After calling on the German colony to surrender on 6 August 1914,
French and
British troops invaded unopposed the next day. No military personnel were stationed in the protectorate. The police force consisted of a commander and deputy commander, 10 German sergeants, 1 native sergeant and 660 Togolese policemen deployed throughout the territory. The
Entente forces occupied Lomé, then advanced on a powerful new radio station near Kamina, east of
Atakpamé. after the German technicians who had built the radio installation destroyed the station during the night of 24/25 August. In the weeks before the destruction,
Kamerun,
German Southwest Africa,
German East Africa and 47 ships on the high seas were sent reports of Allied actions, as well as warnings of trouble ahead. On 27 December 1916, Togoland was separated into French and British administrative zones. After the end of World War I, members of the newly established
Czechoslovakia government considered acquiring the colony as
Czechoslovak Togo, but the idea never proceeded past creating a flag. Following the ratification of the
Treaty of Versailles, on 20 July 1922, Togoland formally became a
League of Nations Class B mandate divided into
French Togoland and
British Togoland, covering respectively about two-thirds and one-third of the territory. The British area of the former German colony was integrated into
Ghana in 1957 after a May 1956 plebiscite in which 58% of British-area residents voted to join Ghana upon its independence, rather than remaining under British-administered
United Nations Trusteeship. The French-ruled region became the Republic of Togo in 1960 and is now known as the
Togolese Republic. In 1960, the new state invited the last German governor of Togoland,
Duke Adolf Friedrich of Mecklenburg, to the country's official independence celebrations. ==Governors==