•
Gottlieb Ababio Adom - Gold Coast educator, journalist, editor and Presbyterian minister •
Kwasi Sintim Aboagye - Ghanaian politician, member of parliament during the first republic. •
Clement Anderson Akrofi - Gold Coast ethnolinguist, translator and philologist who worked extensively on the structure of the Twi language •
Ofori Atta I -
Okyenhene or King of
Akyem Abuakwa, 1912 – 1943 •
Rose Akua Ampofo - Ghanaian educator, gender advocate and first woman in Ghana to be ordained a Presbyterian minister •
Michael Paul Ansah - Ghanaian politician, minister of state in the
third republic •
David Asante - first native missionary of the Basel Mission and philologist; instructor in language •
Christian Gonçalves Kwami Baëta - Gold Coast academic and Presbyterian minister and Synod Clerk, Evangelical Presbyterian Church of the Gold Coast, 1945 – 1949, who was instrumental in the establishment of the University of Ghana, Legon in 1948 •
Solomon Antwi Kwaku Bonsu - Ghanaian politician, minister of state in the
first republic •
Carl Henry Clerk - Gold Coast educator, administrator, journalist, editor and Presbyterian minister, fourth Synod Clerk, Presbyterian Church of the Gold Coast, 1950 – 1954 •
Nicholas T. Clerk - Ghanaian academic, administrator and Presbyterian minister •
Nicholas Timothy Clerk - Gold Coast-born Basel missionary and theologian, first Synod Clerk, Presbyterian Church of the Gold Coast, 1918 –1932 •
Ferdinand Koblavi Dra Goka - Ghanaian educationist and politician in the
First Republic; Volta Regional Minister, 1960 – 1961 and
Minister for Finance, 1961 – 1964 •
Peter Hall - Gold Coast-born Jamaican educator, clergyman, missionary and first Moderator of the Presbyterian Church of the Gold Coast, 1918 –1922 •
Emmanuel Mate Kole -
Konor, or
paramount chief of the
Manya Krobo, 1892–1939. •
Joseph Edward Michel - one of the early commissioned officers in the
Ghana Army,
Michel Camp was named in his honour. •
Joseph Hanson Kwabena Nketia - Ghanaian composer and ethnomusicologist; •
Richard Emmanuel Obeng (1877–1951), Ghanaian writer; credited for writing one of Africa's earliest and Ghana's first novel titled
Eighteenpence. •
E. M. L. Odjidja - ninth
Moderator of the Presbyterian Church of Ghana •
Nii Amaa Ollennu - jurist, judge, Justice of the Supreme Court of Ghana, Speaker of the Parliament of Ghana in the Second Republic and acting President of Ghana from 7 August 1970 to 31 August 1970 •
Theophilus Opoku - native Akan linguist, translator, philologist, educator and missionary who became the first indigenous African to be ordained a
pastor on Gold Coast soil by the Basel Mission in 1872 •
Solomon Osei-Akoto - Ghanaian educationist and politician in the
Second Republic, Deputy
Minister for Transport and Communications, 1969 – 1972 •
Emmanuel Charles Quist - barrister, judge and the first African President of the Legislative Council and first Speaker of the Parliament of Ghana •
Edward Akufo-Addo-politician and judge; former Chief Justice in the NLC era and President of Ghana in the second Republic == See also ==