Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-r5fsc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T09:33:52.011Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

OF DEBT AND BONDAGE: FROM SLAVERY TO PRISONS IN THE GOLD COAST, c. 1807–1957

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 March 2020

SARAH BALAKRISHNAN*
Affiliation:
Harvard University

Abstract

Contrary to the belief that prisons never predated colonial rule in Africa, this article traces their emergence in the Gold Coast after the abolition of the Atlantic slave trade. During the era of ‘legitimate commerce’, West African merchants required liquidity to conduct long-distance trade. Rather than demand human pawns as interest on loans, merchants imprisoned debtors’ female relatives because women's sexual violation in prison incentivized kin to repay loans. When British colonists entered the Gold Coast, they discovered how important the prisons were to local credit. They thus allowed the institutions to continue, but without documentation. The so-called ‘native prisons’ did not enter indirect rule — and the colonial archive — until the 1940s. Contrary to studies of how Western states used prisons to control black labour after emancipation, this article excavates a ‘debt genealogy’ of the prison. In the Gold Coast, prisons helped manage cash flow after abolition by holding human hostages.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

Many people read initial drafts of this essay, and many more offered their comments in conversation. I thank Emmanuel Akyeampong, Gareth Austin, Erin Braatz, Kelly Brignac, Jean Comaroff, John Comaroff, Dima Hurlbut, Olatunji Ojo, Nana Quarshie, Jake Christopher Richards, Rebecca Shumway, Ben Silverstein, Jon Soske, Diana Wylie, and Adam Ewing. I would also like to acknowledge Gregory Mann's helpful corrections and suggestions. I can be contacted at [email protected].

References

1 National Archives of the United Kingdom (NAUK) CO 96/130, Chief Justice to the Governor, 26 Jan. 1880.

2 Half of these testimonies are available in the Public Records and Archives Administration at Accra (PRAAD-Accra). See PRAAD-Accra ADM 11/1/1477, Native Prisons Ordinance, 21 and 24 Apr. 1886. The others are in NAUK CO 96/191, Gold Coast no. 116, 10 Apr. 1888.

3 PRAAD-Accra ADM 11/1/1477, notes of evidence taken by S. M. Bennett in the appeal case of Oppon vs. Ackinie and Ghartey, 21 and 24 Apr. 1886.

4 NAUK-CO 96/191, testimony of J. Green in the appeal case of Oppon vs. Ackinie and Ghartey, 21 Apr. 1886.

5 PRAAD-Accra ADM 11/1/1477, ‘Questions Put to Mr. Cleland’, 24 Apr. 1886. Although described as the ‘Chief of James Town’, George Cleland was an independent wealthy merchant (obirempon) who had come to run his own court and prison, as other merchants had, in the nineteenth century. For background on Cleland, see Parker, J., Making the Town: Ga State and Society in Early Colonial Accra (Portsmouth, NH, 2000), 86Google Scholar.

6 PRAAD-Accra ADM 11/1/1477, testimony of R. Quasie in the appeal case of Oppon vs. Ackinie and Ghartey, 24 Apr. 1886.

7 PRAAD-Accra ADM 11/1/1477, notes of evidence, S. M. Bennett, 21 and 24 Apr. 1886.

8 Clifford, W., An Introduction to African Criminology (Nairobi, 1974), 189Google Scholar; Bernault, F., ‘The shadow of rule: colonial power and modern punishment in Africa’, in Dikötter, F. and Brown, I. (eds.), Cultures of Confinement: A History of the Prison in Africa, Asia and Latin America (Ithaca, 2007), 55–6Google Scholar; Branch, D., ‘Imprisonment and colonialism in Kenya, c. 1930–1952: escaping the carceral archipelago’, International Journal of African Historical Studies, 38:2 (2005), 243Google Scholar.

9 Bernault, F., ‘The politics of enclosure in colonial and post-colonial Africa’, in Bernault, F. (ed.), A History of Prison and Confinement in Africa, (Portsmouth, NH, 2003), 2Google Scholar.

10 For example, the Asante akyerekuro. See Williams, C., ‘Asante: human sacrifice or capital punishment? An assessment of the period 1807–1884’, International Journal of African Historical Studies, 21:3 (1988), 433–41CrossRefGoogle Scholar. On barracoons, see Smallwood, S., Saltwater Slavery: A Middle Passage from Africa to American Diaspora (Cambridge, 2008), 3364Google Scholar. For a general overview, see T. Bah, ‘Captivity and incarceration in nineteenth-century West Africa’, in Bernault, History of Prison, 69–78.

11 R. Gocking suggests that prisons in the Gold Coast developed in the 1880s–1890s. However, they developed at least forty years earlier. See Gocking, British justice and the Native Tribunals of the southern Gold Coast Colony’, The Journal of African History, 34:1 (1993), 93113CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Kwabena Akurang-Parry also argues that Gold Coast prisons derived from British legislation on debtors’ imprisonment in 1878 and 1883. However, the prisons emerged independently on both the Ga coast (outside of British jurisdiction at the time) and in Akan societies, where they posed a crisis to British sovereignty — they were not made by colonial law. See Akurang-Parry, ‘“What is and what is not the law”: imprisonment for debt and the institution of pawnship in the Gold Coat, 1821–1899’, in P. Lovejoy and T. Falola (eds.), Pawnship, Slavery and Colonialism in Africa (Asmara, 2003), 427–48. African prisons in the Gold Coast have also been noted, without investigation, by Parker, Making the Town, 84–7, 135; Kimble, D., A Political History of Ghana, 1850–1928 (Oxford, 1963), 201–4Google Scholar; Agbodeka, F., African Politics and British Policy in the Gold Coast: A Study in the Forms and Force of Protest (Evanston, IL, 1971), 1819Google Scholar; and Sackyefio-Lenoch, N., The Politics of Chieftaincy: Authority and Property in Colonial Ghana, 1920–1950 (Rochester, 2014), 32, 83Google Scholar. In the course of publishing this essay, I came across the unpublished dissertation of E. Braatz, ‘Governing Difference: Prisons and Colonial Rule on the Gold Coast, 1844–1957’ (unpublished PhD thesis, New York University, 2015). Braatz offers the same empirical timeline for the growth of the prisons, but advances a different argument regarding their purpose in Gold Coast society. She does not outline the prison's role in credit, debt or enslaving practices, but offers a useful legal perspective on the way that prisons were employed in contestations and collaborations between European and African sovereigns in the nineteenth century.

12 Seidman, R., ‘The Ghana prison system: a historical perspective’, in Miller, A. (ed.), African Penal Systems (New York, 1969), 463Google Scholar; also see Arthur, J., ‘Development of penal policy in British West Africa: exploring the colonial dimension’, International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice, 15:2 (1991), 187206CrossRefGoogle Scholar; D. Killingray, ‘“Punishment to fit the crime?”: penal policy and practice in British colonial Africa’, in Bernault, History of Prison, 181–203.

13 P. Lovejoy and T. Falola (eds.), Pawnship; Oroge, E. A., ‘Iwofa: an historical survey of the Yoruba institution of indenture’, African Economic History 14 (1985): 75106CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Miers, S. and Roberts, R. (eds.), The End of Slavery in Africa (Madison, 1988)Google Scholar; Austin, G., ‘Indigenous credit institutions in West Africa, c. 1750–1960,’ in Austin, G. and Sughiara, K. (eds.), Local Suppliers of Credit in the Third World, 1750–1980 (London, 1993), 93159CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Miller, J. C., Way of Death: Merchant Capitalism and the Angolan Slave Trade, 1730–1830 (Madison, 1996)Google Scholar; Robertson, C. and Klein, M. (eds.), Women and Slavery in Africa (Madison, 1983)Google Scholar.

14 R. Dumett and M. Johnson, ‘Britain and the suppression of slavery in the Gold Coast, Ashanti, and the Northern Territories’, in S. Miers and R. Roberts (eds.), The End of Slavery, 71–116; McSheffrey, G., ‘Slavery, indentured servitude, legitimate trade and the impact of abolition in the Gold Coast, 1874–1901: a reappraisal’, The Journal of African History, 24:3 (1983), 349–68CrossRefGoogle Scholar; C. Robertson, ‘Post-proclamation slavery in Accra: a female affair?’, in C. Robertson and M. Klein (eds.), Women and Slavery, 220–45; Getz, T., Slavery and Reform in West Africa: Toward Emancipation in Nineteenth-Century Senegal and the Gold Coast (Athens, OH, 2004)Google Scholar; Austin, G., Labour, Land and Capital in Ghana: From Slavery to Free Labour in Asante, 1807–1956 (Rochester, NY, 2005)Google Scholar; Akurang-Parry, K. O., ‘Rethinking the “slaves of Salaga”: post-proclamation slavery in the Gold Coast (Colonial Southern Ghana), 1874–1899’, Left History, 8:1 (2002), 3360Google Scholar.

15 Akurang-Parry, ‘What is’, 427–8.

16 Ignatieff, M., A Just Measure of Pain: The Penitentiary in the Industrial Revolution, 1750–1850 (New York, 1978)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Rothman, D. J., The Discovery of the Asylum: Social Order and Disorder in the New Republic (New York, 1971)Google Scholar; Melossi, D. and Pavarini, M., The Prison and the Factory: Origins of the Penitentiary System (London, 1981)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

17 Davis, A., ‘From the prison of slavery to the slavery of prison: Frederick Douglass and the convict lease system’, in James, J. (ed.), The Angela Y. Davis Reader (Malden, MA, 1998), 7495Google Scholar; Lichtenstein, A., Twice the Work of Free Labor: The Political Economy of Convict Labor in the New South (London, 1996)Google Scholar; Wacquant, L., ‘From slavery to mass incarceration: rethinking the “race question” in the United States’, New Left Review, 13:2 (2002) 4160Google Scholar; Paton, D., No Bond but the Law: Punishment, Race and Gender in Jamaican State Formation, 1780–1870 (Durham, NC, 2004)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

18 ‘Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade–Estimates’, Voyages: The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Database, https://www.slavevoyages.org/assessment/estimates), accessed 7 Jan. 2020.

19 See Shumway, R., The Fante and the Transatlantic Slave Trade (Rochester, NY, 2014)Google Scholar; Austin, Labour, Land and Capital; Getz, Slavery; and Dumett, R., El Dorado in West Africa: The Gold-Mining Frontier, African Labour and Colonial Capitalism in the Gold Coast, 1875–1900 (Portsmouth, NH, 1998)Google Scholar.

20 R. Kea, ‘Plantations and labour in the South-East Gold Coast from the late eighteenth to the mid-nineteenth century’, in R. Law (ed.), From Slave Trade to ‘Legitimate Commerce’: The Commercial Transition in Nineteenth-Century West Africa (1995), 119–30.

21 Lovejoy and Falola, Pawnship; Grier, B., ‘Pawns, porters and petty traders: women in the transition to cash crop agriculture in colonial Ghana’, Signs, 17:2 (1992), 304–28CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Opare-Akurang, K., ‘The administration of the abolition laws, African responses, and post-proclamation slavery in the Gold Coast, 1874–1940’, Slavery & Abolition, 19:2 (1998), 149–66CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

22 NAUK CO 96/72, Colonel Conran to Colonel Blackall, 19 Aug. 1866.

23 Kopytoff, I. and Miers, S., ‘African “slavery” as an institution of marginality’, in Miers, S. and Kopytoff, I. (eds.), Slavery in Africa: Historical and Anthropological Perspectives (Madison, 1979), 381Google Scholar.

24 Sparks, R. J., ‘Gold Coast merchant families, pawning, and the eighteenth-century British slave trade’, William and Mary Quarterly, 70:2 (2013), 317–40CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Lovejoy, P. and Richardson, D., ‘The business of slaving: pawnship in Western Africa, c. 1600–1810’, The Journal of African History, 42:1 (2001), 6789CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Lovejoy, P., ‘Pawnship, debt, and “freedom” in Atlantic Africa during the era of the slave trade: a reassessment’, The Journal of African History, 55:1 (2014), 5578CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

25 Getz, Slavery, 22.

26 In Sierra Leone, for example. See Grace, J., Domestic Slavery in West Africa with Particular Reference to the Sierra Leone Protectorate, 1896–1927 (London, 1975), 163Google Scholar.

27 Sometimes pawns, held as simple collateral, were detained in isolated holding cells. See Lovejoy and Richardson, ‘Business of slaving’, 79.

28 Rask, J., A Brief and Truthful Description of a Journey to and from Guinea, trans. Winsnes, S. A. (Legon, Ghana, 2008 [1713]), 142–3Google Scholar.

29 Kea, R., ‘“I am here to plunder on the general road”: bandits and banditry in the pre-nineteenth century Gold Coast’, in Crummey, D. (ed.), Banditry, Rebellion & Social Protest in Africa (Portsmouth, NH, 1986), 109–32Google Scholar; Shumway, The Fante, 59–61; Green, T., The Rise of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade in Western Africa, 1300–1589 (Cambridge, 2012)Google Scholar, 2; Kelley, S., ‘The dirty business of panyarring and palaver: slave trading on the Upper Guinea Coast in the eighteenth century’, in Lovejoy, P. and Schwarz, S. (eds.), Slavery, Abolition and the Transition to Colonialism in Sierra Leone (Trenton, NJ, 2014), 89107Google Scholar.

30 PRAAD-Accra SCT 2/4/2, Eliza Hanson vs. Sackey Ocooloo, 16 Aug. 1861; PRAAD-Accra SCT 5/4/89, Queen vs. Quamina Fokoo and Quacoe Fokoo, 20 Dec. 1862; PRAAD-Accra SCT 5/4/9, Judicial Assessor's Court, 16 Oct. 1863. For a case study of southern Nigeria, see Olatunji Ojo, ‘“Èmú: (Àmúyá): The Yoruba Institution of Panyarring or Seizure for Debt’, African Economic History, 35 (2007), 31–58.

31 Smallwood, Saltwater Slavery, 39.

32 Smallwood, Saltwater Slavery, 37. Also see description by Barbot, J., Barbot on Guinea: The Writings of Jean Barbot on West Africa, 1678–1712 (London, 1992 [1746]), 392Google Scholar.

33 Claridge, W. W., A History of the Gold Coast and Ashanti From the Earliest Times to the Commencement of the Twentieth Century, Volume I (London, 1915), 338Google Scholar.

34 Fortes, M. and Mayer, D. Y., ‘Psychosis and social change among the Tallensi of Northern Ghana’, Cahiers d’Études Africaines, 6:21 (1966), 35Google Scholar.

35 United Kingdom, House of Commons, Further Papers Relating to the Ashantee Invasion, no. 1 (London, 1874), 58.

36 Kea, ‘“I am here to plunder”’, 110.

37 NAUK CO 96/31, S. Hill to G. Grey, 18 Dec. 1854.

38 For information on James Thompson, see R. Gocking, Facing Two Ways: Ghana's Coastal Communities Under Colonial Rule (Lanham, MD, 1999), 33.

39 NAUK CO 96/33, J. Thompson and others to G. Grey, 5 Jan. 1855.

40 NAUK CO 96/30, G. L. Heinz to Governor, 4 Aug. 1854.

41 NAUK CO 96/191, ‘Memorandum on Native Prisons’, 3 Dec. 1887.

42 S. Kaplow, ‘African merchants of the nineteenth century Gold Coast’ (unpublished PhD thesis, Columbia University, 1971); Reynolds, E., Trade and Economic Change on the Gold Coast, 1807–1874 (London, 1974)Google Scholar; also see Akyeampong, E., ‘Commerce, credit, and mobility in late nineteenth-century Gold Coast: changing dynamics in Euro-African trade’, in Akyeampong, E. et al. (eds.), African Development in Historical Perspective (Cambridge, 2014), 231–63CrossRefGoogle Scholar

43 PRAAD-Accra SCT 5/4/94, Accosuah Quaminah vs. Quassie Coomah, 18 Feb. 1871.

44 Hopkins, A. G., ‘The currency revolution in South-West Nigeria in the late nineteenth century’, Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria, 3:3 (1966), 471–83Google Scholar.

45 A prison was attached to the stool of King Dowuona of Osu; see PRAAD-Accra SCT 2/4/2, court ruling by J. Fort, 5 Nov. 1861. There was also a debtor's prison used at least once in the Krobo region in 1861; see PRAAD-Accra SCT 2/4/2 Quah vs. Atheapa, 11 Sept. 1861. There was also a prison attached to the court of the Ga mantse Tackie Tawiah by1860; see Parliamentary Papers, 1875, vol. LII (1140), Quow Ouchin vs. Tawiah and Quay, 13 Apr. 1874.

46 Methodist Missionary Society archives, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London (SOAS-MMS) Special Series/Biographical/West Africa/Box 597B, T. Freeman to Mrs. Freeman, 31 Jan. 1864.

47 Sampson, M. J., Makers of Modern Ghana (Accra, 1937), 5387Google Scholar.

48 Quartey-Papafio, A. B., ‘Native Tribunals of the Akras’, Journal of the Royal African Society, 11:41 (1911), 80Google Scholar. During her ethnographic fieldwork in Accra in the 1930s, M. J. Field also described kpa bu as ‘a grave-like hole under a house’ where only ‘very troublesome people’ were thrown. See Field, Social Organization of the Ga People (London, 1940), 112.

49 Ehret, C., History and the Testimony of Language (Berkeley, 2011), 83, 102Google Scholar.

50 Zimmerman, J., A Grammatical Sketch of the Akra or Gã-Language with some Specimens of it from the Mouth of the Natives and a Vocabulary of the Same, I (Stuttgart, 1858), 35, 114, 162Google Scholar.

51 Legalization occurred via the 1888 Native Prisons Ordinance.

52 NAUK CO 96/231, Chief Justice to Colonial Secretary, 29 Mar. 1892.

53 NAUK CO 96/131, Circular, 13 Apr. 1880.

54 PRAAD-Accra SC 17/331, W. Z. Coker to Konor Mate Kole [n.d.]. Coker, as Tufuhen, explains the traditional role of Tufuhen in prison management.

55 A. N. Allott describes how the earliest indigenous courts in the Gold Coast were comprised mainly of merchants and the asafo. See Allott, A. N., ‘Native Tribunals in the Gold Coast, 1844–1927: prolegomena to a study of native courts in Ghana’, Journal of African Law, 1:3 (1957), 166CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

56 Akurang-Parry, ‘What is’, 438, 442.

57 For example, the British government kept records for chiefs’ prisons in Nigeria and Buganda. See Buell, R. L., The Native Problem in Africa, Volume 1 (New York, 1928), 575, 693–5Google Scholar.

58 PRAAD-Accra ADM 1/12/3, note by J. Marshall, Judicial Assessor [n.d., ca. 1873].

59 NAUK CO 96/130, Chief Justice to the Governor, 23 Jan. 1880.

60 See PRAAD-Accra ADM 11/1/1477, B. Griffith, ‘Memorandum on Native Prisons’, 3 Dec. 1887.

61 Parliamentary Papers, 1875, vol. LII (1140), enclosure 6 in no. 6, Quow Ouchin vs. Tawiah and Quay, 13 Apr. 1874.

62 Parliamentary Papers, 1875, vol. LII (1140), enclosure 1 in no. 6, J. Marshall to Johnson, 9 Apr. 1874.

63 PRAAD-Accra ADM 11/1/1477, statement by Quarmine, 25 Nov. 1887.

64 Parliamentary Papers, 1875, vol. LII (1140), enclosure 6 in no. 6, Quow Ouchin vs. Tawiah and Quay, 13 Apr. 1874.

65 NAUK CO 96/72, S. C. Brew to A. Cary, 5 May 1866.

66 Sarbah, J. M., Fanti Customary Laws: A Brief Introduction to the Principles of the Native Laws and Customs of the Fanti and Akan Districts of the Gold Coast, (2nd edn, London, 1904), 116Google Scholar.

67 Public Records and Archives Administration at Cape Coast (PRAAD-Cape Coast) ADM 23/1/328, D. Kingdon, ‘Memorandum on Bankruptcy’, Aug. 1919.

68 NAUK CO 96/112, J. Marshall to C. C. Lees, 26 May 1874.

69 Falola and Lovejoy, Pawnship, 8.

70 NAUK CO 96/84, palaver between the King of Anomabu and the captains and headmen of Anomabu, 26 May 1869.

71 NAUK CO 96/84, Headmen of Anamaboe to H. Simpson, 8 May 1869.

72 PRAAD-Accra ADM 11/1/1111, Eccuah Aiwool to Colonial Secretary, 7 Nov. 1906; H. M. Hull to Ekua Aiwul, 19 Nov. 1906.

73 Akurang-Parry, ‘What is’, 437–42.

74 For example, the man imprisoned as ‘surety’ for his uncle was reported in the newspaper run by West African contributors, Western Echo, 30 Jan. 1886.

75 NAUK CO 96/184, testimony of Oboshee in Regina vs. Lagos & Others, 13 Sept. 1887.

76 PRAAD-Accra ADM 11/1/1476, testimony of Abina Affua in enquiry in Abakrampa, 2 May 1908.

77 NAUK CO 96/130, J. R. H. Wilson, ‘Circular: Native Prisons’, 23 Jan. 1880.

78 Parliamentary Papers, 1867, vol. XLIX, no. 3 in enclosure 24, W. Z. Coker to T. Whyte, 5 Dec. 1866.

79 NAUK CO 96/84, trial of the Chief of Anomabu, 26 May 1869.

80 Parker, Making the Town, 85.

81 Robertson also notes a large (40 per cent) proportion of female domestic slave owners in colonial Accra. See Robertson, ‘Post-proclamation’, 224.

82 Gold Coast Leader, 10 Jan. 1920, 4.

83 Getz, Slavery, 61; SOAS-MMS Special Series/Biographical/West Africa/Box 597B, T. Freeman to T. Hughes, 31 Jan. 1864.

84 SOAS-MMS Special Series/Biographical/West Africa/Box 597B, T. Freeman to J. Dawson, 20 Feb. 1864.

85 PRAAD-Accra CSO 21/7/101, testimony of Nana Ofori Atta in Native Tribunals enquiry, 21 Dec. 1942.

86 Berry, S., ‘Hegemony on a shoestring: indirect rule and access to agricultural land’, Africa, 62:3 (1992), 327–55CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

87 PRAAD-Accra CSO 10/9/31, H. J. L. Cavenaugh, ‘Memo on unification of the prisons service’, 7 Feb. 1938.

88 Parliamentary Papers, 1867, vol. XLIX, no. 1 in enclosure 38, B. Pine to E. Cardwell, 7 Apr. 1865.

89 Parliamentary Papers, 1865, vol. V, (412) ‘Report from the Select Committee on Africa (Western Coast) Together with the Proceedings of the Committee: Minutes of Evidence and Appendix’, 26 June 1865, 329. My emphasis added.

90 PRAAD-Accra ADM 11/1/1477, B. Griffith, ‘Memorandum on Native Prisons’, 3 Dec. 1887.

91 Edsman, B., Lawyers in Gold Coast Politics c. 1900–1945 (Stockholm, 1979)Google Scholar; Boahen, A., Ghana: Evolution and Change in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Century (London, 1975), 40–5Google Scholar.

92 NAUK CO 96/111, Colonial Minutes, 18 Apr. 1874; CO 96/112, J. Marshall to C. C. Lees, 26 May 1874; CO 96/130, H. T. Ussher to M. Hicks-Beach, 26 Jan. 1880.

93 PRAAD-Cape Coast ADM 23/1/328, Kingdon, ‘Memorandum on Bankruptcy’, Aug. 1919.

94 PRAAD-Cape Coast ADM 23/1/328, District Commissioner to Commissioner Central Province, 5 Nov. 1919.

95 PRAAD-Accra SCT 2/6/4, Mutchi vs. Kobina Annan and Kobina Inketsia, 14 Sept. 1907.

96 J. Parker has suggested that this measure was introduced primarily to ban Tackie Tawiah's prison in Accra. The evidence that he cites does not presently support this claim, but it could have been damaged in the two-decades between our consultations of the Accra archives. See Parker, Making the Town, 135.

97 PRAAD-Accra ADM 11/1/1476, Colonial Minutes, 3 Jan. 1906.

98 PRAAD-Accra ADM 11/1/1111, Colonial Minutes, 22 Mar. 1890.

99 Government Gazette, 31 January 1889; PRAAD-Accra ADM 11/1/5, H. M. Hull to Commissioner Eastern Province, 24 Mar. 1905.

100 During stool disputes, the British often waited until chiefs used their unregistered prisons as a pretext for intervening in the stool disputes themselves. For example, see Public Records and Archives Administration at Ho (PRAAD-Ho) KE/C/67, Quarterly Report for Keta District, 31 Dec. 1924.

101 Public Records and Archives Administration at Sekondi (PRAAD-Sekondi) WR 24/1/396, Commissioner Western Province to Chief Commissioner, 6 Sept. 1945.

102 PRAAD-Accra ADM 11/1/1131, W. R. Rainsford, notes from inquiry, 1 Sept. 1923.

103 PRAAD-Cape Coast ADM 23/1/1503, ‘Notes on the seven Asafo companies of Cape Coast’, n.d.

104 PRAAD-Accra ADM 11/1/1, ‘Police officer shooting in the street’, 3 Aug. 1902.

105 PRAAD-Cape Coast ADM 23/1/410, ‘Ashanti Farmers’ Union’, n.d.; ‘Meeting Minutes at Adabraka’, 21 Jan. 1938.

106 PRAAD-Accra ADM 11/1/1105, Kwaku Amoah and others to Lord Passfield, 27 Sept. 1929; PRAAD-Cape Coast 23/1/724, W. J. A. Jones to Commissioner Central Province, 16 Sept. 1933; PRAAD-Sekondi WR 24/1/396, O. J. Collision to Commissioner Western Province, 2 Apr. 1947.

107 PRAAD-Accra CSO 21/7/81, J. C. Taggoe to H. Thomas, 12 Mar. 1943.

108 PRAAD-Sekondi WRG 21/1/210, A. Duncan-Johnstone to Director of Prisons, 23 Aug. 1933.

109 PRAAD-Accra ADM 11/1/1840, District Commissioner Axim to District Commissioner Sekondi, 12 May 1945.

110 PRAAD-Cape Coast ADM 23/1/724, District Commissioner to Commissioner Central Province, 14 Feb. 1936.

111 Gocking, R., ‘Indirect rule in the Gold Coast: competition for office and the invention of tradition’, Canadian Journal of African Studies, 28:3 (1994), 421–46Google Scholar

112 PRAAD-Accra ADM 11/1/1840, Colonial Minutes, 30 June 1949.

113 NAUK CO 96/33, J. Thompson and others to G. Grey, 5 Jan. 1855.

114 Kosto, A. J., Hostages in the Middle Ages (Oxford, 2012)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Schofield, P. and Mayhew, N., Credit and Debt in Medieval England, c. 1180–c. 1350 (Oxford, 2002)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Morgan, W. D., ‘History and economics of suretyship’, Cornell Law Review, 12:2 (1927), 153–71Google Scholar; Hopley, R., ‘The ransoming of prisoners in medieval North Africa and Andalusia: an analysis of the legal framework’, Medieval Encounters, 15:2–4 (2009), 179–98CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

115 Innes, J., Inferior Politics: Social Problems and Social Policies in Eighteenth-Century Britain (Oxford, 2009), 227–78CrossRefGoogle Scholar; see also Mann, B. H., Republic of Debtors: Bankruptcy in the Age of American Independence (Cambridge, 2002)Google Scholar.