![]() 2004 Fencing Olympians from Peter Westbrook Foundation, Keeth Smart, Erinn Smart, Ivan Lee, and Kamara James on far right
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Personal information | |
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Full name | Kamara Latoya James |
Born |
Kingston, Jamaica |
November 23, 1984
Died | September 20, 2014 Modesto, California, United States |
(aged 29)
Residence | Modesto, California |
Height | 5–5.5 (167 cm) |
Weight | 134 lb (61 kg) |
Sport | |
Country | United States |
Sport | Fencing |
Event(s) | women's individual épée |
College team | Princeton University |
Club | Peter Westbrook Foundation |
Retired | 2004 |
Achievements and titles | |
World finals | bronze medal (junior world championships; 2003) |
Highest world ranking | 50 |
Kamara Latoya James (November 23, 1984 – September 20, 2014) was an American Olympic épée fencer.
James was born in Kingston, Jamaica, into a single-parent household. Her family moved to Jamaica, Queens, New York, when she was 10. She was given a full fencing scholarship to The Dwight School, an independent college preparatory school. She then attended Princeton University on a full academic scholarship.
James began fencing at age 11, through the Peter Westbrook Foundation. In 2003, she won a bronze medal at the junior world championships.
She competed in the women's individual épée event at the 2004 Summer Olympics. James died at age 29, in September 2014.
James, who was Black, was born in Kingston, Jamaica, in 1984, into a single-parent household. Her parents separated before she was born; she met her father only once during her childhood. Her mother, Sandra Fernandez, remarried to Delano Fernandez when James was 7.
The family moved to Jamaica, Queens, New York, three years later. She attended Public School 3 in Greenwich Village. James' stepfather died of brain cancer two years later, in 1996. James was given a full fencing scholarship to The Dwight School, an independent college preparatory school located on Manhattan’s Upper West Side, where annual tuition was $28,000.