James Armistead Lafayette
James Armistead Lafayette, born an enslaved Virginian in New Kent County, won his freedom for his service as a double agent during the Revolution.
Scroll to Read
BORN A SLAVE
James Armistead Lafayette (ca. 1748–1830), an enslaved Virginian, was born on a plantation in New Kent County.
During the war James probably spent time in Williamsburg, where his owner, William Armistead, was helping to manage military supplies. In 1781, James was pressed into service under the Marquis de Lafayette, who was leading Patriot forces against Lord Cornwallis’s army in Virginia.
ACROSS ENEMY LINES
James infiltrated the British army as a servant for Cornwallis. He reported to the Marquis de Lafayette that Cornwallis moved British forces from Portsmouth to Yorktown, valuable intelligence that helped pave the way for the siege of Yorktown that effectively ended the war. He also supplied Cornwallis with false information provided by Lafayette as misdirection.
REWARDED FOR HIS SERVICE
In 1787, the Virginia Assembly granted James his freedom for his courageous contribution, while his owner, William Armistead, was compensated £250. James added Lafayette to his name to honor the French general for whom he spied.
James established a farm next to his former master in New Kent, and he came to own a number of slaves. In 1824, he enjoyed a reunion with the Marquis de Lafayette in Yorktown when the Frenchman returned for a lengthy tour of the United States.
James Armistead Lafayette died on his farm on August 6, 1830.
Further Reading
Meet a Nation Builder
-
Performance: The Soldier and the Widow
Experience the first conversation between Colonel George Washington and Martha Custis that set them on the path to becoming the iconic couple that history remembers.
Art Museums Admission
-
Performance: Visit with Marquis de Lafayette
Step into the past with the Marquis de Lafayette, French hero of two worlds. Through stories and questions, explore the hopes, choices, and challenges he faced.
CW Admission
-
Performance: Cost of War
Colonel George Washington discusses the Seven Years' War and its high cost to combatants and non-combatants alike.
Art Museums Admission