what would life be like without George Washington Carver
That would be George Washington Carver.
George Washington Carver would experiment on insects, peanuts, yams, soybeans, mushrooms, and all sorts of other plants.
yes
i would say dont do it.
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.
The part that George Washington Carver played in soil conservation was developing methods of crop-rotation. This would conserved nutrients in the soil.
George Washington Carver died at the age of 14 in 1841. He was 39 years old. For real though he died on January 5, 1943.
George Washington Carver would experiment on insects, peanuts, yams, soybeans, mushrooms, and all sorts of other plants.
By asking if he would like to work with him
This would be George Wahsington Carver. A very fascinating man. That is "Washington" - corrected spelling....sorry
George Washington Carver invented many uses for the peanut.
Booker T. Washington greatly influenced George Washington Carver. First, he provided a home for Dr. Carver to conduct his research at Tuskegee University. He also worked to insure that discoveries made by Dr. Carver would be available, patent-free, to all farmers - black and white alike.