Showing posts with label peanuts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label peanuts. Show all posts

July 12 - Happy Birthday, George Washington Carver

 Posted on July 12, 2021

This is an update of the post published on July 12, 2010:


George Washington Carver was believed to have been born near the end of the Civil War, before slavery was abolished in Missouri. I read that he was born in 1860, 1861, and 1864, in July, in January, or specifically on July 12. I also read that nobody knows for sure when he was born, and I believe that those informants are probably the most accurate.

Since a lot of sources claim his birthday as falling on this day, I imagine that Carver may have celebrated his birthday on July 12... but I wasn't able to confirm or refute this theory.


At any rate, George Washington Carver was born to a woman named Mary and—when he was just a tiny baby, only a week old—mother and babe were stolen by “night raiders” from Arkansas, to be sold in Kentucky. The slave owner, Moses Carver, hired someone to find his “property” and negotiated for the return of the baby, but nobody could find George's mom.

When slavery was abolished, Moses Carver and his wife raised both George and his older brother, teaching them to read and write and encouraging them to learn. Black children weren't allowed to go to school in that part of Missouri, but there was a school for Black people ten miles away, and when George was about ten years old, he left “home” to go there. He stayed with a series of foster families while attending a series of schools and finally was able to go to college. He studied many subjects but ended up concentrating particularly on botany. 

In 1896 Carver was hired by Booker T. Washington to lead the Agriculture Department of Tuskegee Institute (later Tuskegee University). There Carver taught and did research.


Good thing for all of us! Carver developed crops that could be planted in the south, which for too long was planted almost entirely with cotton. (The soil was depleted from growing just one thing year after year. Also, the boll weevil destroyed much of the cotton crop in the early twentieth century.) 

Carver promoted growing peanuts and sweet potatoes, and he was able to come up with hundreds of ways of using these foods, including around 100 recipes using peanuts and hundreds of products made from peanuts, including a milk substitute, adhesives, cosmetics, dyes, paints, and even plastics. He also worked on uses for soybeans and pecans.


Much of Carver's work focused on helping small farmers in the south, helping farmers diversify their crops, and encouraging sustainable agriculture—you know, the kind of agriculture that environmental and food activists are still trying to urge on farmers who now devote acres and acres to the monoculture of corn!



Celebrate George Washington Carver!

Here is a printable coloring book about Carver.

Eat peanuts or peanut butter. Here are some recipes.

Read about George Washington Carver. There is also a slide show, puzzles, and other features here.












(Second Monday in July)












September 13 - National Peanut Day

Posted on September 13, 2018

Are peanuts your favorite nuts?

Trick question - because they aren't actually nuts!

Nuts that are true nuts - that is, that are botanically nuts - are hard-shelled pods that contain both the fruit and the seed of the plant. Here are a few examples:

Chestnuts, hazelnuts, acorns.


A lot of "tree nuts" aren't true nuts, but are instead drupes, because the part we eat are just the seeds of the plant. Outside of the seed is a hard shell and then a fleshy fruit (often not edible for humans). Examples of drupes that we think of as nuts include:

Walnuts, almonds, and pecans.


And then there are peanuts, which aren't any of those things. Peanuts aren't true nuts, aren't tree nuts, and aren't drupes. Instead, they are legumes, in the same family with peas and beans. They are an edible seed encased in a hard shell, but they grow underground!



Peanut isn't too bad a name for this food, since peanuts are related to peas. Some other names for peanuts include groundnuts, ground peas, and goobers

If we were to compare peanuts to all the other foods we call nuts, we would find that peanuts are way higher in protein than the rest. Peanuts are also high in vitamins and minerals, and they help us absorb nutrients found in other foods better, and they contain antioxidants. 

Here are a few more facts about peanuts for you to chomp on:

In the U.S., peanuts became more popular when Civil War soldiers ate them - and enjoyed them! - and when P.T. Barnum started selling "hot roasted peanuts" at his circus.

Hot roasted peanuts also became a thing at baseball games. So much so that a song about baseball implores, "Buy me some peanuts and Crackerjacks / I don't care if I never get back."



George Washington Carver famously encouraged farmers to diversity their crops by growing peanuts. He came up with dozens and dozens of uses for peanuts, too!






Enjoy some peanut-ty foods today - like these!






Also on this date:


July 14 - Carver Day

Posted on July 14, 2018


Hopefully you've heard of George Washington Carver (I've written about him here and here). Some people think of Carver as "The Peanut Man," but this inventor and scientist was way more than that!

When Carver was a child and could barely even read (he was born into slavery), he was so into nature that he noticed how various plants responded to different conditions... People who lived near him began to ask for his advice about plants, often handing over a potted plant that was sick; he would get the plant to flourishing again and then return the plant, better than ever. He wasn't educated in the ways of science, but at that point Carver was already considered a young plant doctor!

After slavery was abolished, Carver's previous owners, from whom he got his name, raised him and his older brother as their own children and taught them to read and write. But Carver wanted to go to school, and black kids were not allowed at the only school in town. Carver decided to go to the school for black children - ten miles away from his home! That was too far a walking commute, so at a young age (maybe 11 or 12?) Carver began staying at others' houses or renting rooms - just so he could get an education.

Carver sometimes had to leave a school and a community when race-based violence would break out there.

Carver applied to universities and was finally accepted in one in Kentucky. But when he arrived there, the university personnel realized he was black and took back their acceptance.

He ended up finally attending a university in Iowa and became a professor at Tuskegee University. He studied and researched and taught about - of course - plants!


Carver's research involved clays, seeds, sweet potatoes, peanuts, and more. But he got the "Peanut Man" label when he was asked to talk to the U.S. Congress about peanuts and all the many uses he had created for peanuts.


Carver applied for few patents, because he wanted his products and discoveries to be available to everyone. He spent little money on clothes, even though he was really famous in his own time and corresponded with and met many famous people. He turned down a very well-paid job with Thomas Edison, he was friends with Henry Ford, he wrote back and forth with Harvey Kellogg (of cereal fame), he gave U.S. President F.D. Roosevelt peanut oil for massages of his polio-inflicted legs, and he was even asked for advice from supporters of Mahatma Gandhi - and Gandhi himself wrote to him to say thanks for his informative responses!

The reason that today is Carver Day is because the George Washington Carver National Monument was established on this date in 1943, about half a year after the esteemed scientist died. This was the first National Park locale established to honor an African American person - actually, the first to honor anyone other than a former president! - and every year the anniversary is celebrated at the National Monument.



This year is super special, because it is the 75th anniversary! There are going to be speakers, a one-person show with actor Paxton Williams playing the role of Carver, live music, peanut milk demonstrations, kids' activities, storytelling, guided tours, and food. 

The George Washington Carver National Monument is located in Missouri, in an area where Carver spent much of his childhood.

Carver Day is celebrated in many places
on the anniversary of his death on January 5,
1943, because we have no idea when he was
born.





Also on this date:




























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