Heritage Materials

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These materials consist primarily of the African, Furley and Folio collections which are being kept at the Africana section of the Balme Library, University of Ghana. Furley and Folio were Dutch writers in the colonial period in the history of Ghana

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The collection includes documentary materials relating to the history of Ghana, old books, maps, engravings, pamphlets and manuscripts but most of all archival material. Some portions of the Furley collection contains essays on the local history, customs histories and constitutions of the various tribes of the Gold Coast which was later published in two slim volumes by Welman on Ahanta and Peki

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Furley presented his enormous collection of documentary materials of various kinds to the library of the University College of the Gold Coast. After his death, his widow added to this collection some materials which Furley had collected in the last years of his life

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    A Geographical History of Africa
    (Londini, Impensis Georg. Bishop, 1600) Leo, J.
    A general description of the Africa, together with a comparison of the ancient and new names of all the principal countries and provinces therein.
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    Extracts From the Records of the African Companies
    (The Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, 1538) Fisher, R.A.
    These documents were extracted from the Records of the African Companies in London by Miss Ruth A. Fisher. They are from the papers of the Treasury and the Colonial Office. They appear here in the form of extracts which are in no sense intended as exhaustive of any particular phase of history, but as showing the value of an almost unexploited store of information bearing on a most important aspect of the commercial expansion of Europe. It is believed, too, that these extracts herein presented will stimulate interest and attract attention to the historical and anthropological aspects of this conquest of Africa. These extracts from the Records of the African Companies have several claims to value. They show the method of approach in opening the African trade, the effort to monopolize it, the international contest for control of the traffic, the manner in which the natives were brought into it, and the institutions of the natives thus reached. The special reason for the publication of these documents is the light which they throw on the natives themselves. Valuable as these Records of the African Companies may seem, however, they have not been extensively used by investigators as has been the case with the records of other trading companies of the British Empire like that of the East India. This neglect, as Mr. Hilary Jenkinson has pointed out, may be due to the dissimilarity in fortune. The natives of Africa differed more widely from those of Europe than did those of India, and the trade of India was more profitable than that of Africa