J. H. Allassani Explained

Joseph Henry Allassani
Office1:Resident Minister of Ghana to Guinea
Term Start1:September 1959
Term End1:1 July 1960
President1:Kwame Nkrumah
Predecessor1:Ebenezer Ako-Adjei
Successor1:Stephen Allen Dzirasa
Office2:Minister for Health[1]
Term Start2:June 1956
Term End2:July 1959
President2:Dr. Kwame Nkrumah
Successor2:Imoru Egala
Office3:Minister for Education
Term Start3:21 June 1954
Term End3:June 1956
President3:Kwame Nkrumah
Successor3:John Bogolo Erzuah
Office4:Member of Parliament
for Saboba
Term Start4:1965
Term End4:February 1966
Successor4:Ernest Seth Yaney
Office5:Member of Parliament
for Dagomba East[2]
Term Start5:1951
Term End5:1965
Successor5:Constituency abolished
Birth Date:1906
Birth Name:Joseph Henry Allassani
Birth Place:Gumo, British Togoland
Nationality:Ghanaian

Joseph Henry Allassani was a Ghanaian teacher and politician. He was a member of parliament and a minister of state during the first republic. He was the first health minister in the first republic of Ghana.[3]

Early life and education

Allassani was born around 1906 at Gumo a suburb of the Kumbungu District about 9 km from Tamale in the Northern Region, Ghana then a territory of Togoland under the trusteeship of the United Kingdom.

He received his elementary education at Catholic schools in Tamale, Elmina, Sunyani, and finally at St. Peter's in Kumasi. He entered the Government Teacher Training College in 1924 and graduated with his Certificate 'A' in 1926.[4]

Career and politics

Allassani began teaching in 1927 at St. Peter's Catholic School, Kumasi. He taught there for about twenty-two years. In 1949 he resigned to take up an appointment as secretary to the Dagomba Native Administration. That same year, he was elected into the Northern Territories Council and in 1951 he was elected to the legislative assembly as a representative of Dagomba East on the ticket of the Convention People's Party.[5] [6] [7] He officially took office on 8 February 1951. On 1 April 1951, he was appointed ministerial secretary (deputy minister) to the ministry of development and on 20 June 1954 he was appointed Minister for Education, officially taking office on 21 June that year.[8] [9] In 1955 and 1956 he argued for the integration of Northern Togoland with the Gold Coast before the Trusteeship Council of the United Nations.[10] He was appointed minister for health in June 1956[11] [12] [13] [14] until September 1959 when he was appointed Ghana's Resident Minister in Guinea.[15] He held that office until 30 June 1960 when he was appointed chairman of Rural Housing officially taking office on republic day; 1 July 1960. He served in this capacity until 1 January when he was appointed chairman of the State Paints Corporation. He held this office until February 1966 when the Nkrumah government was overthrown.[4]

During his tenure of office as a government official, he served on various boards and committees, some which include; the Scholarship Selection Board, the Central Tender Board, the Erzuah Committee on Civil Service Salaries and the Committee on Transport in the Northern Territories.[16] During the era of the National Liberation Council government he was sentenced to 3 months imprisonment with hard labour by two asset commissions on the conviction of perjury and contempt of Justice Apaloo's Commission.[17] [18]

Personal life

Allassani and his wife Susana Andani had twelve children.[4]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Google books. Parliamentary debates; official Report, Part 2 . Ghana Publications Corporation . i . 1965.
  2. Google books. The Diplomatic Press Directory of the Republic of Ghana, Volume 2 . Diplomatic Press and Publishing Company . 26 . 1960.
  3. 1957 . Parliamentary Debates; National Assembly Official Report . Google books . Accra, Government printing department.
  4. Report of the Manyo-Plange (Assets) Commission, appointed under the Commissions of Enquiry Act, 1964 (Act 250) and N. L. C. (Investigation and Forfeiture of Assets) Decree, 1966 (N. L. C. D. 72) to enquire into the assets of specified persons . Ghana Publishing Corporation . xv . 1969.
  5. 1955 . Report by His Majesty's Government in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland to the General Assembly of the United Nations on the Administration of Togoland under United Kingdom Trusteeship. . Google books . H.M. Stationery Office . 19.
  6. Book: A History of Higher Education in Northern Ghana, 1907–1976 . Ghana Universities Press . 194 . 1990. 9789964302153.
  7. 1954 . United Nations Bulletin, Volume 16 . Google books . United Nations Department of Public Information . 222.
  8. 1956 . Gold Coast Gazette, Part 1 . Google books . Government Print Office . 453.
  9. Book: Rathbone, Richard . 1992 . Ghana, Part 2 . xv. 9780112905264 .
  10. Book: Rubin, J. A. . 1962 . Pictorial history of the United Nations . 181.
  11. Book: Steinburg, S. . 2016 . The Statesman's Year-Book: Statistical and Historical Annual of the States of the World for the Year 1960 . 295. 9780230270893 .
  12. 1953 . The British Commonwealth Year Book . Google books . MacGibbon and Kee . 227.
  13. GHANA'S CABINET . Crisis . April 1957. USA . The Crisis Publishing Company . 204 . 16 August 2019.
  14. Book: Bawumia, Mumuni . 1972 . A life the Political History of Ghana:Memoirs of Alhaji Mumuni Bawumia . 116. 9789964303358 .
  15. Book: Thompson, W. S. . 1969 . Ghana's Foreign Policy, 1957-1966: Diplomacy Ideology, and the New State . 75 . 9781400876303 .
  16. 1958 . Ghana Year Book . Google books . Graphic Corporation . 179.
  17. 1967 . Africa Report, Volume 12 . Google books . African-American Institute . 45.
  18. Book: Rajasooria, J. P. . 1972 . Ghana & Nkrumah . 124. 9780871961914 .