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Meet Amazing Americans Scientists & Inventors George Washington Carver
 
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George Washington Carver

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Born: About 1864 (exact date is unknown)
Died: January 5, 1943

George Washington Carver was born a slave in Diamond Grove, Missouri, around 1864. He is one of the nation's most famous agricultural scientists. He is best known for his research on peanuts and his commitment to helping poor Southern African American farmers.

Carver worked at Tuskegee Institute in Alabama for most of his adult life. In 1943, soon after Carver's death, President Franklin D. Roosevelt made Carver's boyhood home a national monument. It was the first national monument to honor an African American.


George Washington Carver in 1906
Working for the Greatest Good
Help for the Hard Times
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More Stories About George Washington Carver
George Washington Carver
Help for the Hard Times
"Practical Advice for Farmers"
What's So Great About Peanuts?
"The Peanut Man"
Working for the Greatest Good
"Teaching at Tuskegee Institute"


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