Ghana’s Adventist history is said to have started with literature.
In 1863 Adventism found its way into West Africa through literature. It wasn’t an official church missionary who brought the literature to West Africa. It was Hannah More, an American missionary who worked for another denomination in Liberia
1. While Hannah was on vacation in America, Adventist Pioneer Stephen Haskell gave her literature, which led to her conversion to Adventism. She was baptized in Massachusetts. Upon returning to Africa, Hannah visited the other mission stations on the coast of West Africa, including Ghana, and left literature at each one. She shared her new belief with her missionary colleague Alexander Dickson, who later introduced Adventism into Australia.