Pvt. James Robinson played an important role in the final battle of the Revolutionary War, but like many African Americans who took up arms against the British, he received little lasting recognition.

That's about to change.

Members of two patriotic lineage societies linked to historic wars are planning to unveil a special grave marker and give Robinson, who died in 1868, military funeral honors during a ceremony next month at Elmwood Cemetery in Detroit.

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"Over 5,000 African Americans served in the Revolutionary War, and Robinson is one of the most consequential figures of the period," said Elijah Shalis, secretary of the Michigan Society Sons of the American Revolution. "He deserved this honor 151 years ago for his service to his country."

Robinson led a remarkable life. He was a slave and a minister who fought in two wars and died at age 115 as the last known living African American veteran of the Revolutionary War.

Robinson was born into slavery in 1753 in Maryland. Shalis said after the Revolutionary War broke out in 1775, he served in a light infantry regiment.

Robinson fought at the battles of Brandywine and Yorktown. During the latter, he charged up a British rampart, fought against and killed three men and helped take over the rampart, Shalis said. The battle of Yorktown ended with the British surrendering. Later, French General Marquis de Lafayette awarded Robinson a Gold Medal of Valor.

Robinson had been promised freedom in exchange for fighting. Instead, he remained a slave and was sold in Louisiana. He went on to fight in the Battle of New Orleans in the War of 1812.

By the 1820s, Robinson had a license to preach as a Methodist minister, according to a letter to the editor that ran in the Detroit Free Press in 1984 from a writer who was pushing then for a special historical marker for Robinson.

It's unclear when Robinson finally became free. Shalis said U.S. Census records show him living as a free man in Ohio in the 1840s and 1850s. The 1860 census lists him living in Detroit.

It's also unclear what type of recognition he received, if any at all, at the time of his death for his military service. Elmwood Cemetery's handwritten records from 1868 say that Robinson was "colored" and died of old age, but don't mention his service.

Shalis learned about Robinson through conversations with Maurice Barboza, who is leading the effort to build the National Liberty Memorial in Washington, D.C., to honor African Americans who were involved in the American Revolution.

"James Robinson ... was indicative of the kind of spirit we want to inject in this memorial," Barboza said. "It’s heroism, but it’s also incredible doggedness. Nothing destroyed his spirit. He must have been one extraordinary human being to have endured what he did."

Barboza said while black soldiers were honored for their accomplishments in the war, they were largely forgotten in the decades that followed as slavery persisted.

"Following the Revolutionary War, people weren't thinking about freedom or liberty," he said. "They were thinking about building the country, and to continue to do so with the slave labor that they had.”

The Michigan Society Sons of the American Revolution (MISSAR) and the Michigan Society of the War of 1812 purchased bronze emblems that represent the wars in which Robinson fought. The emblems were affixed to a granite stone donated by Elmwood Cemetery.

The special grave marker will be dedicated during a ceremony at noon June 22 at the cemetery. A sword salute and possibly a 21-gun salute are among the activities planned.

Shalis said Robinson's last living relative appears to have been a granddaughter who died in the 1980s.

He said it's important to keep Robinson's memory alive because his story shows how all types of people helped create the United States of America. He noted that along with people of African descent, the French, Dutch, Spanish, Native Americans, Muslims, Jews and others contributed to the American Revolution in various ways, from fighting to providing financing and goods.

"America was only founded because everybody was involved, not just old white men, like a lot of people think about when they think about the American Revolution," Shalis said. "Without every single segment of society that was involved, it wouldn’t have been possible."

Contact staff writer Ann Zaniewski at 313-222-6594 or azaniewski@freepress.com. Follow her at azaniewski@freepress.com.