Describe the connection issue. Toggle navigation Back to results. John Mensah Sarbah, his life and works. Responsibility Azu Crabbe. Imprint Accra : Ghana Universities Press, Physical description xvii, p. Available online. The delegation travelled to London in and succeeded in getting the Lands Bill withdrawn. Sarbah returned the guinea fee which the ARPS gave him for his work, as he regarded it as an honour to serve his country.
John Mensah Sarbah also worked hard to promote secondary education. He founded a Dutton scholarship at Taunton College, in memory of his brother, Joseph Dutton Sarbah, who had died there in He also, together with other nationalists, re-established and financed the Cape Coast Wesleyan School. He went on to help promote an enterprise called the Fanti Public Schools Limited, which led to the foundation of the Mfantsipim School in Fanti national constitution : a short treatise on the constitution and government of the Fanti, Asanti, and other Akan tribes of West Africa, together with a brief account of the discovery of the Gold Coast by Portuguese navigators by John Mensah Sarbah Book 3 editions published in in English and held by 6 WorldCat member libraries worldwide.
Fanti customary laws : a brief introduction to the principles of the native laws and customs of the Fanti and Akan sections of the Gold Coast, with a selection of cases thereon decides in the law courts by John Mensah Sarbah Book 3 editions published between and in English and held by 3 WorldCat member libraries worldwide. Fanti National Constitution: a short treatise on the constitution and government of the Fanti, Asanti, and other Akan tribes of West Africa, etc by John Mensah Sarbah Book 2 editions published in in English and held by 3 WorldCat member libraries worldwide.
Fanti Customary Laws by John Mensah Sarbah Book 3 editions published between and in English and Undetermined and held by 3 WorldCat member libraries worldwide John Mensah Sarbah, the first of the activist lawyer statesmen whose works have so marked Ghanaian history. Great Sarbah was the first formally trained Ghanaian lawyer and the author of the seminal work, Fanti Customary Laws, where he sought to set down the rules and principles of customary law, a tradition followed by subsequent generations of legal scholars such as Joseph Casely Hayford, J.
Danquah, and Nii Amaah Ollenu. Their works served to reinforce the historic bargain and duality which characterise the Ghanaian legal environment - the coexistence of customary law and the received English law, both statutory and common law. Thus Ghana, like many other African countries, has a plural legal system, which the founders of our nation have chosen as an instrument of nation - building. He also identified the need for good interpreters in the courts, and proposed the establishment of a school for court interpreters.
When the Gold Coast Native Jurisdiction Ordinance was being amended in , Section 29 caused a stir among the people because they felt it would empower the governor to usurp the rights of the people in the destooling of chiefs. Sarbah had opposed such proposals before, and people had expected him to oppose the amendment outright.
Instead, he suggested that the dismissal or the suspension of chiefs should be carried out by a resolution of the Legislative Council instead of by Order in Council. His suggestion, which was an improvement on the amendment, was not accepted. The passage of the bill, however, made him very unpopular, especially since subsequently he received the British decoration of the CMG Companion of the Order of St. Michael and St. George , an honor some thought that he had sought, though he denied it.
He encouraged farmers to grow cocoa and gave them loans for the purpose. He was a good churchman, and bought a pipe organ for the Methodist Church at Cape Coast. He had married Marian Wood of Accra in , and they had three children. He died in , without, however, making any provision in his will for the education of his children, probably because he believed that the Akan family system would cater for them.
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