Joseph Ephraim Casely Hayford was born on 29 September 1866 in
Cape Coast, in the British
Gold Coast colony, now
Ghana. His family, part of the
Fante Anona clan and descendants of a dynasty of
omanhenes and
okyeames, was part of the Fante coastal elite. His father,
Joseph de Graft Hayford (1840–1919), was educated and ordained as a minister in the
Methodist church, and was a prominent figure in Ghanaian politics. His mother, Mary de Graft Hayford, was from the Brew family, descended from the 18th-century Irish trader Richard Brew and his African "country wife", the Fante princess and daughter of Eno Baisie (Beesie) Kurentsi (known to Europeans as “John Currantee”), the Omanhene (chief) of Anomabu. Brew settled in this area about 1745 and was involved in the
Transatlantic slave trade. Casely was one of Joseph's middle names; he adopted Casely Hayford as a non-hyphenated double surname. His brothers were
Ernest James Hayford, a doctor, and the Reverend Mark Hayford, a minister.
Early life Casely Hayford attended Wesley Boys' High School (now known as
Mfantsipim) in Cape Coast, and
Fourah Bay College in
Freetown, Sierra Leone. While in Freetown, Casely Hayford became an avid follower of
Edward Wilmot Blyden, the foremost pan-African figure at the time, who edited
Negro, the first explicitly pan-African journal in West Africa. Upon returning to Ghana, Casely Hayford became a high-school teacher. He eventually was promoted to principal at Accra Wesleyan Boys' High School. He was dismissed from his position at the school for his political activism. By 1888, Casely Hayford was the editor, and he renamed the paper as the
Gold Coast Echo. From 1890 to 1896, he was co-proprietor of the
Gold Coast Chronicle. He also wrote articles for the
Wesleyan Methodist Times. ==Inner Temple and the bar==