Robert Okyere Amoako-Atta

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PresidentDr. Kwame Nkrumah
Succeeded byBrigadier D. C. K. Amenu
PresidentDr. Kwame Nkrumah
Robert Okyere Amoako-Atta

Regional Commissioner for the Ashanti Region
In office
1965  February 1966
PresidentDr. Kwame Nkrumah
Preceded byStephen Willie Yeboah
Succeeded byBrigadier D. C. K. Amenu
In office
1 November 1961  1 October 1963
PresidentDr. Kwame Nkrumah
Preceded byOsei Owusu Afriyie
Succeeded byStephen Willie Yeboah
In office
1 December 1959  1 July 1960
PresidentDr. Kwame Nkrumah
Preceded byCharles de Graft Dickson
Succeeded byOsei Owusu Afriyie
Regional Commissioner for the Brong Ahafo Region
In office
1 October 1963  1965
PresidentDr. Kwame Nkrumah
Preceded byStephen Willie Yeboah
Succeeded byNicholas Anane-Agyei
Minister of Labour and co-operatives
In office
1 July 1960  1 October 1961
PresidentDr. Kwame Nkrumah
Preceded byNathaniel Azarco Welbeck
Succeeded byOsei Owusu Afriyie
Member of Parliament for Obuasi[1]
In office
1954  February 1966
Preceded byNew
Succeeded byJustice Akuamoa Boateng
Personal details
BornRobert Okyere Amoako-Atta
1913 (1913)
CitizenshipGhanaian

Robert Okyere Amoako-Atta was a Ghanaian politician. During the first republic, he served as the Regional Commissioner (Regional Minister) for the Ashanti Region on three occasions. He also served as the Minister of Labour and Co-operative from 1960 to 1961 and the Regional Commissioner for the Brong Ahafo Region from 1963 to 1965. In 1954, he became the member of parliament representing the Obuasi constituency. He served in that capacity until February 1966 when the Nkrumah government was overthrown.

Amoako-Atta was born in 1913 at Akrokerri, a town in the Adansi district of the Ashanti Region. He was educated at the Akrokerri Roman Catholic Middle School and the Obuasi Roman Catholic Middle School from 1923 until 1931 when he obtained his standard seven certificate. He later studied book-keeping, accountancy and shorthand privately.[2]

Career

Amoako-Atta was employed by the Apam Court in Obuasi as a Registrar-cum-Bailiff in 1932 after undergoing some preliminary training. A year later, he joined the Ashanti Goldfields Corporation at Obuasi as a time keeper.[3] After about a year of service at the Ashanti Goldfields Corporation, he joined the Dunkwa Agricultural department as a shorthand typist and a year later he was employed by the Breman Gold Dredging Company at Ankobra to work as a shorthand typist and accountant.[4] He worked there from 1935 to 1949. In 1949, he moved to Takoradi and took up a job as a secretary and accountant for Messrs. A. E. Senchire and Company, a Timber Merchant in Takoradi.[5] He worked for the firm from then until 1951 when he returned to his home town; Akrokerri to work as a local Court Registrar and Traditional Secretary. From 1954 to 1963 he served as the Town Clerk for the Obuasi Urban Council.

Politics

Amoako-Atta was elected into the Legislative Assembly in June 1954 as the representative of the Obuasi electoral area. He remained in this post until the Nkrumah government was overthrown in February 1966. In parliament, he remained a back bencher until 1956 when he was appointed Ministerial Secretary (Deputy Minister) to the Ministry of Communications and Transport.[6] In 1959 he was appointed Regional Commissioner (Regional Minister) for the Ashanti Region and after serving for seven months he was appointed Minister of Labour and Co-operatives on 1 July 1960.[7][8] On 1 October 1961 he was reverted to his former post as Regional Commissioner for the Ashanti Region.[9][10] On 1 October 1963 he was transferred to the Brong Ahafo Region to serve as its Regional Commissioner and in 1965 he was posted back to the Ashanti Region as the Regional Commissioner. He remained in that office until the coup in 1966.[11]

Personal life

See also

References

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