Sekondi Takoradi

Sekondi Takoradi The only twin city in Afrika

S e k o n d i  T a k o r a d i  🇬🇭
19/11/2023

S e k o n d i T a k o r a d i 🇬🇭

S e k o n d i  T a k o r a d i   🇬🇭
19/10/2023

S e k o n d i T a k o r a d i 🇬🇭

S e k o n d i   T a k o r a d i  🇬🇭
15/10/2023

S e k o n d i T a k o r a d i 🇬🇭

Somewhere in Takoradi 🇬🇭
13/10/2023

Somewhere in Takoradi 🇬🇭

What's the name of this place?
10/09/2023

What's the name of this place?

This is where?
26/08/2023

This is where?

Meet   Western Region representative, Serwaa. Vote for her by dialing *713*13 # or download the TV3 Reality app to vote
31/07/2023

Meet Western Region representative, Serwaa.

Vote for her by dialing *713*13 # or download the TV3 Reality app to vote

Meet   Western North Region representative, Benewa. Vote for her by dialing *713*13 # or download the TV3 Reality app to...
31/07/2023

Meet Western North Region representative, Benewa.

Vote for her by dialing *713*13 # or download the TV3 Reality app to vote.

26/07/2023

Don't miss this event powered by Maximum 104.3 Takoradi

W a l k w i t h M a x i m u m

Friday, 4th August

5:30am









Max TV

Max FM 89.7

Takoradi was once the most beautiful city in the whole Ghana but, look at us now; terrible roads every corner 😭😭😭,😭😭😭
20/07/2023

Takoradi was once the most beautiful city in the whole Ghana but, look at us now; terrible roads every corner 😭😭😭,😭😭😭

Reporting from B u s u a   B e a c h   R e s o r t   🇬🇭
16/07/2023

Reporting from B u s u a B e a c h R e s o r t 🇬🇭

The Port of Takoradi makes History again as it has received the Largest Bulk Vessel since 1928. MV Baby Hercules loaded ...
12/07/2023

The Port of Takoradi makes History again as it has received the Largest Bulk Vessel since 1928. MV Baby Hercules loaded a Record Tonnage of 106,530 metric tons of Bauxite in just five (5) days.





PETRONIA CITY PROJECT IN TAKORADI IN WESTERN REGION OF GHANA🇬🇭 Petronia City – the new state of the art self-sufficient ...
11/07/2023

PETRONIA CITY PROJECT IN TAKORADI IN WESTERN REGION OF GHANA🇬🇭

Petronia City – the new state of the art self-sufficient integrated city where our future is better and brighter. Welcome to the New Africa.

Petronia City is the vision of CEO and Founder of Wonda World Estates, The Ghanaian 🇬🇭 Nana Kwame Bediako. Designed around the ideology of ‘work, live, learn and play’, Petronia City is a self-sustaining, master-planned, integrated city. It will attract, retain and support businesses, human capital needs and elevate Ghana’s Western Region into a world-class business location, tourist destination and home.

The city’s 2000-acre development will include residential, office, industrial, commercial, leisure and hospitality space. It will be the first at the heart of the Western Region of Ghana, home to the country’s rapidly growing oil, gas and mining industries.

This incredible project will be realised in three key phases over the next 10 years. The Petronia City project will unroll in 3 phases over the next 10 years.

NOTE: The project is still at the land clearing phase and will constructed.

Credit : Ghana The Gateway To Africa

29/06/2023

We have realized people Don’t like the information we give here that's why we have stopped posting.

You Don’t Even comment smh

SHORT HISTORY OF GHANA SECONDARY TECHNICAL SCHOOL (GSTS)At the turn of the 20th century, the government of the colonial ...
12/06/2023

SHORT HISTORY OF GHANA SECONDARY TECHNICAL SCHOOL (GSTS)

At the turn of the 20th century, the government of the colonial Gold Coast confronted with the growing demand for technical education required for its ambitious industrial expansion decided to establish a technical school for post-primary school students in the colony. The school was necessary to train a workforce for its Transport and Communication, Public Works, Electricity Supply Commissions, and general infrastructure development. In response, the government established the Accra Technical School in 1909.

The School was initially sited at the former premises of the Accountant-General’s Department at Kinbu in the heart of Accra. As a fledging establishment, it had its teething challenges. Without dormitories of its own, the 19 pioneers of the school had to lodge at the Government Teacher Training College. As a result, most of the students from Accra were non-resident. By the end of the first term, the student population had increased to 25. In 1911, two dormitories were put up to accommodate the increasing student population. The school offered 3-year courses in metal and wood works to students who qualified as artisans. In line with the school’s objectives of providing practical training in engineering and craftsmanship, students of the school, from 1912, began practical training, first with the Railways and later with the Public Works Department. This was a symbiotic relationship in which the school had the opportunity to reinforce classroom theory with workshop practical, while the government departments benefited from the services of these students. In May 1912, the first batch of 28 candidates, made up of eighteen (18) metalwork and ten (10) woodwork candidates, were presented for examination. The graduates were recruited into government departments – Public Works, Waterworks and Railways.

On the 5th of August 1914, there was news of a declaration of war on the Germans by the British Empire. This declaration would ultimately disrupt activities of the school as four days later; instructions came for the evacuation of the buildings of the Technical School and the Training College for German prisoners of war. The temporary closure of the school also affected its staff as they too were required for various services in connection with the war. Some students entered the Volunteer Service, and two went on active service to East Africa. The school resumed when the war ended, and with it came a gradual increase in student population to 80 by 1928. A new and larger site was needed.

The buildings in Takoradi – the new site for the school – were completed in 1939 and built like an Olympic stadium. This new site was larger by far than the former and occupied a 120-hectare ground. It cost an estimated £37,000. Technical equipment was moved from Accra to Takoradi by road, between June and August 1939. On 21st of September 1939, under the leadership of Mr. T. T. Gilbert, and with the new name, Government Technical School, the school re-opened on this new site that overlooked the bay of the harbour, and offered a picturesque view of the expanse of the Atlantic Ocean. Grammar schools were all-over West Africa, but not Technical schools. This unique character became evident as students from other West African countries – Nigeria, Dahomey (now Benin) and Sierra Leone – came to do courses in the school.

Soon after the school started settling down in Takoradi, World War II was declared, and the school had to move house again as its premises were required for the use of the Royal Air Force (RAF). In August 1940, the school moved to the Elmina Castle, and the Royal Air Force occupied its buildings. (Today a miniature nose of an airplane hangs at the entrance of the science block to commemorate the occupation by the Royal Air Force). The castle was woefully unsuitable for a school, and a few alterations were required before it could house a school. Equipment again had to be transferred, and this was done in November and December and the school re-opened in January 1941. Fifty (50) of the old students returned.

Then another setback was recorded; after a mere sixteen-month period, the castle was also required for the training of service tradesmen, the technical branch of the military force. This time academic activities were disrupted as the school was absorbed by the technical branch of the military force. All the staff and most of the pupils served with the forces until the end of hostilities. The Royal Air Force which occupied the school’s buildings in Takoradi moved out in October 1945 giving way for the return of the Government Technical School under the headship of Major T.C. Watkins designated Acting Principal. A few of the former staff were brought back, and the school started to shape and growing again, with 110 students in 1950.

In 1953 the authorities revised the school’s programmes and introduced Secondary curriculum. Accordingly, Government Technical School became the Government Secondary Technical School, and with it also a five-year course leading to the School Certificate. The pre-1953 curriculum comprised Engineering and Construction with English, Mathematics, and Science as background subjects.

From 1953 there was an expansion to include academic subjects like Physics, Chemistry, Elementary and Additional Mathematics, Geography and French. Religious Knowledge, Music, and History also came later though for a considerable length of time they were not offered for the school certificate examinations. They were brought in to avert a situation of narrow-mindedness on the part of the products. Government Secondary Technical School (GSTS) had its first African Headmaster, Mr. J.W.L. Mills (who took over from the last white head, Mr. F.E. Joselin) in August 1958. Sixth-form education began in 1961.

Another landmark is the story of the military’s involvement in the school. On 3 November 1965 the late Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, first President of the Republic of Ghana, announced that the Government Secondary Technical School was to be adopted and turned into an Air Force Training College.

His announcement that “students in the Government Secondary Technical School will be given such opportunities as are appropriate and suitable to make them potential candidates to the Air Force and even for our Civil Aviation,” was refreshingly received. The coup of 1966 that overthrew Dr. Nkrumah seemed to have jettisoned that idea. However, on 23 April 1971 Air Marshall M. A. Otu (formerly Lt. General) and some Senior Officers of the Military Division of the Ministry of Defence visited the school to clarify the intention of the Army’s involvement in the school. The headmaster at the time was Mr. B.W. de-Graft Johnson who presided over the name change of the school from Government Secondary Technical School to Ghana Secondary Technical School as the school had ceased to be a wholly managed government institution. In the 1972-73 academic year, the batch of students admitted to the two-year sixth-form course included a group of young men from the Military Academy and Training Schools (MATS) that the Armed Forces had sponsored to enlist them. It was a combination of regular academic work with intermittent military training during holidays. This exclusive arrangement, similar in nature to the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC) program, was however short-lived with no further intake from the MATS. The last batch of military sixth-formers left in the mid-1970s.

The course of the school’s history in the 1970s seemed to suggest that everything had fallen in place. The curricula of the school appeared to have undergone all the relevant changes and had stabilized. The school was doing well in sports, always taking the first position in athletics and rubbing shoulder with other schools in hockey, football, basketball and the rest. There were several clubs and societies to take care of both the social and academic life of the students. The upward surge in the reputation of the school brought other problems in its wake. Chiefly was the pressure on the school for more intake and the resultant effects on its facilities.

Many parents, enticed by the academic excellence and strict discipline of the school sought to enroll their wards in this innovative institution without considering whether their children could appreciate the high Science and Technical courses. Metalwork or Woodwork was compulsory options for any student (Blacksmith and Pottery having fizzled off for lack of interest). Idealism crumbled as pragmatism held sway, forcing the school’s authorities to create an Arts class for students, to read arts for the ordinary level examination. For a while, the school carried on successfully until it became evident that the authorities had bitten more than they could chew in allowing arts subjects to the examination level. The intense pressure on the timetable was an unhealthy one. In 1985, therefore, a bold decision was taken to drop the arts courses. The last batch of art students passed out in 1986.

Meanwhile, about 1979, the government regularised the “Continuation” technical curriculum of the Middle Schools and christened them Junior Secondary Schools (JuSec). The successful students from these 3-year JuSec schools entered the regular secondary schools at year 3. GSTS had its fair share of the pioneers in the 1980-81 academic year and thereafter. With the introduction of the Senior Secondary School (SSS) system in 1990, Arts courses were reintroduced. Paradoxically, this also culminated in the abolition of compulsory technical education in a school whose bedrock was Technical Education! The irony of this shift in focus meant that a student can now go through the Ghana Secondary Technical School without technical education. The workshops, prided as the substratum of this iconic school, now lies in ruins. The practical aspects of the specialized curricula were being considered too wearisome for students who now spend barely three years of secondary-level education.

Then in 1991, the inconceivable happened: five (5) bold ladies blazed the trail and attempted to establish another paradigm shift in the school’s masculine structure. Admitted as Day Students, those girls can pride themselves at the only girls ever to be permitted to enroll in the envious institution.

Apart from being the first Secondary Technical School in Ghana, the first cadet corps in Ghana started at GSTS. With many pioneers out there, the history of science, engineering, and the Armed Forces in Ghana cannot be told without mentioning the pivotal role that GSTS has and continues to play. Like Giants (Alumnus of GSTS) of old, our current students continue to excel in Ghana, West Africa and around the world. We remain one of the best secondary/technical schools in Ghana, and we look forward to the next century of this great institution with great hope and higher expectations.

Ghana Secondary Technical School

GSTS 2001 YEAR GROUP





GSTS.Online





CONGRATULATIONS TO WESTERN REGION'S FC MEDEAMAA for winning the 2022/23 BETPAWA PREMIER LEAGUE!CHAMPIONS OF GHANA 👏👏👏👏🎉🎊
11/06/2023

CONGRATULATIONS TO WESTERN REGION'S FC MEDEAMAA for winning the 2022/23 BETPAWA PREMIER LEAGUE!

CHAMPIONS OF GHANA 👏👏👏👏🎉🎊

SHASHA MARLEY PROFILE:Shasha Marley is a Ghanaian roots reggae. He is noted for songs such as "Twin City Mafia", "I'm No...
07/06/2023

SHASHA MARLEY PROFILE:

Shasha Marley is a Ghanaian roots reggae. He is noted for songs such as "Twin City Mafia", "I'm Not Ashamed of the Gospel", and "Maata Family" among others.

He was born in Sekondi-Takoradi in the Western Region of Ghana to a father who was a retired educationist and a choirmaster. Between 1979 and 1983, he was a student at St. John's Secondary School in Sekondi where he played with the school's band known as Mathew Chapter 5. Right after secondary school, he went mainstream and then on went ahead to release several albums.

During his early days, Shasha Marley spoke of Bob Marley, burningspearmusic, Steel Pulse and Jimmy Cliff as his major influences. He released his debut single, "Tell Freedom", which became a major hit in Ghana and beyond. Since then he has gone on to release several other songs.

Though Shasha Marley was already famous in his home country and abroad, the one song that arguably gave him the most exposure particularly in Ghana was "Maata Family". The song, which was released in 2007 had words that suggested flatulence in the Ghanaian parlance. For instance, the title Maata, in the Akan dialect means flatulence and people dragged him for using such words in his song. Also, the usage of Maata Tui, Maata Pue and Mataa Fish somewhat gave credence to the meaning of the song. But Shasha Marley has since refuted the claim and explained that the meaning of the song had nothing to do with flatulence, but rather the names of his pals in Papua New Guinea i.e. Maata Tuitui, Maata Pue and Maata Fish.

In 1999, Shasha Marley released the album, Tell Freedom, which contained the hit songs, "Seek Ye Good" and "Not Evil". In 2000, he led 15 top Ghanaian musicians in a collaboration against HIV/AIDS in Africa. A song named "Stop Aids, Love Life" was released via the sponsorship of Johns Hopkins University in New York.

In 2007, he released 14 songs on his album, Lost and Found. These included "Twin City Mafia", "I'm not Ashamed of the Gospel", "Maata Family", "So Nyame Mo", "Buum Buum-Waa Waa", "Shame Politicians", "Promise Land", "I See No Wrong with Jesus", "Queen of Queens", "Evil Spirits Walk Away", "Eagerness", "Shasha's Creed" and "Will You Be My Friend".

2020 saw the release of "Tha Dawn" on the album, Frontline Workers Appreciation. An album from 14 artists from 14 different countries, it was released in support of the frontline workers on the island of Hawaii during the wake of COVID-19.

In 2021, Shasha Marley released "Enemies Are Not Jah" and "Gloria Akuffo". 2022 also saw the release of his latest single, "Tribute to Burning spear ".





Congratulations toGhana Secondary Technical School St. Mary's Boys' SHS Fijai Shs Sekondi Archbishop Porter Girls School...
07/06/2023

Congratulations to

Ghana Secondary Technical School
St. Mary's Boys' SHS
Fijai Shs Sekondi
Archbishop Porter Girls School
.on Qualifying to the National Championship of the ongoing National Science & Maths Quiz

Make us proud this year ✍️

WESTERN: End of ContestSt. Mary's Boys SHS: 49ptsTakoradi SHS: 27ptsShama SHS: 26ptsSt. Augustine's SHS, Bogoso 22ptsSt....
06/06/2023

WESTERN:

End of Contest

St. Mary's Boys SHS: 49pts
Takoradi SHS: 27pts
Shama SHS: 26pts
St. Augustine's SHS, Bogoso 22pts

St. Mary's Boys SHS...🎉🎉🎉

See you at the National Championship!

PROFILE OF NANA KOBINA NKETSIA V:Nana Kobina Nketsia V is the Paramount Chief (Omanhen) of the Essikado(British Sekondi)...
05/06/2023

PROFILE OF NANA KOBINA NKETSIA V:

Nana Kobina Nketsia V is the Paramount Chief (Omanhen) of the Essikado(British Sekondi) Traditional Area in the Western Region of Ghana and President of the Traditional Council.

He attended basic education at Mfantsipim High School in Cape Coast in Ghana and obtained his first degree in Morden History from the University of Ghana, referred to as Legon by Ghanaians.

He then obtained Doctor of Philosophy in African History at the University of Calabar in Nigeria.
His areas of special interests are in Pan-Africanism, African Culture and Religion, and Governance, Law and Philosophy.

Nana has written a book titled “African Culture in Governance and Development: The Ghana Paradigm” published by Ghana University Press.

Among a number of recognitions, he has received for outstanding leadership and having contributed significantly to administration and management, the following were bestowed on Nana: Western Region Personality of the Year; Certificate of Appreciation from the PanAfrican Student summit; Fellowship Certificate (Honorary) (FCIA) – The Chartered Institute of Administration and Management Consultants; and Traditional Ruler of the Year (2015) – EXLA Award. Although the sportsman and a committed Pan-Africanist is not a lawyer, he has written several articles on law and holds strong views on the law and Africa’s (mal) administration.

Nana wears many hats: he is currently the Chair of Advisory Committee of Care International (Ghana); Chair of Kwame Nkrumah Mausoleum Governing Board; Chair of Water Aid (Ghana); Member of Western Region House of Chiefs (Ghana); Member of National House of Chiefs (Ghana); National Patron ATUU Festival; and Director of Pan African Festival (Panafest) Foundation.

Previously, Nana has chaired and been a participant on several boards, commissions, committees and conferences.

Nana also Chaired GMMB; GBC; Kwame Nkrumah Mausoleum; @002 NAFAC; Care In international (Ghana).

He also served as Commissioner on the PURC; Director of VRA and Patron of the Osagyefo Kwame Nkrumah Awards; Ghana Culture Forum.

This includes being the former Chair of the following: Ghana Museums and Monuments Board; Ghana Broadcasting Corporation; Sekondi-Takoradi Venue Organizing Committee (CAN 2008); and National Planning Committee – National Festival of Arts and Culture (NAFAC).
Moreover, he was the Commissioner of Public Utilities and Regulatory Commission (PURC); Member of Public Emoluments Committee; and Chair of African Regional Conference on Education for Cultural Heritage Development by UNESCO.




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