Online Encyclopedia

CAPE COAST

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 225 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CAPE

COAST  , a
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port on the Gold Coast,
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British West Africa, in 5° 5' N., 1° 13' W., about 8o m . W. of
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Accra . Pop . (1901) 28,948, mostly Fantis . There are about loo Europeans and a colony of Krumen . The
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town is built on a low
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bank of
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gneiss and micaceous slate which runs out into the sea and affords some
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protection at the landing-place against the violence of the surf . (This bank was the Cabo Corso of the Portuguese, whence the
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English corruption of Cape Coast.) The castle faces the sea and is of considerable
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size and has a somewhat imposing appearance . Next to the castle, used as quarters for military
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officers and as a prison, the
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principal buildings are the residence of the
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district
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commissioner, the churches and
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schools of various denominations, the government schools and the colonial hospital . Many of the wealthy natives live in brick-built residences . The streets are hilly, and the town is surrounded on the east and north by high ground, whilst on the west is a lagoon . Fort Victoria lies west of the town, and Fort William (used as a
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light-house) on the east . The first
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European settlement on the spot was that of the Portuguese in 161o .

In 1652 the Swedes established themselves here and built the castle, which they named Carolusburg . In 16J9 the Dutch obtained

possession, but the castle was seized in 1664 by the English under Captain (afterwards
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Admiral
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Sir) Robert Holmes, and it has not since been captured in spite of an attack by De Ruyter in 1665, a French attack in 1757, and various assaults by the native tribes . Next to
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Elmina it was considered the strongest fort on the
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Guinea Coast . Up to 1876 the town was the capital of the British settlements on the coast, the administration being then removed to Accra . It is still one of the chief ports of the Gold Coast Colony, and from it starts the
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direct road to Kumasi . In 1905 it was granted municipal government . In the courtyard of the castle are buried George Maclean (governor of the colony 1830-1843) and his wife (Laetitia Elizabeth Landon) . The graves are marked by two stones bearing respectively the initials " L . E . L." and " G . M." The
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land on the east side of the town is studded with disused gold-diggers' pits . The natives are divided into seven clans called companies, each under the
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rule of recognized captains and possessing distinct customs and fetish .

See A . Ffoulkes, " The

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Company
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System in Cape Coast Castle," in Al .
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African
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Soc. vol. vii, 1908; and GOLD COAST . v .

End of Article: CAPE COAST
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