Fayerweather was born on March 12, 1822 in Stepney, Connecticut. His father (a shoemaker) died when he was still very young, leaving his family with insufficient means for support. Fayerweather was "bound out" by court order to a Connecticut farmer, to serve as a farm hand until he was capable of supporting himself. After he finished his term, he went to Bridgeport, Connecticut, and learned shoemaking. His career as a shoemaker was interrupted by his conducting the "shoemaker's colic," an occupational disease; he turned to peddling tin products and traveling across the country until his health improved, and then returned to Bridgeport where he set up a shoemaker's shop. In 1854, he was offered a clerkship by the New York leather-trading firm of Hoyt Brothers. At the end of his first year, Fayerweather was offered a share in the company. It was this share that made him wealthy, as the firm expanded to become the biggest leather trader in the country. On the resignation of Joseph Hoyt, the chief shareholder, Fayerweather became the senior partner in the firm, which was renamed Fayerweather & Ladew. By the time of his death on November 6, 1890, Fayerweather was a millionaire. Encouraged by his friend Dr. Roswell Hitchcock of Union Theological Seminary, Fayerweather bequeathed a significant portion of his wealth to colleges and universities, including Amherst, Williams, Dartmouth, Yale, Columbia and several others. The settlement of his estate encountered legal problems, which extended over several years; however, the courts ultimately sustained the bequest of the residue of his estate to the colleges.
From the description of Fayerweather will papers, 1890-1948. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 51877922
Daniel Burton Fayerweather was born on March 12, 1822 in Stepney, Connecticut. His father (a shoemaker) died when he was still very young, leaving his family with insufficient means for support. Daniel Fayerweather was "bound out" by court order to a Connecticut farmer, to serve as a farm hand until he was capable of supporting himself. After he finished his term, he went to Bridgeport, Connecticut, and learned shoemaking. His career as a shoemaker was interrupted by his conducting the "shoemaker's colic," an occupational disease; he turned to peddling tin products and traveling across the country until his health improved, and then returned to Bridgeport where he set up a shoemaker's shop. In 1854, he was offered a clerkship by the New York leather-trading firm of Hoyt Brothers. At the end of his first year, Fayerweather was offered a share in the company. It was this share that made him wealthy, as the firm expanded to become the biggest leather trader in the country. On the resignation of Joseph Hoyt, the chief shareholder, Fayerweather became the senior partner in the firm, which was renamed Fayerweather & Ladew. By the time of his death on November 6, 1890, Fayerweather was a millionaire. Encouraged by his friend Dr. Roswell Hitchcock of Union Theological Seminary, Fayerweather bequeathed a significant portion of his wealth to colleges and universities, including Amherst, Williams, Dartmouth, Yale, Columbia and several others. The settlement of his estate encountered legal problems, which extended over several years; however, the courts ultimately sustained the bequest of the residue of his estate to the colleges.
At Amherst, the Fayerweather bequest was used to construct a chemistry and physics building, which opened in 1894; it later became the Fayerweather Laboratory of Physics. In 2002 Fayerweather Hall was renovated to house the Fine Arts departments.
From the guide to the Fayerweather Will Papers, 1890-1948, (Amherst College Archives and Special Collections)