John Sykes Fayette

Rev. John Frederick Augustus Sykes Fayette (c. 1810 – February 27, 1876) was an American and Canadian college-educated Presbyterian minister. Fayette attended Western Reserve College, present day Case Western Reserve University, beginning in 1832 and graduated in 1836, notably as Ohio's first African American college student.

Early life and education
Fayette arrived in Hudson, Ohio, via New York City, when his minister, Rev. Samuel Hanson Cox of Laight Street Presbyterian Church, wrote a letter of recommendation to President Charles Backus Storrs of Western Reserve College. In 1832, Fayette became the first African American to enroll at a university in Ohio and west of the Appalachian Mountains. In 1836, John Sykes Fayette became the first African American to graduate from a university in Ohio and west of the Appalachian Mountains. Staying for another year, Fayette earned a graduate degree in divinity, graduating again in 1837.

As a participating Abolitionist, Fayette spent time associating with local Hudson resident John Brown.

Presbyterian ministries


Often described as an "educated mulatto," Fayette moved to Canada in 1839 after being licensed by the Cleveland Presbytery. In 1840, he founded the "Wellington Institute" in the Waterloo region of Berlin, Ontario (known today as Kitchener, Ontario), teaching local and Mennonite children for two years. The Institute did not attract enough students to make ends meet, and closed after two years.

Fayette was finally licensed in Canada by the Presbytery of Niagara. He then became a minister for several Presbyterian congregations, first in Ancaster in 1844 and then at Barton Stone Church from 1845 to 1850. The church, which still stands in Hamilton, Ontario, was completed in 1847. Other cities Fayette served as minister included St. Vincent, Tecumseh, and Watford.

Fayette died on February 27, 1876, in London, Ontario, and was buried in Oakland Cemetery next to his third wife Elizabeth Bartlett Forbes.