Commemorating the links related to this entry Carver related category 1860-1920 1920-1960 Educator's work AF History People List Name Politician activist Technical archive Photo Tuskegee College's George Washington Carver 1896 George Washington Card Iowa State University Agriculture Eve graduating from the Mechanical Engineering University (now Iowa State University) accepted the invitation of Booker T. Washington, and led the Taski Giutiards College and the Black Industry Institute (now Tuskegee). University in the field of agriculture).
George Washington Carver George Washington Carver was born in the diamond forest of Missouri in the spring of 1864 or 1865. Like many slaves, he is not sure about his birth date. His mother Mary is a slave to Moses and Susan Carver. As a baby, a slave attacker kidnapped his mother. A sculptor without a child raised George and his brother James. In the process of growth, George was fascinated by plants. Many neighbors call him "plant doctor". As Carver was an African American, he could not enter any local school, so he had to go to school eight miles from his house.
George Washington Carver has never been married and has no family. He donated $ 33,000 to the George Washington Carver Agricultural Research Foundation founded in Tuskege in 1940. Today, at the George Washington Carver Museum of the Tuskegee Institute, Carver's discovery, collections and paintings are on exhibition. Barbara McClintock is an acutely trained scientist. In 1902, she was born in three of three daughters of Sarah, Connecticut, and Thomas Henry McClintock. She has a younger brother. In 1908, McClintock and her family moved to Brooklyn in New York where he went to school.
The school named after Carver has George Washington Carver elementary school of Compton unified school district in Los Angeles County, California, George Washington Carver School of Arts and Sciences of Sacramento City Unified School District of California, Dr. George. Washington Carver Elementary School, Newark Public School, Newark, New Jersey. The categories he nominated include Colletotrichum carveri and Metasphaeria carveri, both named by Job Bicknell Ellis and Benjamin Matlack Everhart in 1902, Cercospora carveriana was named by Pier Andrea Saccardo and Domenico Saccardo in 1906. Named after Anna Eliza Jenkins, Pestalotia carveri was named after EF Guba in 1961