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Sarah Harris Fayerweather (1812-1878) was an African-American activist, abolitionist, and school integrationist. She attended Prudence Crandall’s Canterbury Female Boarding School beginning in January 1833 at the age of twenty. (Three Who Dared 9; Notable Black American Women Book II pg. 218)
Fayerweather was born Sarah Ann Major Harris in Norwich, Connecticut on April 16, 1812. The daughter of William Monteflora Harris and Sally Prentice Harris, both of whom were free farmers, Fayerweather was of African and French West Indian descent and the second eldest of twelve children. (Notable Black American Women Book II pg. 218) She was raised in the Orthodox Congregational Church of Canterbury. (Three Who Dared 9)
In September 1832, Fayerweather requested admission to the Canterbury Female Boarding School. In a letter to William Lloyd Garrison’s newspaper The Liberator, Crandall recalls Fayerweather’s visit: “A colored girl of respectability – a professor of religion – and daughter of honorable parents, called on me sometime during the month of September last, and said in a very earnest manner, ‘Miss Crandall, I want to get a little more learning, enough if possible to teach colored children, and if you will admit me into your school I shall forever be under the greatest obligation to you. If you think it will be the means of injuring you, I will not insist on the favor.’” (The Liberator May 25, 1833 pg. 218) After brief deliberation, Crandall admitted her to the school and refused to expel her when the parents of most of the other attendees withdrew their daughters. (Three Who Dared 9)
Faced with opposition from the Canterbury community, Crandall closed the existing school – only to reopen in 1833 in order to teach a group of solely African-American students. Fayerweather continued to attend the school in the face of harassment and ostracization until Crandall, afraid for her pupils’ safety after a mob converged on the school in September of 1834, closed the school permanently. (Notable Black American Women Book II pg. 220)
Fayerweather married George Fayerweather, Jr., a mixed-race blacksmith ten years her senior, on November 28, 1833. (Notable Black American Women Book II pg. 220) The couple moved to New London, Connecticut in 1841 before moving to Kingston, Rhode Island, in 1855 to raise their eight children. (Notable Black American Women Book II pg. 220) Both Fayerweather and her husband supported abolitionism and racial equality; Fayerweather joined the Kingston Anti-Slavery Society, attended antislavery meetings held by the Anti-Slavery Society in various cities across the North, maintained a correspondence with her former teacher Prudence Crandall and former slave and abolitionist Frederick Douglass, and subscribed to The Liberator until Garrison ceased printing it in 1865. (Notable Black American Women Book II pg. 220, The Devotion of These Women pg. 90) She also maintained an active church life, joining the Sunday school class at Kingston’s Congregational church. (Notable Black American Women Book II pg. 220)
Surviving her husband by nine years, Fayerweather died on November 16, 1868 from a swelling of the neck. She was buried in the Old Fernwood Cemetery in Kingston, Rhode Island. (Notable Black American Women Book II pg. 220)
Today her name is memorialized by Fayerweather Hall, a dormitory at the University of Rhode Island, and by the Fayerweather Craft Guild, located in Kingston. (Notable Black American Women Book II pg. 221)
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