George Washington Carver: The Life of the Great American Agriculturist

Front Cover
Rosen Publishing Group, 2004 - Juvenile Nonfiction - 112 pages
George Washington Carver began life as a slave in the tumultuous world of pre-Civil War Missouri. After the war, the orphaned Carver worked as a farmer, a hotel cook, and a laundryman while pursuing an education. As a professor at the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute, Carver spearheaded the initiative to cultivate peanuts, soybeans, and sweet potatoes to revive the South's dismal agricultural economy. He also researched the domestic and industrial possibilities of these crops, and is most remembered for the invention of peanut butter. Readers will be fascinated by this incredible person.

Bibliographic information