Alumni association celebrates Dr. Carver’s birthday Saturday
Library of Congress
George Washington Carver in 1906.
Advertisement
Text size: small | medium | large
By Allison Brophy Champion
Published: July 11, 2008
One of America’s greatest inventors and most transformative African American educators was born a sickly baby into slavery in Missouri.
Dr. George Washington Carver, arrived on this earth July 12, 1864, many historians agree, although it is said the man himself was never sure of his exact birth date.
There is no question, however, about the level of Carver’s contributions to the world.
The Alumni Association of the George Washington Carver School of Culpeper County hosts a birthday celebration in his honor Saturday at 3 p.m.
The old school, located about six miles from town along U.S. 15, operated as a segregated school for black students from 1948-1968.
Bobby Wilson, a Culpeper native and nurse at Culpeper Regional Hospital, graduated from Carver in 1965.
He remembered the experience as a good one though noting, “When I went to Carver, the schools were not integrated.”
“We got a good education, but it wasn’t equal. The teachers went out of their way to make sure we got a good education,” Wilson said, mentioning the dedication of Carver teachers like Miss Wallace and Miss Finley.
As for Dr. Carver, “He was one of the greatest people in the world,” he added.
Saturday’s event at the old Carver school will include musical performances, refreshments and a talk by Col. Sam Glasker.
The event is free and open to the public.
“We just want to honor his many contributions to our country,” Wilson said.
They were many.
“That he, a Negro, became the first and greatest chemurgist, almost single-handedly revolutionized Southern agriculture and received world acclaim for his contributions to agricultural chemistry was against all accepted patterns,” writes Peggy Robins at the National Park Service Web page of the George Washington Carver Birthplace District Association, a grassroots group dedicated to preserving his legacy and the national monument bearing his image in his home state.
“But seen from today’s distance, possibly the most amazing facet of the life of this gentle genius is the manner in which he overcame enormous prejudices and poverty in his struggle from nameless black boy to George Washington Carver, B.S., M.S., D.Sc., Ph.D., Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, London, and Director of Research and Experiment at Tuskegee Institute, Alabama — all without a trace of bitterness, with total indifference to personal fortune, and thought only to make the world, and America in particular, a better place for all mankind.”
The list of inventions pioneered by Dr. Carver is truly impressive. An agricultural chemist, Carver discovered 300 uses for peanuts, including peanut butter.
Among the listed items he proposed to farmers were his recipes and improvements to/for: adhesives, bleach, buttermilk, chili sauce, fuel briquettes, ink, instant coffee, mayonnaise, shaving cream and talcum powder, just to name a few.
In spite of his intellectual richness, Dr. Carver did not care for material wealth.
“It is not the style of clothes one wears, neither the kind of automobile one drives, nor the amount of money one has in the bank, that counts,” he said.
“These mean nothing. It is simply service that measures success.”
Allison Brophy Champion can be reached at 825-0771 ext. 101 or
Want to go?
The Alumni Association of the George Washington Carver School of Culpeper County hosts a birthday celebration in his honor Saturday at 3 p.m. in the old school, located about six miles from town along U.S. 15.
Free and open to the public, the event will include music, refreshments and a talk by Col. Sam Glasker.
Post a Comment
The commenting period has ended or commenting has been deactivated for this article.
