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James Armistead Lafayette (1748 [1] or 1760 [2] — 1830 [1] or 1832) [2] was an enslaved African American who served the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War under the Marquis de Lafayette, and later received a legislative emancipation.
Liberty's Kids (stylized on-screen as Liberty's Kids: Est. 1776) is an American animated historical fiction television series produced by DIC Entertainment, and originally aired on PBS Kids from September 2, 2002, to April 4, 2003, with reruns airing on most PBS stations until October 10, 2004.
James Armistead Lafayette; Saul Matthews; Salem Poor; Peter Salem; Jack Sisson; Prince Whipple This page was last edited on 8 November 2024, at 13:20 (UTC). Text ...
The Lafayette Memorial is a public memorial located in Brooklyn's Prospect Park in New York City.The memorial, designed by sculptor Daniel Chester French and architect Henry Bacon, was dedicated in 1917 and consists of a bas-relief of Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette alongside a groom (speculated by some historians to be James Armistead Lafayette) and a horse.
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Ivan Lafayette (1930–2016), longtime member of the New York State Assembly (1977–2008) James Lafayette (1853–1923), pseudonym of James Stack Lauder, portrait photographer, James Armistead Lafayette (c. 1760–1830), aka James Armistead, African-American Revolutionary War spy; Nathan LaFayette (born 1973), former National Hockey League player
James Armistead Lafayette (1760–1830), an enslaved African-American man who served the Continental Army in the American Revolutionary War as a double agent. James Baugh, an enslaved American who sued for his freedom on the grounds that his maternal grandmother had been an Indian. [75]
William Armistead (1754–1793), slave owner and namesake of former slave and spy James Armistead Lafayette William Armistead (1762–1842) , Revolutionary war veteran and Alabama pioneer William Martin Armistead (1873–1955), publicist for the N. W. Ayer & Son advertising agency