Plain sticky notes
As a child
Carver's mother was a slave, and she was stolen, or kidnapped, by "Nightriders", a group of people who stole slaves and either used them for themselves, or sold them.
Scientist or Botantist
George Washington Carver was a very intelligent and successful scientist, or botanist, as he called himself
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Taken in
A family who lived near him and his mother took him in. Their name was Carver. He lived with them for about ten years. Nobody knew the boy's real birthday, but he figured he was about ten when he left home to go to a school for colored children.
Bulletins
Carver made things out of peanuts. Carver made a bulletin in 1916 that were common kitchen recipes, on this lists of his peanut inventions included salted peanuts, bar candy, chocolate coated peanuts, peanut chocolate fudge, peanut wafers and peanut brittle. George's list of peanut inventions have 30 cloth dyes, 19 leather dyes, 18 insulating boards, 17 wood stains, 11 wall boards and 11 peanut flours.
His Job
He taught science, mostly botany. That is where he discovered most of his uses for the peanut. Carver was in his late 70s when he died at Tuskegee Institute in Tuskegee, Alabama. His death was a national event and everyone mourned.
The barn
When he went to school all the boys and girls laughed at him, and the teacher didn't seem to like him that much either. He slept in a barn every night until the owner of the barn found him. The owners of the barn were named John and Lucy Martin. They decided to take him in and pay him, as long as he did work for them. After a while the Martins decided to move to California, so they had no choice but to leave George behind.
Education
When he was old enough, he applied to Highland University, and was accepted. When he got there, the president of the college turned him down because he was black. So he went to Simpson University and then Iowa State. He taught there for a while and then made one of the biggest decisions of his life, and started to teach at Tuskegee Institute and on the Jessup Wagon. As it turns out, he taught there for the rest of his life.
Living Arangement
The Martins made arrangements for George to live with someone he had met at church. He called her Aunt Mariah. She was very loving and really cared about George. He decided to move to Fort Scott, Kansas where he could get a better education and go to school with all children, white and black. He lived behind a hotel, with the hotel's permission, of course.
Little Business
He had his own business, a laundry service. He went to school at "Fort School". As time wore on, he packed up and moved to Kansas City because at Fort Scott a black man got lynched. There he worked as a helper to construction workers.
Rich sticky notes
GEORGE WASHINGTON CARVER
George Washington Carver: One Step Away From Success