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List of alumni of the Accra Academy

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An alumnus of the Accra Academy is referred to as an Accra Aca Old Boy. Article 4 of the constitution of the Accra Academy Old Boys' Association sets the parameters for joining the association as follows:

1. Membership of the association shall in general be open to all past students of the Accra Academy since its foundation on 20th July, 1931.
2. A past student of the Accra Academy qualifies for admission into the membership of the association if he has attended the school for at least one year.[1]

Mrs. Beatrice Abla Lokko, the first Headmistress of the academy, was not enrolled at the school but was nevertheless a paid up member of the association. Charles McArther Emmanuel aka Chuckie Taylor, son to former Liberian President Charles Taylor, was enrolled at the academy but later dismissed by administrators on grounds of possessing drugs and weapons.[2]

Alumni

Academia

Activism

  • Adjoa Acquaah-Harrison – founder and board chairwoman of WingSpan International USA[11]
  • Alexander Banful (Bleo '72) – CEO of the Ghana Social Marketing Foundation[12]

Athletics and sports

Banking

  • John Saka Addo – former Governor of the Bank of Ghana[14]
  • Felix Nyarko-Pong (Bleoo '78) – Chief Executive Officer uniBank (Ghana) Limited

Business

  • Solomon Lartey – Managing Director & Chief Executive Officer of Activa International Insurance[15]
  • Felix Addo (Bleo '73) – Country Senior Partner of PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) Ghana[16]
  • Nathan Kwabena Adisi (aka Bola Ray) (Bleo '96) – CEO of Starr FM and Empire Entertainments[17]
  • Ernest Amartey-Vondee (Bleo '78) – President of the Actuarial Society of Ghana (ASG) and CEO of the Ghana Healthcare Company[18]
  • Charles Alexander Iddrisu Cofie – CEO of Unilever Ghana[19]
  • Moses Cofie (Bleo '83) – CEO/Lead Consultant, Leaders & Mentors International
  • Charles Ayensu Darku (Bleo '75) – General Manager, Tullow Oil Ghana Ltd
  • Harry Dodoo (Bleo '38) – former Chairman and Managing Director of the Ghana Cocoa Marketing Board
  • Sulemanu Koney – Ag CEO of the Ghana Chamber of Mines[20]
  • Ignace Hego Kwame (Bleo '95) – CEO of 4syte TV
  • Stephen Stanley Quaye (Bleo '90) – CEO of SEF Ventures Ltd; Executive Director of Rehoboth Petroleum Ltd. (Goodness Energy Ltd)
  • Constance Swaniker – creative arts designer[21]
  • Wilson Tei (Bleo '68) – MD of Provident Life Assurance Company Ltd; Chairman of the Accra Academy Board of Governors[22]

Chieftaincy

  • Nii Kotey Amon III (Bleo '71) – Asere Djaasetse; Ghana’s former ambassador to Morocco, Head of Mission in Brussels, and envoy to Germany[23]
  • Nana Awuah Darko Ampem – former Nkosuohene of Ashanti Juaso; the first Ghanaian Captain of the Accra Polo Club, founded Marine and General Insurance Brokers; the first indigenous insurance company in Ghana and later Vanguard Assurance
  • Neeyi Ghartey (Bleo '75) – Paramount Chief of Winneba
  • Osagyefo Nana Kuntunkununku II (Bleo '62) – 34th Okyenhene and Paramount Chief of the Akyem Abuakwa Traditional Area:1976/1999
  • Nana Nkuah Okomdom II (Samuel Appiah) – Paramount Chief of the Sefwi Wiawso Traditional Area in the Western Region from 1997 to 2011; former lecturer at Lund University; former CEO of Liberty FM at Sefwi Wiawso; former head of the Scandia Cab and Timber Company Limited[24]
  • Emmanuel Noi Omaboe (Nana Wereko Ampem II) (Bleo '50) – former Gyaasehene of Akuapem Traditional Area; former Omanhene of Amanokrom; first non-Head of State Chancellor of the University of Ghana, Legon; former government statistician[25][26][27]

Entertainment

  • Reginald Kojo Ainooson (aka Reggie Zippy) – musician[28]
  • John William Hansen (Bleo '47) – musician, founder of the Ramblers International Band[29]
  • Nat Larbi (aka Borax) – musician[30]
  • Emmanuel Mallet (aka Zap Mallet) – sound engineer[31]
  • Daniel Tetteh Nettey (aka Danny Nettey) – musician[32]
  • Augustine Osei-Wusu (aka C-Zar) – musician[28]

Law

Media

  • Earl Ankrah
  • Kofi Kum Bilson – chartered accountant; radio presenter[61]
  • Rayborn Bulley (Bleo '74) – journalist at Ghana Broadcasting Corporation
  • Stephen Stanley Quaye (Bleo '90) – media consultant, oil and gas business executive
  • Ben Ephson – Managing Editor of the Daily Dispatch
  • Derek Karikari – journalist at The Associated Press
  • Israel Laryea – news editor and anchor, TV and radio at Multimedia Broadcasting Limited
  • Akwasi Sarpong (Bleo '95) – journalist at BBC World Service

Medicine

  • Emmauel Quaye Acheampong (Bleo '51) – former Dean of the Ghana Medical School[62]
  • Hutton Ayikwei Addy (Bleoo '51)[63]
  • Rexford S. Ahima, MD, PhD, FACP, FTOS (Class of 1976; 1978) – Professor of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
  • Robert Yartey Mensa Annan – physician[64]
  • Samuel Gepi Attee – physician
  • William Godson Bruce-Konuah – physician[63]
  • Dr. Bernard Tei Dornoo (Bleo '84) – Board Chair of the African Palliative Care Association[16]
  • J.A.O.T. Mustafa – first neurosurgeon in Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Nii Otu Nartey – CEO of the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital
  • Cornelius Odarquaye Quarcoopome (Bleo '43) – first Ghanaian eye specialist[65]
  • Kwei Quartey – medical doctor and writer, Pasadena, California[66]

Military

Ministers of State

  • Chris Kpodo – Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs
  • Nathan Quao (Bleo '35) – former diplomat and presidential advisor[71]
  • Harry Sawyerr – organiser and later the National Co-ordinator of the Association of Recognised Professional Bodies from 1971 to 1979; former MP for Osu Klottey Constituency; Minister of Transport and Communications from 1979 to 1981; former Minister for Education[72]
  • Betty Mould-Iddrisu (Bleoo '73 A/L) – Minister for Education

Police

Writers

  • Amu Djoleto – author of The Strange Man (1967), Money Galore (1975), and Hurricane of Dust (1987), among many other novels, short stories, and poems[73]
  • Ellis Ayitey Komey[74][75]
  • CNN Lokko – author of Honeymoon, Homecoming, Adventures of Elizabeth Sam, and Trinity High among other children's, young adult, and adult books
  • Kwei Quartey – medical doctor and writer, Pasadena, California[66]

Others

  • Samuel Anang Ababio – CEO of the National Pension Regulatory Authority and National Secretary of the Pensioners Association of Ghana[76]
  • Kwaku Aning (Bleo '60) – Deputy Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency
  • Benjamin Aryee – CEO of Minerals Commission
  • Reginald Nii Bi Ayi-Bonte (Bleo '82) – former member of Parliament for the Odododiodo Constituency[77]
  • Ebenezer Quashie Blavo (Bleo '44) – former Youth Policy Advisor to the Government of Jamaica[77]
  • Alhaji M. Billy Brimah – member of the Council of Muslim Chiefs
  • Habteselassie Ebenezer Nii Amu First-Quao – at age 28, seven years after 1972 graduation,became first black African English translator at the UN, working from hexagonal French and Castilian Spanish to English
  • Alex Mould (Bleoo '78) – CEO of the Ghana National Petroleum Corporation (GNPC), former Ag CEO of the National Petroleum Authority[78]
  • John Henry Newman – former Chief of staff at the Office of the President[79]
  • Jerry Agiri Williams – martial artist and former karate champion for Arizona State (US)[80]

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