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George Washington Carver’s Legacy Went Beyond Peanuts

The famed scientist made lasting contributions to environmental and sustainable farming.

By Avery Hurt
Sep 25, 2020 2:00 PMSep 25, 2020 1:52 PM
George Washington Carver portrait - Wikimedia Commons
(Credit: Tuskegee University Archives/Wikimedia Commons)

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The trendy, independent farmer who delivers your weekly farm share may have more in common with George Washington Carver — a man better known today for doing strange things with peanuts — than you might realize. Yet today's environmental and sustainable farming movements owe a lot to the innovative Black scientist.

Carver was born in Missouri at the end of the Civil War. After emancipation, he was raised by the same couple, Moses and Susan Carver, who had previously owned him as a slave. He managed — not without some difficulty — to get an education. After studying art and piano at Simpson College in Indianola, Iowa, he transferred to what is now Iowa State University, earning a bachelor’s in agriculture and a master's degree.

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