame Nkrumah as a dynamic Cold War front. After Ghana's independence in 1957, Nkrumah asserted that the new nation would guard its sovereignty from foreign influence, while recognizing that it needed foreign cooperation and investment. His government embarked upon a development program with an emphasis on diversifying Ghana's agriculture to decrease her dependence on cocoa. Meanwhile, both the United States and the Soviet Union sought to establish footholds in Ghana through agricultural aid, trade, and investments. In the first years of independence, the Ghanaian state encouraged smallholder farming and American investment. Later, in a sudden change of policy, the government established large-scale state farms along the socialist model. This article brings to light the ways that Ghanaians in rural areas engaged with and interpreted the increasingly interventionist agriculture projects and policies of Nkrumah's government.
Research for this article was supported by the Social Science Research Council's International Dissertation Research Fellowship, with funds provided by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. I would like to thank Moses Andoh for his assistance conducting interviews, as well as Jeffrey Ahlman, Robert Harms, and Efe Igor for their comments on earlier versions of this article. Feedback received at the Greater New York African History Workshop and Agricultural History Society Annual Meeting, as well as from the anonymous reviewers of this journal, also strengthened this article. Author's email: [email protected]
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37 National Archives and Records Administration II, College Park, Maryland (NARA) RG 469, Entry P250, Container 4, Folder: Commodities — Rubber, correspondences between A. Moffat, L. Reeves and E. Taylor, Jul. 1958.
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40 PRAAD-Accra RG 4/1/88, ‘Progress During 1961 — Foreign Technical Aid to Ghana’, 1962.
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47 PRAAD-Accra, RG 17/1/211, Nkrumah to Khrushchev, 6 Jun. 1960.
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50 TNA DO 198/6, CRO, ‘Ghana: Achieving A Balance Between East and West’, 18 Mar. 1961.
51 TNA OD 20/171, Acting British Commissioner, ‘Technical Assistance from Britain’, 12 Jan. 1962.
52 PRAAD-Accra RG 4/1/99, ‘Meeting Held to Discuss Russian Agricultural Machinery’, 22 Jan. 1962.
53 TNA FO 1110/1697, ‘Dissatisfaction with Communist Aid and Services’, 8 Apr. 1963.
54 PRAAD-Sunyani BRG 1/1/38, ‘Meeting Held to Discuss the Establishment of State Farms’, 15 Feb. 1962.
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56 Ibid. col. 337–45, 378–9, 384–6.
57 PRAAD-Accra RG 7/1/617, ‘Meeting Held with Soviet Specialists on Rubber’, 1 Feb. 1962.
58 PRAAD-Sunyani BRG 1/1/38, ‘Meeting Held to Discuss the Establishment of State Farms’, 15 Feb. 1962.
59 PRAAD-Accra RG 4/1/84, ‘Meeting Held to Discuss the Establishment of State Farms’, 15 Mar. 1962.
60 TNA FO 1110/1697, ‘Dissatisfaction with Communist Aid and Services’, 8 Apr. 1963.
61 PRAAD-Accra RG 4/1/84, ‘Meeting To Discuss the Cost of State Farms’, 27 Feb. 1962.
62 PRAAD-Accra RG 4/1/84, ‘Report of Sub-Committee Appointed by the Minister of Agriculture to Review the Cost Estimates of the Establishment of State Farms’, 1962.
63 TNA FO 1110/1697, ‘Dissatisfaction with Communist Aid and Services’, 8 Apr. 1963
64 ‘State Farms Output will Eliminate Food Imports!’ Evening News, 24 Apr. 1963.
65 Ibid.
66 PRAAD-Accra, RG 8/2/438, ‘Second Annual Report, Ghana SFC, 1963–64’.
67 ‘State Farms Output’, Evening News, 24 Apr. 1963. For a broader discussion of the CPP's promotion of socialist work, see Ahlman, Living with Nkrumahism, 115–47.
68 NARA RG 59, Entry A1 3112A, Container 1, Folder: Despatches, ‘Confidential: Ghana’, 8 Jun. 1962.
69 NARA RG 59, Entry A1 3112A, Container 1, Folder: Visits and Meetings, ‘American Foreign Policy (Ghana),’ n.d. [1962?]
70 NARA RG 286, Entry P 349, Container 8, Folder: Rubber, W.-G.-S. Aggrey, Agricultural Officer, to F. Pinder, US Operations Mission/Ghana, 29 Aug. 1962.
71 NARA RG 59, Entry A1 3112A, Container 1, Folder: Visits and Meetings, ‘Confidential: Briefing Paper, Governor Williams's African Trip’, 22–26 Jun. 1963.
72 NARA RG 59, Entry A1 3112A, Container 1, Folder: Visits and Meetings, ‘American Foreign Policy (Ghana)’, nd. [c. 1962].
73 PRAAD-Accra ADM 7/5/89, ‘Seven Year Development Plan, 1963–1970’, x, xv, and 75.
74 PRAAD-Sekondi WRG 38/1/99, letters to district commissioner, Half Assini, Jul. 1964.
75 PRAAD-Sunyani BRG 1/1/38, ‘Establishment of State Farm at Namasa’, 16 Jul. 1964.
76 PRAAD-Koforidua ADM.KD 22/6/519, ‘Granting of Abonse Stool Land For State Farm Corporation’, to commissioner, Eastern Region, 25 Sep. 1962.
77 PRAAD-Accra RG 8/2/438, ‘Second Annual Report, Ghana SFC, 1963–64’.
78 PRAAD-Sekondi WRG 38/1/66, J. E. K. Dickson to district commissioner, Half Assini, Jul. 1964.
79 Interview with Nana Kwesi Agyeman IX, Lower Dixcove, 30 Oct. 2017.
80 Interview with Moses Kudjoe, Abura, 17 Jul. 2015; interview with Esta Ofori, Mpatase, 21 Jul. 2015.
81 PRAAD-Sunyani BRG 1/1/38, N. K. Kesi, Kojokesekrom, to district commissioner, Dormaa, 26 Nov. 1962.
82 PRAAD-Sunyani BRG 1/1/38, N. A. Sasraku II, Ankobia, to commissioner, Brong Ahafo Region, 18 Jun. 1964.
83 PRAAD-Cape Coast RG 1/5/49; PRAAD-Koforidua ADM.KD 22/6/519.
84 See Ahlman, Living with Nkrumahism, 184–7.
85 PRAAD-Koforidua ADM.KD 22/6/519, L. Aboagye, et al., Akropong-Akwapim, to the Director of State Farms, Accra, 23 Dec. 1964.
86 PRAAD-Accra RG 8/2/1244, ‘State Lands Act (Act 125) of 1962.’
87 Interview with James Donkor, Adjumako, 15 Mar. 2017; Interview with Esta Ofori.
88 Interview with Joseph Kayans, Takoradi, 21 Jul. 2015.
89 PRAAD-Sunyani, BRG 1/1/38, ‘Annual Report 1967–68’.
90 Dadson, ‘Socialized Agriculture in Ghana’, 167, 265.
91 PRAAD-Cape Coast RG 1/5/49, ‘Monthly Progress Report’, Jun. 1967.
92 PRAAD-Accra RG 8/2/438, ‘Second Annual Report, Ghana SFC, 1963–4’.
93 PRAAD-Cape Coast RG 1/5/49, ‘Monthly Progress Report’, Jun. 1967.
94 PRAAD-Sunyani BRG 1/1/38, R. O. Amoako-Atta, commissioner, Brong Ahafo Region, to Nkrumah, 5 Mar. 1965.
95 PRAAD-Accra RG 8/2/438, ‘Second Annual Report, Ghana SFC, 1963–64’.
96 Interview with Comfort Tom, Agona Nkwanta, 17 Oct. 2017.
97 Interview with John Niako, Essaman, 24 Jul. 2015.
98 Interview with Abena Owusu, Adiewoso, 14 Mar. 2017.
99 Interview with George Baidoo, Bokoroh, 8 Nov. 2017.
100 SFC originally mandated 7AM–3PM workdays, but it switched to a ‘piece-work’ system to halt alleged laziness. PRAAD-Accra RG 8/2/438, ‘Second Annual Report, Ghana SFC, 1963–64’.
101 PRAAD-Sekondi WRG 24/2/505, R. H. van Drooge, SFC Manager, to Western Region Administrator.
102 Interview with Grace Cobbinah, Nkwanta, 3 Apr. 2017.
103 Interview with Esta Dofor, Gyebunkrum, 21 Jul. 2015; interview with Elizabeth Atta, Mpatasi, 4 Sep. 2017.
104 Interview with Mary Yeboah, Nkwanta, 3 Apr. 2017.
105 Interview with Comfort Tom.
106 Interview with George Baidoo.
107 Interview with Esther Kwaw, Ewusiejoe, 1 Nov. 2017; interview with Emmanuel Nketsia, Anibel, 17 May 2017.
108 Interview with Nana Duku II, Kedadwin, 7 Apr. 2017; interview with Kwesi Duku, John Akyeampong, and Yaa Mensah, Nsuaem, 24 Jul. 2015.
109 ‘State Farms Output,’ Evening News, 24 Apr. 1963.
110 Interview with Nana Kwesi Agyeman IX, Lower Dixcove, 30 Oct. 2017; see also ‘Chiefs Scramble for GREL Lands,’ Ghanaian Chronicle, 29 Jan. 2014.
111 PRAAD-Sunyani BRG 1/1/38, ‘Annual Report, 1967–68 SFC.’
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114 PRAAD-Sekondi WRG 24/2/505, Ohene of Nsuaem, et. al. to Ankrah, 8 Jun. 1968.
115 PRAAD-Sekondi WRG 24/2/505, letter from Secretary of the Chief of Apowa-Yarbiw, 4 May 1966.
116 ‘Release Lands, Corp Told,’ Daily Graphic, 29 Jul. 1966; ‘State Farms are a Waste’, Daily Graphic, 26 Jul. 1966.
117 PRAAD-Sekondi WRG 24/2/505, speech by Ankrah, 14 Mar. 1968.
118 PRAAD-Koforidua ERG 1/3/31, SFC progress reports, 1968–9; PRAAD-Cape Coast RG 1/5/49, petitions and reports regarding SFC at Essarkyir, 1966–73.