


We visited this fort in 2008.
Fort St. Jago, also known as Coenraadsburg, is situated on a hill opposite
Elmina Castle in the small town of Elmina in
Ghana.
The first European building on this hill was a Portugese church dedicated to St. Jago. In 1637 the
Dutch used the hill as a gun-position to bombard and take Elmina Castle from the Portugese. To prevent
others from using the same tactic the Dutch build an fortified earthwork on the hill the next year.
In the 1660's the Elmina Castle Director General J. Valckenburgh replaced the earthen fortification
with a permanent fort built out of local sandstone and called it Coenraadsburg. It compromised 2 strong
landward bastions for defending the castle from land attacks and 2 smaller seaward bastions. The
buildings inside the fort, surrounding a courtyard, housed a garrison of 69 soldiers. In 1671 the fort
was strengthened with outer walls.
In 1880, 8 years after the Dutch had transferred the fort to the British, several modifications were
carried out by the British to facilitate the use of the fort for civilian pursuits. In the 19th and 20th
century the fort was used as a prison, a hospital and a rest house.
Well, to say we visited isn't exactly true. We visited Elmina Castle and viewed the fort from there. We
didn't have the time nor the energy, due to the humid heat, to go up the hill and visit it. Too bad,
maybe next time?

The fort seen from Elmina Castle.
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