Fausett taught at the Henry Street Settlement House Arts and Crafts School in
New York. In this capacity, he taught painting and drawing to underprivileged children. He painted murals depicting maps of Grant's Civil War battles in Grant's tomb. These murals were painted over, however in the 1970s. They were restored and rededicated in 1995. Eisenhower also requested that one of Fausett's paintings,
Derby View, hang in the
White House study. The painting hung in the president's office for his entire eight-year term, being loaned from the
Museum of Modern Art. From 1939 to 1940, Fausett was the director of the Herbert Institute of Art located in
Augusta, Georgia. He painted several murals during this time. Fausett also painted other murals for the
United States Air Force and the
United States Capitol. Fausett was later commissioned by United States President
Dwight D. Eisenhower to be an artist-consultant for the chief of staff of the Air Force. This position allowed him to see up close and paint flying jets. He painted for over six decades. His works were romantic landscapes. He painted portraits of United States presidents Eisenhower and
Ronald Reagan. He also made portraits for the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, Grandma Moses,
Ezra Taft Benson,
Sir Alexander Fleming,
Grandma Moses, and others. Fausett was also named a fellow of the Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and the Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation. ==Later life in Vermont==