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▲{{short description|Former President of Liberia}}
{{Infobox officeholder
|name=James Spriggs Payne
|office=4th and 8th [[President of Liberia]]
|smallimage=James_Payne2.jpg
|predecessor=[[Daniel Bashiel Warner]]
|successor=[[Edward James Roye]]
|vicepresident=[[Joseph Gibson]]
▲|predecessor2=[[Joseph Jenkins Roberts]]
▲|successor2=[[Anthony W. Gardiner]]
▲|vicepresident2=[[Charles Harmon]]
|party=[[Republican Party (Liberia)|Republican]]
|birth_date={{birth date|1819|12|19|mf=y}}
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|term_start=January 6, 1868
|term_end=January 3, 1870
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}}
'''James Spriggs Payne''' (December 19, 1819 – January 31, 1882) served as the
==Early life==
Payne was born in [[Richmond, Virginia]], in 1819 to free [[mixed-race]] parents. Payne grew up in a deeply religious [[Methodist]] family and was a devout [[Christians|Christian]].<ref name=dacb>[http://www.dacb.org/stories/liberia/payne_james.html "Payne, James Spriggs"], ''Dictionary Of African Christian Biography''</ref> His father, David M. Payne, was a Methodist minister and was ordained a [[deacon]] by the [[Virginia Conference]] in 1824.<ref>Melton (2007), p. 58.</ref> Payne was noted for having a rather light complexion, with some estimates claiming that he was indeed an [[octoroon]]—having seven-eights European ancestry and one-eighth African ancestry. When Payne was ten years old, his family emigrated to [[Liberia]] on the
Aside from religion, the young Payne showed interest in [[politics]] and [[economics]]. He later became a successful writer in these areas.<ref name=dacb/> As an adult, he was appointed by the Liberian government to work to complete the severance of Liberia's ties to the American Colonization Society.<ref name=dacb/>
==
=== First term ===
Payne was elected as the fourth president of Liberia in 1868 and served a single two-year term. During his presidency, he worked to end the slave trade that still took place along Liberia's coast.<ref name=dacb/> During his first term, he improved government relations with the [[Demographics of Liberia|indigenous communities]]
=== Second term ===
Payne was elected a second time in 1876, again serving a single two-year term. Escalating economic difficulties began to weaken the
==Later life and family==
Payne married three times in his life. He was widowed twice. He had nine children in total.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=|first1=|title=James S. Payne, Second President of Liberia|journal=Liberia Today|date=June 1952|volume=1|issue=6 |pages=7|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.31158011975926&seq=57|access-date=September 29, 2023|publisher=Embassy of the Republic of Liberia in the United States|jstor=|issn=|oclc=}}</ref> On leaving political office in 1878, Payne continued his lifelong involvement in church work. In 1880, he was the Liberian delegate at the General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church in [[Cincinnati]], [[Ohio]].<ref name=dacb/> The next year, he was elected president of the Methodist Annual Conference of Liberia.<ref name=dacb/> James Spriggs Payne died in [[Monrovia]] in 1882.
==Legacy and honors==
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{{LiberianPresidents}}
{{incubator|vai/ꔛꕆꔻ ꔻꔪꔻ ꔪꘋ}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Payne, James Spriggs}}
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[[Category:Politicians from Richmond, Virginia]]
[[Category:Americo-Liberian people]]
[[Category:
[[Category:Liberian Methodists]]
[[Category:Republican Party (Liberia) politicians]]
[[Category:19th-century Liberian politicians]]
[[Category:19th-century African-American politicians]]
[[Category:19th-century Methodists]]
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