The State Historical Society of Missouri

Famous Missouri Scientists

George Washington Carver (1865? – 1943)

Introduction

George Washington Carver was a world-famous chemist who made important agricultural discoveries and inventions. His research on peanuts, sweet potatoes, and other products helped poor southern farmers vary their crops and improve their diets. A monument showing Carver as a boy was the first national memorial erected in honor of an African American.

Signature of George Washington Carver

Early Years and Education

George Washington Carver was born on a farm near Diamond, Missouri, in Newton County about 1865. His mother, Mary, was owned by Moses and Susan Carver. His father, a slave on a neighboring farm, died before George was born. When George was just a few months old, he and his mother were kidnapped from the Carver farm by a band of men who roamed Missouri during the Civil War era. These outlaws hoped to sell George and his mother elsewhere. Young George was recovered by a neighbor and returned to the Carvers, but his mother was not. George and his older brother, Jim, were raised by Moses and Susan Carver.

While Jim helped Moses Carver with farm work, George, who was frail and sickly, spent much of his time helping Susan Carver with chores around the cabin. He learned how to perform many domestic tasks such as cooking, mending, and doing laundry. He also tended the garden and became fascinated with plants.

Susan Carver taught George to read and write at home. When he was about eleven, George went to Neosho to attend a school for African Americans. There he boarded with Andrew and Mariah Watkins, a childless black couple. He stayed in Neosho for at least two years until the late 1870s, when he decided to move to Kansas with other African Americans who were traveling west.

Over the next ten years, Carver traveled from one midwestern town to another, working and attending school. He often used his domestic skills to make money. By the late 1880s, Carver moved to Winterset, Iowa. Carver was befriended by a white couple, John and Helen Milholland. They encouraged Carver to enroll in nearby Simpson College where he studied piano and art. After a year, however, Carver transferred to the State Agricultural College at Ames, Iowa, to study agriculture. He earned his bachelor’s degree in 1894 and a graduate degree in 1896.

Agricultural Chemist

In 1896, George Washington Carver left Iowa to take a job with Booker T. Washington at Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. There he conducted agricultural research and taught students until his death. Carver’s research and instruction helped poor southern farmers, both white and black, change their farming practices and improve their diets. He stressed the importance of planting peanuts to upgrade the quality of the soil, which had been depleted from years of planting cotton. Carver found many practical uses for peanuts, sweet potatoes, and other agricultural products. He also created and tested many recipes in his laboratory. Carver’s ideas and discoveries helped farmers improve their lives. His work also helped revitalize the depressed southern economy.

As Carver worked tirelessly in his laboratory from 1900 to 1920, his fame grew. He became widely known for his agricultural experiments. He also became known as a promoter of racial equality. People who wanted to improve race relations in America asked for Carver’s help. Carver was a deeply religious man and agreed to share his belief in racial equality. During the 1920s and 1930s, he traveled throughout the South delivering his message of racial harmony.

Carver drew more public attention during the mid-1930s when the polio virus struck in America. Carver offered a treatment of peanut-oil massages that he believed helped many people, especially children, gain relief from the painful and paralyzing effects of polio. As word of Carver’s treatment spread, people flocked to the Tuskegee campus for Carver’s “cure.”

George Washington Carver’s reputation also grew larger during the 1930s because of the Great Depression. This was a period of great economic decline caused partly from generations of poor farming practices and years of drought. People from all over the world asked Carver for agricultural advice because he was able to show farmers how to maximize plant production and improve the soil at very little cost.

Carver lived a simple and industrious life. A skilled artist and musician who never married, Carver lived out his life in a dormitory at Tuskegee Institute. He became friends with many people, some of whom were quite rich and famous. One of his closest friends was the automobile manufacturer Henry Ford. Ford made sure that an elevator was installed in Carver’s dormitory so that Carver could get to his laboratory more easily in his later years.

Carver’s Legacy

George Washington Carver changed the agricultural and economic life of many poor farmers. From ordinary peanuts he made hundreds of useful products, including milk, cheese, soap, and grease. He also made over a hundred products from sweet potatoes. Though he was offered positions at many other laboratories, Carver always declined, preferring to continue his work among his own race at Tuskegee.

Carver died on January 5, 1943, at Tuskegee Institute. He is buried on that campus near the grave of Booker T. Washington. The George Washington Carver National Monument in Diamond was created soon after his death. Established by legislation sponsored by Senator Harry S. Truman, it was the first national memorial to an African American. It stands on the farm where Carver was born.




Text by Gary R. Kremer and Carlynn Trout
Intern Research by Valerie Kemp and Jillian Hartke

Meets Show-Me Standards SS: 2, 6, 7; 4th grade GLE 2a.A.; and MSIP equity in gender and racial/ethnic awareness.

References and Resources

For more information about George Washington Carver and his life and writings, see the following resources:

Society Resources
  • Selected Bibliography
    http://www.umsystem.edu/shs/famousmissourians/scientists/carverbiblio.shtml
    A selected list of books and articles about George Washington Carver in the library of The State Historical Society of Missouri. The Society’s call numbers follow the citations in brackets.
  • Western Historical Manuscript Collection
    http://www.umsystem.edu/shs/famousmissourians/scientists/carverbiblio.shtml
    A list of primary sources about George Washington Carver in the Western Historical Manuscript Collection.
Outside Resources

These links, which open in another window, will take you outside the Society’s Web site. The Society is not responsible for the content of the following Web sites:

  • George Washington Carver National Monument
    http://www.nps.gov/gwca/
    In addition to showing the monument and boyhood farm, this Web site offers an extensive biography of Carver and many pictures pertaining to his life.
  • National Inventors Hall of Fame
    http://www.invent.org/hall_of_fame/30.html
    This Web site offers a brief biography of Carver and notes his importance in the area of agricultural chemistry.
  • The National Parks Service “Legends of Tuskegee Institute” exhibit
    http://www.cr.nps.gov/museum/exhibits/tuskegee/gwcoverview.htm
    This excellent Web site offers a thorough biography of Carver along with many visuals that document his life as a scientist and teacher at Tuskegee Institute.
  • Hall of Famous Missourians
    http://www.house.mo.gov/famous/default.aspx
    This Web site provides a brief biography of Carver as well as a picture of the bronze bust of him.
  • Missouri Secretary of State Kids!
    http://www.sos.mo.gov/Kids/history/famousmissourians.asp
    This state Web site offers a picture and brief biography of George Washington Carver.
  • George Washington Carver
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Washington_Carver
    This Web site offers a biography and photographs of George Washington Carver along with various links to Carver-related sites.
  • United States Department of Agriculture Office of Operations
    http://www.usda.gov/oo/colorbook.htm
    This Web site offers a downloadable coloring and activity book about George Washington Carver and his accomplishments in the field of agriculture.
  • The Legacy of George Washington Carver
    http://www.lib.iastate.edu/spcl/gwc/home.html
    This Web site offers a biography of George Washington Carver, “the first African American to enroll at Iowa State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, which today is Iowa State University.”

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Last modified 04/19/07