The Cape Coast Castle Museum (1974)
The Cape Coast Castle Museum is housed in one of the wings of Cape Coast Castle, in the Central Region. Established in 1970, the museum was given a face-lift in 1994 by the GMMB, with funds from the UNDP, USAID, the Smithsonian Institution and Counterpart funding from the Government of Ghana, along with support from other NGOs.
The Cape Coast Castle Museum aims to educate its visitors about the advent of Europeans to Africa and their interactions with the local communities and the Central Region in general. Visitors can view maps of slave trade routes and look at examples of the objects which were traded in for slaves – such as glass beads, whisky bottles, and firearms. Representations of the hold of a ship, as well as auction blocks, have been constructed to simulate for guests a tiny part of the experience of the enslaved. The museum also includes exhibits on the pre-colonial history of the Central Region, in addition to displays on its contemporary culture. Visitors can view a video documentary on “Cross Roads of Trade, Cross Roads of People” putting into context the interactions between the Africans at Home and those in the Diaspora.
Exhibits include: gold weights and measuring scales; state swords; guns; stone implements for hunting; paintings; terracotta figurines; a palanquin (a structure used to carry chiefs); life size European engravings that depict West African scenes; maps of the slave trade routes; examples of items exchanged for slaves; shackles; a black-and-white print of the slave ship, nineteenth-century engravings of captives onboard a slave ship; clan staffs; a canoe; photographs of famous black people through the years; traditional cloths; carved wooden utensils; musical instruments; and a model of Cape Coast Castle.
The Cape Coast Castle Museum’s facilities include conference halls; a library; an art and craft studio; a book store and gift shop; curio shops, a car park; and an open courtyard for outdoor activities. The Cape Coast Castle also hosts the Building History Museum. There is also a 45-minute guided tour, which allows visitors to view the castle’s dungeons, the condemned cell and the “Door of No Return”.
The museum is open from 9:00am to 4:30pm every day.
Entrance fees are as follows:
CATEGORIES | GHS |
Lower & Upper Primary | 5.00 |
JHS Students | 6.00 |
SHS Students | 6.00 |
Tertiary Students / Volunteers with ID | 10.00 |
Ghanaian Adult | 20.00 |
Non-Ghanaian Lower & Upper Primary Students | 20.00 |
Non-Ghanaian JHS/SHS with ID | 30.00 |
Non-Ghanaian Tertiary Students / Volunteers with ID | 60.00 |
Non-Ghanaian Adult | 80.00 |
Contact Details:
GMMB
Central and Western Regions
Cape Coast Castle
P.O. Box 281, Cape Coast
Telephone: +233-3321 32529 +233-3321 3