Wesley Girls’ High School
| Inception | 1836 |
|---|---|
| Motto text | Live Pure, Speak True, Right Wrong and Follow the King |
| Country | Ghana |
| Located in the administrative territorial entity | Cape Coast Metropolitan District |
| Location | Central Region |
| Coordinate location | 5°7′53″N 1°16′46″W |
| Headquarters location | Cape Coast |
| Color | green, yellow |
| Operator | Ghana Gbaʋŋ zamisʋg lʋgʋr |
| Street address | P.O. Box Box 61, Cape Coast, Ghana |
| Official website | http://www.wesleygirls.edu.gh |

Wesley Girls’ High School (WGHS) anɛ gbaʋŋ zamisʋg zin’ig tis bipumis ka li bɛ Cape Coast linɛ bɛ Central Region Ghana ni.[1] Sakur la da pin’ilɛ yʋʋm 1836 la ni, ka li anɛ Harriet Wrigley, onɛ pʋ’a da an Methodist minister.[2] Ba nɔknɛ onɛ da pin’il sakur la yʋri pʋd sakur la, John Wesley.
Labakʋda
[dɛmisim gbɛlima | dɛmisimi din yi zin'isiana]Wesley Girls’ High School da bɛnɛ pisyuobʋ nɛ anii ni 68th yi sakur bɛda nam kɔbiga pʋʋgin bɛ Africa ni ka li anɛ Africa Almanac bɛ yʋʋm 2003, lin dɔlis sakur la gbaʋŋ zamisʋgʋ ken titua la zugɔɔ, sakur biis la’asʋg, ba paŋ ne ba tʋʋma nam, sakur la pʋʋgʋn, na’asaa sɔɔng nɛ labaya tʋm si’em.[3]
Zamisʋg nam
[dɛmisim gbɛlima | dɛmisimi din yi zin'isiana]Home Economics
Business
General Science
Visual Arts
General Arts[4]
Science Lab
Sick Bay Clinic
Assembly Hall
Dinning Hall
Library
English Lab[5]
Nᴐŋgbaʋnnwa’ar
[dɛmisim gbɛlima | dɛmisimi din yi zin'isiana]Yʋʋm 2024 la ni, Shafic Osman onɛ an zamis wada tituaa da mɔr sakur la keŋ kooto ni ne ban pʋ siak ye sakur biis banɛ an mɔɔm pʋ’ʋs bɛ sakur la ni.[6][7]
Nintitada banɛ naae ani
Gisela Abbam, Global Senior Executive and Chair of Pharmacy regulator
Rosina Acheampong, educationist, first female deputy director general of the GES, first Ghanaian headmistress of Wesley Girls High School
Jemila Abdulai, blogger, writer and digital marketer
Barbara Frances Ackah-Yensu, justice of the Supreme Court of Ghana
Rosamond Asiamah Nkansah, 1st police woman in Ghana
Betty Acquah, feminist painter
Adina, musician
Sophia Ophilia Adjeibea Adinyira, justice of the Supreme Court of Ghana (2006 – 2019)
Dedo Difie Agyarko-Kusi, Ghana Ambassador to South Korea (2017–2021)
Agnes Aggrey-Orleans, Ghanaian diplomat
Zanetor Agyeman-Rawlings, member of parliament for Klottey Korle Constituency
Mabel Agyemang, Chief Justice of the Turks and Caicos Islands, first female Chief Justice of The Gambia (2013–2014)
Ama Ata Aidoo, award-winning author, academic, former Minister of Education
Sophia Akuffo, 13th Chief Justice of Ghana
Patience Akyianu, banker; formerly managing director of Barclays Bank Ghana and currently CEO
Akosua Addai Amoo, sports journalist
Grace Amponsah-Ababio, retired diplomat
Abena Osei Asare, member of parliament for Atiwa East
Gladys Asmah, former Minister of Fisheries
Becca, musician
Sylvia Boye, former Chief Executive and first female Registrar of West Africa Examinations Council
Mary Chinery-Hesse, former civil servant and first female director of International Labor Organization, United Nations
Melody Millicent Danquah, first female pilot in Africa
Mercy Yvonne Debrah-Karikari, first female to be Secretary to the Cabinet
Rita Akosua Dickson, Vice Chancellor of Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology
Florence Dolphyne, first female Professor and first female Pro-vice Chancellor, University of Ghana, Legon
Lydia Yaako Donkor, Commissioner of Police and the Director-General of the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) of the Ghana Police Service
Efua Dorkenoo, activist
Brigitte Dzogbenuku, Presidential candidate (2020) & Vice Presidential candidate (2016) for the Progressive People's Party
Constance Edjeani-Afenu, first female brigadier general of the Ghana Armed Forces, Deputy Military Adviser to Ghana's permanent Mission in New York
Mary Grant, Ghana's first female council of state member; first alumna to be a medical doctor
Afua Adwo Jectey Hesse, chief executive officer of the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital
Avril Lovelace-Johnson, Justice of the Supreme Court of Ghana
Jennifer Koranteng, model and fashion designer
Angela Kyerematen-Jimoh, business leader and Microsoft's Financial Strategic Partnership Lead for Africa
Eva Lokko, engineer and former managing director of the Ghana Broadcasting Corporation
Alima Mahama, lawyer and former Minister for the affairs of women and children in Ghana
Takyiwa Manuh, Ghanaian academic and author
Joy Henrietta Mensa-Bonsu, a law professor and Justice of the Supreme Court of Ghana
Akosua Manu, deputy CEO of National Youth Authority
Joyce Bawah Mogtari, Lawyer and Former Deputy Minister of Transport
Emma Morrison, television personality and media professional
Victoria Nyarko, Ghanaian politician, member of parliament in the first republic
Jane Naana Opoku-Agyemang, first female Vice-Chancellor of a state University in Ghana, First female Vice-President of Ghana
Rose Constance Owusu, former justice of the Supreme Court of Ghana (2008 – 2014)
Deborah Owusu-Bonsu, musician, television presenter and model
Martha Akyaa Pobee, Diplomat, Permanent Member to the United Nations,
Lucy Quist, first Ghanaian woman to become the CEO of a multinational telecommunications company in Ghana
Mabel Simpson, fashion designer
Hanna Tetteh, former Minister for Trade and Industry and former Minister for Foreign Affairs
Gertrude Torkornoo, 15th Chief Justice of Ghana
Yvonne Tsikata, international economist and first Ghanaian woman to become vice president at the World Bank
Julia Osei Tutu, wife of Asantehene, Otumfuo Nana Osei Tutu II
Georgina Theodora Wood, former police prosecution officer, first female Chief Justice of Ghana
Nana Oye Mansa Yeboaa, first female deputy Governor of the Bank of Ghana, and former Ghanaian diplomat
Vida Yeboah, minister of state in the Rawlings government, former Headmistress of Mfanstiman Girls' Secondary School
Gbanvɛɛnsa
[dɛmisim gbɛlima | dɛmisimi din yi zin'isiana]- ↑ "We've made progress in Wesley Girls' school impasse— Peace Council". Graphic Online. 18 May 2021. Retrieved 2021-05-20.
- ↑ Abyna-Ansaa Adjei (2007). Ghana at 50. National Planning Committee, Ghana at 50. p. 95. ISBN 978-9988-0-9707-3.
- ↑ "top20highschools". Africa Almanac. 1 October 2003. Archived from the original on 14 January 2007. Retrieved 19 June 2016.
The research leading up to the publication of the 100 Best High Schools in Africa began with the launching of the website in December 2000.
- ↑ "Wesley Girls Senior High, Cape Coast". GhanaHighSchools.com. Retrieved 2025-05-03
- ↑ "Wesley Girls Senior High, Cape Coast". GhanaHighSchools.com. Retrieved 2025-05-03.
- ↑ "Wesley Girls SHS sued for allegedly denying Muslim students Islamic practices". 2024-12-24. Retrieved 2024-12-2
- ↑ "Lawyer sues Wesley Girls SHS for alleged religious discrimination - MyJoyOnline". www.myjoyonline.com. 2024-12-24. Retrieved 2024-12-24.