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This will be the first book to focus on the African patrons, who commissioned grand family mansions from the 1860s to 1950s, to highlight their intentions during the tumultuous period in the Gold Coast Colony (part of present-day Ghana) from roughly 1874 to independence from the British on March 6, 1957.
Today, coastal Ghana today is dotted with grand old homes; most are uninhabited, in ruin and hauntingly eerie. Whilst most people associate these homes with European patrons, these structures were constructed for wealthy Africans. Case studies reveal the "Coastal Elite Style," an umbrella term for the multitude of innovative responses to European, Afro-Brazilian and American architecture. These hybrid mansions communicate ideas of status and modernity through their combination of local aesthetics with the manipulation of foreign architectural styles. This movement is significant because the layered meanings expressed resistance to the British and established a vernacular for housing in Ghana today. By decolonizing the study of colonial architecture by placing the gaze on African patrons, these mansions will be revealed as unique works of African Modernism.
This book will expand upon existing literature concerning hybridity in colonial residential architecture. It will be of interest to researchers and students of architectural history, colonial studies, African studies and Atlantic studies.
List of contents
Introduction Chapter 1:
Innovation and Appropriation, Local Housing Materials and Types Chapter 2:
Gold Coast Georgian, George Kuntu Blankson's Addition to Castle Brew Chapter 3:
Gold Coast Italianate, Kwamin Atta Amonoo's Mansion on the Hill Chapter 4:
Gold Coast Italianate with Sobrado Plan, Justice Akwa's and Reverend John Oboboam Hammond's Cosmopolitan Homes Chapter 5:
Gold Coast Afro-Brazilian, Upscale Renovations on the Mefful Residence Chapter 6:
Gold Coast Beaux Arts, Sir Kobina Arku Korsah's Ready-Made Mansion Chapter 7:
Gold Coast Neoclassical Revival, Kofi Bentsi-Enchill's "Dream House" Bibliography Appendix
About the author
Courtnay Micots is the Associate Professor of Art History at Florida A & M University (Tallahassee, Florida, USA). She has worked in Ghana for nearly 20 years. She has conducted further research in the Republic of Benin, South Africa, Egypt, England, Cuba and Brazil. Her research encompasses a variety of resistance art forms, including carnival, architecture, sculpture and asafo flags. Her book, supported with an NEH Award, "Kakaamotobe: Fancy Dress Carnival in Ghana" was published in 2021. She received a second NEH Award in 2023 for her book "African Mansions: How the Gold Coast Elites Resisted Colonialism with Status and Modernity," which will be available in February of 2026.