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Cuffee, Cuffey, or
Coffey is a
first name and
surname recorded in African-American culture,
believed to be
derived from the Akan
language name Kofi, meaning...
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Cuffee was an
escaped slave in
Jamaica who led
other runaway slaves to form a
community of free
black people in
Jamaica in the island's
forested interior...
- Paul Cuffe, also
known as Paul
Cuffee (January 17, 1759 –
September 7, 1817) was an
African American and
Wampanoag businessman,
whaler and abolitionist...
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Cuffee Mayo,
sometimes spelled Cuffie Mayo, (1803–1896) was a minister, laborer, and
politician in
North Carolina. He was a Republican. Mayo was born free...
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freed by
Cuffee and
pursues Smith, who she
defeats in a hand-to-hand fight.
Pickett is shot in the back by Bill, who is
subsequently killed by
Cuffee in a...
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conflict in Liberia".
Archived from the
original on 5
November 2007. Paul
Cuffee advocated settling formerly enslaved African Americans in Africa. He gained...
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leaders of
enslaved people's
rebellions had "day names"
including Cuffy,
Cuffee or Kofi,
Cudjoe or Kojo, Quao or Quaw, and
Quamina or Kwame/Kwamina. Most...
- Paul
Cuffee (1757 –
March 7, 1812) was a
Christian minister, missionary, and preacher. A
Native American of the Shinne**** tribe,
Cuffee became a Christian...
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Archived from the
original on July 12, 2023.
Retrieved July 12, 2023.
Cuffee, Paul; Ashmun, Jehudi; Society,
American Colonization (July 23, 2010). "Colonization...
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Edward Emerson Cuffee (June 7, 1902 –
January 3, 1959) was an
American jazz trombonist.
Cuffee moved to New York in the 1920s,
where he
recorded with...