Background
As a toddler, Forsythe moved with his family to Portuguese Antonio, Jamaica, where his father was a prominent civil engineer
As a toddler, Forsythe moved with his family to Portuguese Antonio, Jamaica, where his father was a prominent civil engineer
Forsythe continued his education at University of Illinois and finally at University of Toledo where he earned his Bachelor of Science. Forsyth then went on to medical school and graduated from McGill University Medical School.
Born in Nassau, Bahamas, he was the third child (second to survive infancy) born to Horatio Alexander Forsyth and Lillian Maud Byndloss. At aged fifteen, Forsythe emigrated to the United States to study architecture at Tuskegee Institute. He added the "e" to Forsyth while practicing medicine in New Jersey to distinguish himself from another physician practising in the same building as his practice.
In 1933, Forsythe and C. Alfred "Chief" Anderson were the first black pilots to make a round-trip cross-country flight from Atlantic City, New Jersey, to Los Angeles, California.
They made the cross country journey in a Fairchild 24 named "The Pride of Atlantic City." The plane was not equipped with parachuts, a radio or landing lights, and they navigated using a road map. Later that same year, the two became the first black pilots to fly across an international border to Montreal, Canada.
In 1934, Forsythe and Anderson bought a and christened it the "Booker T. Washington," in which they flew their Southamerican Good Will Flight. Letters said to have been written by Forsythe during his historic flights were found by a woman under the porch of an Atlantic City home in 2011.
In 1945, Forsythe married Francis T. Chew, a nurse he met in Atlantic City.
The couple settled the following year in Newark, New Jersey, where they remained until Forsythe"s death in 1987. Francis died in Newark, New Jersey in 2009. The couple did not have children.