BLACK HISTORY: BIOGRAPHIES 
		
		George Washington Carver  
		  (1864-1943)
		
		
		
		 
		 
    CBN.com  George 
      Washington Carver devoted his life to research projects connected primarily 
      with southern agriculture. The products he derived from the peanut and the 
      soybean revolutionized the economy of the South by liberating it from an 
      excessive dependence on cotton.  
    Born a slave on January 5, 1864 in Diamond Grove, Missouri, Carver was 
      only an infant when he and his mother were abducted from his owner's plantation 
      by a band of slave raiders. His mother was sold and shipped away, but Carver 
      was ransomed by his master in exchange for a race horse.  
    While working as a farm hand, Carver managed to obtain a high school education. 
      He was admitted as the first black student of Simpson College, Indianola, 
      Iowa. He then attended Iowa Agricultural College (now Iowa State University) 
      where, while working as the school janitor, he received a degree in agricultural 
      science in 1894. Two years later he received a master's degree from the 
      same school and became the first African American to serve on its faculty. 
      Within a short time his fame spread, and Booker T. Washington offered him 
      a post at Tuskegee.  
    Carver revolutionized the southern agricultural economy by showing that 
      300 products could be derived from the peanut. By 1938, peanuts had become 
      a $200 million industry and a chief product of Alabama. Carver also demonstrated 
      that 100 different products could be derived from the sweet potato.  
    Although he did hold three patents, Carver never patented most of the many 
      discoveries he made while at Tuskegee, saying "God gave them to me, 
      how can I sell them to someone else?" In 1938 he donated over $30,000 
      of his life's savings to the George Washington Carver Foundation and willed 
      the rest of his estate to the organization so his work might be carried 
      on after his death. He died on January 5, 1943.  
    Source: The African American Almanac, 7th ed., Gale, 1997.  
    Reprinted by permission of The 
      Gale Group. 
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