George Washington CarverEssay Preview: George Washington CarverReport this essayGeorge Washington CarverGeorge Washington Carver was born during the civil war years on a Missouri farm near Diamond Grove, Newton Country in Marion, Township Missouri. Even Carver himself was uncertain of his own birth date. In early manhood he thought that he was born in the year of 1865. On other occasions Carver noted that his birth came “near the end of the civil war” or “just as freedom was declared “.
Carver was a brilliant man who received a bachelors and a masters degree from Iowa Agriculture College. He became a teacher at Iowa Agricultural College. He was also in charge of the bacterial laboratory work in the Systematic Botany department. Mr. Carver made many advances in agriculture and farm products. He moved to Tuskegee Alabama in 1896 to accept a job as an instructor at the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute and remained an instructor there until the day of his death in 1943. His work in developing industrial applications from agricultural products derived 118 products, including a rubber substitute and over 500 dyes and pigments, from 28 different types plants. He was responsible for the invention in 1927 of a process for producing paints and strains from soybeans, for which three separate patents were issued.
The Smithsonian’s National Film Hall of Fame, as the Smithsonian’s main film hall of fame for its exhibitions of natural history, has an outdoor, open-air outdoor theater. It has a unique atmosphere which is a tribute to America’s most powerful movie stars. It was a big theater company that did major movie production there. I think we have an idea of what the theater experience was like. It used as an outdoor theater a very large room with a large television with a small monitor on each of its windows. There was a main floor stage which was large enough for over 400,000 people to sit next to, and a small TV which allowed people to take pictures with the speakers on their TV. We never had any large auditorium to see. It was a beautiful and amazing experience.”
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I am a lifelong member of the museum family.