Joseph Ephraim Casely Hayford (1866-1930)

March 28, 2009 
/ Contributed By: Brittany Rogers

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Joseph Ephraim Casely Hayford

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Joseph Ephraim Casely Hayford was a West African barrister, author, and political leader who dedicated his life to helping improve conditions for the people of West Africa. Casely Hayford was born on September 3, 1866, the youngest of three sons to parents Reverend John de Graft Hayford and Mary (Awuraba) Brew, both of Anomabu, Gold Coast (present-day Ghana) which was then a colony in the British Empire.

Casely Hayford received his education at the Wesleyan Boys High School in the Cape Coast Region of Ghana and then at Fourah Bay College in Freetown, Sierra Leone.  While at Fourah Bay College Casely Hayford became a follower of the West Indian-born African educator, Edward Wilmot Blyden.  After graduation Casely Hayford worked as a high school teacher and principal of Accra Wesley High School.

J.E. Casely Hayford traveled to London, England in 1893 where he trained to become a barrister (attorney).  He also studied at Cambridge University where, during his stay he met his future wife, Adelaide Smith Casely Hayford who inspired him to become a writer.  Casely Hayford began practicing law in England in 1896.  He returned to Cape Coast the following year and became an active member of the Aborigines’ Rights Protection Society, a group dedicated to advancing the cause of indigenous Africans.

By 1910 Hayford he was elected president of the society.  In 1920, along with T. Hutton Mills, Casely Hayford founded the National Congress of British West Africa (NCBWA), a major political movement in West Africa that worked toward African liberation.  In 1923 he became president of the Congress.   He also worked as a journalist and served as editor of the Gold Coast Leader, one of the largest black-owned newspapers in West Africa. In 1916 Casely Hayford was elected to the Gold Coast Legislative Council.  This advisory council to the British colonial governor was the only body of African elected officials in the colony.

Casely Hayford is best known for his six books about West Africa including Gold Coast Native Institutions (1903) and Ethiopia Unbound (1911), which is said to be the first African novel written in English.  Joseph Ephraim Casely Hayford died on August 11, 1930 in Accra, Ghana.

About the Author

Author Profile

Brittany Rose Rogers is currently pursuing a B.A. at the University of Washington, Seattle, focusing on French Language and Literature and Public Education. After finishing her undergraduate degree she will begin working toward her M.A. through the University of Washington’s Elementary Teacher Education program. She is interested in learning about education in high need schools and looks forward to working with children from diverse backgrounds. She plans to receive an endorsement in ELL/ESL (English language learner/ English as a second language). Rogers looks forward to starting graduate school in the summer.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Rogers, B. (2009, March 28). Joseph Ephraim Casely Hayford (1866-1930). BlackPast.org. https://www.blackpast.org/global-african-history/hayford-joseph-ephraim-casely-1866-1930/

Source of the Author's Information:

G.I.C. Eluwa, “Background to the Emergence of the National Congress of
British West Africa, in African Studies Review 14:2 (1971); Kwadwo
Osei-Nyame, “Pan-Africanist Ideology and the African Historical Novel
of Self-Discovery: The Examples of Kobina Sekyi and J.E. Casely
Hayford,” in Journal of African Cultural Studies 12:2 (1999); Adelaide
M. Cromwell, An African American Feminist: The Life and Times of
Adelaide Smith Casely Hayford, 1868-1960
(London: Frank Cass & Co.
LTD., 1986); Gauray Desai, “Gendered Self-Fashioning: Adelaide Casely
Hayford’s Black Atlantic,” Research in African Literatures 35:3 (Fall
2004).

Further Reading