Anthony Woode
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Anthony Kobina Woode was born on 1 February 1923.[1] A trade unionist, he actively participated in the movement for independence in the Gold Coast, later to become Ghana.
Woode met Kwame Nkrumah when Nkrumah arrived in the Gold Coast from Britain in December 1948 to take up the role of General Secretary of the United Gold Coast Convention. Political differences began to emerge within the convention, leading to younger members breaking away to form the Convention People's Party (CPP) in June 1949. Nkrumah became the chairman, Komla Agbeli Gbedemah the vice-chairman, and Kojo Botsio secretary of the CPP.[2] Woode joined the Sekondi branch of the CPP. He was elected General Secretary of the Trades Union Congress (TUC) in August 1949,[1] aged just 23.[3] Pobee Biney, who became a close friend and associate of Woode, was elected Vice-President and together they forged the radical nationalist tendency, along with several others, in both the TUC and CPP. Woode helped negotiate with the miners' union.[4][page needed]
Woode threatened to call a general strike in November 1949 after 60 meteorological workers were dismissed for striking illegally in October. As General Secretary of the TUC, he threatened to order all workers to down tools and participate in a general strike.[5]
Together with Kwame Nkrumah and others, Woode played a leading role in organising a Positive Action campaign, which consisted of mass peaceful protests aimed at pressurising the British colonial government into granting immediate self-government to the people of the Gold Coast colony.
The TUC declared a general strike at midnight on 6 January 1950, triggering Nkrumah to announce the start of Positive Action at a mass rally just over a day later on 8 January.[6] Woode, Nkrumah and others were eventually arrested and imprisoned, with Nkrumah only being released when the CPP overwhelmingly won the general election held in February 1951.