yes he did finish collge
George Washington Carver attended a school for African American children in Diamond Grove, Missouri. He faced various challenges accessing education due to racial segregation and eventually attended schools in Kansas and Iowa to further his studies.
simpson college
Yes he was!
.HE MAde sure he went to college even by the color of his skin Moses Carver was George Washington Carver's foster father. He was white
he finished high school and went to college.
George Washington Carver discovered peanuts and invented many things out of them.
George Washington Carver
George Washington Carver was older than his brother James Carver. George Washington Carver was born on July 12, 1864, while James Carver was born in 1866.
george washington carver thats him silly
George was the son of slaves, his family owned by a man named Carver. When he went to Iowa State Agricultural College, he adopted the middle name Washington, reportedly because there was another George Carver at the school.
George Washington Carver
Not very much in his childhood. I searched online and found this "George Washington Carver left for school. He eagerly learned everything that he could learn. Working his way through high school and on to college, Carver did odd jobs to pay his way. He continued his education until he had received a Bachelor of Science degree in agriculture and then a Master's degree. He had great skill with plants, and he was given a regular job at the college teaching and taking care of the greenhouse.In 1896 Carver met another man, Booker T. Washington, who was visiting the college where George Washington Carver taught. Washington was impressed with Carver's work and with the recommendations he received from fellow teachers. Washington invited Carver to teach at Tuskegee Institute, a Negro college in Alabama. When Carver began, the college was just a collection of shacks. It did not even have a laboratory where he could do his experiments, but the work of George Washington Carver was destined to change agriculture in the South. He first introduced diversified agriculture where the land was being destroyed by raising only cotton. He urged farmers to raise peanuts and sweet potatoes, which would restore nutrients to the soil. He believed these crops had real industrial potential, and he began a series of careful and persistent experiments