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George Washington Carver was born into slavery. By the late 1890s, after overcoming poverty and racial discrimination, he became the director of agricultural teaching and research at Alabama's Tuskegee Institute.
Carver discovered more than 450 products that could be made from the peanut and other cultivated plants. He made it possible for many Southern farmers to diversify their crops, and became known as "the miracle worker" throughout the South. This photograph, taken by Clifton Johnson, a pioneer of documentary photography, shows Carver (left) with a student in the woodland at Tuskegee. Courtesy of the National Portrait Gallery. |
| Photograph of George Washington Carver (1864-1943), about 1900, by Clifton Johnson (1865-1940), gelatin silver print |
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