1956 British Togoland status plebiscite|
|
|
Choice |
Votes |
% |
| Integration with Ghana |
93,095 |
57.97% |
| UN Trust Territory |
67,492 |
42.03% |
| Valid votes |
160,587 |
100.00% |
| Invalid or blank votes |
0 |
0.00% |
| Total votes |
160,587 |
100.00% |
| Registered voters/turnout |
194,230 |
82.68% |
|
|
Results by local council |
| Source: United Nations |
A plebiscite was held in British Togoland on 9 May 1956 to decide the status of the territory. Since World War I, the territory had been a League of Nations mandate under British control, and became a United Nations Trust Territory after World War II. The referendum offered residents the choice of remaining a Trust Territory until neighbouring French Togoland had decided upon its future, or becoming part of soon-to-be Ghana. The Ewe-based Togoland Congress campaigned against and preferred amalgamation with French Togoland.
The eventual result was reported to be 58% in favour of integration, although 55% of voters in the southern part of the territory had voted to separate from the Gold Coast and continue its status as a UN Trusteeship.