The town was founded around 1740 by Butu, a Nankane speaking hunter from Zecco (present day southern
Burkina Faso), who initially settled in Pungu (a
Kasem speaking community further south of Zecco). During the 19th century, the town became an important staging post on the
Sahel caravan route. At the beginning of the 20th century the British established a base at Navrongo. A Catholic mission was established in 1906 - the
White Fathers ("Pères Blancs"), a
French group made up of
French Canadians. They came to Upper East region from Upper Volta (now Burkina Faso) due to French anti-clerical laws (the Fathers believed they would be expelled from Upper Volta). The British allowed them to set up in Navrongo on the condition that the school that they were to establish used English only. Despite a rocky beginning (the Fathers had learnt the wrong local language and only attracted 5 students in the first 18 months), the school eventually became a success – a
British official in 1927 said that it was the best school (of only 5) in the north of Ghana. Following Ghana's 1957 liberation from British colonial authority, Navrongo was designated as the district capital of the Kassena/Nankani district. ==Climate==