Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Charles Arden Clarke

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Monarch
  
Name
  
Charles Arden-Clarke

Preceded by
  
Sir Robert Scott

Succeeded by
  
Lord Listowel


Charles Arden-Clarke

Prime Minister
  
Kwame Nkrumah(6 March 1957 – 1 July 1960)

Prime Minister
  
Kwame Nkrumah(21 March 1952 – 6 March 1957)

Preceded by
  
Newly created position

Sir Charles Noble Arden-Clarke (25 July 1898 – 16 December 1962) was a British colonial administrator.

Charles Arden-Clarke wwwbritishempirecoukimages4charlesardenclarkejpg

Arden-Clarke was educated at Rossall School. He was the Resident Commissioner of the Bechuanaland Protectorate (later Botswana) between 1937 and 1942, a time at which the ruling regent Tshekedi Khama was in violent conflict with the British authorities. He was the Resident Commissioner of Basutoland from August 1942 to November 1946, and in 1946 was appointed as the first Governor of the newly created British Crown Colony of Sarawak, which was ceded in 1946 by the Kingdom of Sarawak. During his governorship in Sarawak he was despised by locals as, upon his appointment, Sarawak was engulfed with the Anti-cession Movement, which led to the assassination of his successor, Sir Duncan George Stewart in 1949 by the radical members of the Anti-cession movement.

After Sarawak, he was the last governor of the Gold Coast from August 1949 until 1957 (later Ghana). On 12 February 1951, he authorised Kwame Nkrumah's release from imprisonment in James Fort. After independence, he was named the first Governor-General of Ghana in 1957. Arden-Clarke's acceptance of the Africans and his attitude towards Kwame Nkrumah allegedly led to the relative success of Ghana's independence.

References

Charles Arden-Clarke Wikipedia