- James Armistead
James Lafayette Armistead (c.
December 10 ,1748 –August 9 ,1830 ) was anAfrican American slave toWilliam Armistead inVirginia during theAmerican Revolution .Most sources indicate that Armistead was born in 1748 in
New Kent County, Virginia as a slave to William Armistead. Other sources put his birth around 1760 inElizabeth City, Virginia some people really do not know.After getting consent of his master, William Armistead, he volunteered in 1781 to join the
army underGeneral Lafayette . He was stationed as aspy , acting as a slave in Lord Cornwallis' camp. He relayed much information about the British plans for troop deployment and about their arms. His intelligence reportsespionage were instrumental in helping to defeat the British at the surrender at Yorktown. Because he was an intelligence agent and not technically a soldier, James could not qualify for emancipation under the Act of 1783, so with the support of William Armistead, he petitioned the Virginia State Legislature for his freedom. He received a letter of commendation dated November 21, 1784 from the Marquis de Lafayette (The facsimile of the letter of commendation can be viewed on the Lafayette College website [http://ww2.lafayette.edu/~library/special/specialexhibits/slaveryexhibit/onlineexhibit/testimonial.htm] .) On January 9, 1786, the Virginia State legislature granted the slave known only as "James" his freedom for services rendered and bravery as a spy during the siege of Yorktown. It was at that time that he chose the name Armistead for his middle name and Lafayette for hissurname , to honor the general.He continued to live in New Kent County with his new wife, one son and several other children. He became a farmer and at one point owned three slaves. By 1818 he applied to the state legislature for financial aid. He was granted $60 for present relief and $40 annual pension for his services in the Revolutionary War.
In 1824, he was recognized and embraced by General Lafayette during his tour of Yorktown, the story of the event was reported by the
Richmond Enquirer . It was also about this time that the artistJohn Blennerhassett Martin painted an oil on canvas of Armistead. This painting is owned by theValentine Museum . The artist also created a broadside including both the painted likeness and the facsimile of Lafayette’s testimonial. Another possible likeness isJohn-Baptiste Paon ’s 1783 portrait of Lafayette at Yorktown with James Armistead holding his horse. This portrait is owned byLayfayette College and can be viewed on their website [http://ww2.lafayette.edu/~library/special/specialexhibits/slaveryexhibit/onlineexhibit/james.htm] A discussion on the images of Armistead may be found on the Common-place website [http://www.common-place.org/vol-01/no-04/slavery/bontemps.shtml]By 1828, James Armistead Lafayette was also featured as the general’s aid and sidekick in the novel Edge- Hill or the Family of the Fitzroyals by James Ewell Heath.
Some black Americans with the last name of Armistead are suspected of being descendants of James Armistead Lafayette as he is said to have had a number of children after the Revolution. Also it is possible that James was an illegitimate son of William Armistead, The Purser of the Virginia Troops. Regardless of his birth, he is remembered as an American patriot. His intelligence contributions to Lafayette and Washington aided in the capture Gen. Cornwallis at Yorktown, Va. with few shots fired.
He died on
August 9 ,1830 as a freed slave turned farmer.References
*Bishop, David W. “Armistead, James [Lafayette] ,” in Dictionary of American Negro Biography, ed. Rayford W. Logan and Michael R. Winston. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1982.
*Davis, Burke. Black Heroes of the American Revolution. New York: Odyssey Books, division of Harcourt Brace & Company, 1976. p. 36-57.
*Gottschalk, Louis and Shirley A. Bill, ed. The Letters of Lafayette to Washington, 1777-1799. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 1976.
*Boyhood Home of Robert E. Lee. exhibit brochure, “James Lafayette: Hero of Yorktown.” October 16-November 20, 1993,
*Nill, Marshall R., Dr., Ph.D. “African-American Espionage Through The Years.” New York: New Sun Publishing Company, 2002.
*Tucker, George. “Revolutionary War Spy: the slave who served as a double agent.” The Virginia Pilot, the Virginia Ledger-Star 16 October 1988.
*Waller, James. Espionage: Slave turned double agent kgytJames Armistead Lafayette risked his life for America’s freedom- and, eventually, his own. Hilitary History, August 1994 p.10-18.
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