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Published byAlexander Lindgren Modified over 5 years ago
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Crispus Attus (1723 – 1770) Believed to be the first casualty of the American Revolution.
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March 5, 1770 Toward evening that day, a crowd of colonists gathered and began taunting a small group of British soldiers. Tension mounted rapidly, and, when one of the soldiers was struck, the others fired their muskets, killing three of the Americans instantly and mortally wounding two others. Attucks was the first to fall, thus becoming one of the first men to lose his life in the cause of American independence
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African Americans and the Revolutionary War
In 1775 at least 10 to 15 black soldiers, including some slaves, fought against the British at the battles of Lexington and Bunker Hill.
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African Americans and the Revolutionary War
Two of these men, Salem Poor and Peter Salem, earned special distinction for their bravery.
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African Americans and the Revolutionary War
James Lafayette, who supported the American cause as a spy, may have been the inspiration for the figure on the right in the 18th-century engraving, in the Jamestown-Yorktown collection, depicting the Marquis de Lafayette at Yorktown.
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African Americans and the Revolutionary War
By the end of the war from 5,000 to 8,000 blacks had served the American cause in some capacity, either on the battlefield, behind the lines in noncombatant roles, or on the seas.
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