Black History Month: James Armistead Lafayette
Our next African American hero of the American Revolution is James Armistead Lafayette, a freed slave turned colonial spy whose intelligence helped secure American victory at the Battle of Yorktown.
Born into slavery, James was granted leave by his owner in order to join the American Revolution. As a volunteer to the American Continental Army, James was assigned to serve Marquis de Lafayette. In Lafayette’s employ, James posed as a runaway American slave and managed to get hired as a British spy.
While secretly sending information back to the Continental Army, James infiltrated the headquarters of British General, Charles Cornwallis. It was thanks to James’s reconnaissance that the Americans were able to block reinforcements from reaching British soldiers at Yorktown. With James’s help, Patriot victory at Yorktown turned the tide of the Revolution and ultimately secured American independence.
After the war, James returned to life as a slave while petitioning for his emancipation. In his letter of recommendation for James’s freedom, Marquis de Lafayette wrote, “James has done essential services to me while I had the honour to command in this state. His intelligences from the enemy’s camp were industriously collected and faithfully delivered. He perfectly acquitted himself with some important commissions I gave him and appears to me entitled to every reward his situation can admit of.”
James was awarded his freedom in 1787. In honor of Marquis de Lafayette’s role in securing his independence, James took his last name. Later in life, James bought 40 acres of land, became a farmer, married, and raised a family. Until his death in 1830, he received $40 each year from the Virginian government in honor of his service.
Sources: Mount Vernon
Biography.com














