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George Washington Carver Letters to William Wallace Fridy

 Collection
Identifier: Mss-0385

Content Information

The collection consists of copies of two letters from George Washington Carver to William Wallace Fridy and a copy of a photograph of Fridy with Carver. The letters were written after Fridy, a 1932 graduate of Clemson College and a chemistry instructor there, visited the Tuskegee Institute with two Clemson cadets, Kelly E. Traynholm and Carroll Chipley in 1933. Fridy later became a Methodist minister in South Carolina.

The letters and photograph date from 1933-1934.

Dates

  • 1933 - 1934

Access Restrictions

This collection is open to the public without restriction.

Biographical / Historical

George Washington Carver was born in Diamond, Missouri circa 1864, the son Giles and Mary Carver, both of whom were enslaved persons. He graduated from Minneapolis High School in Minneapolis, Kansas in 1880, attended Simpson College in Indianola, Iowa in 1890 and graduated from Iowa State Agricultural College in 1894 with an undergraduate degree in Agriculture. He earned a graduate degree in Agriculture from the same institution in 1896.

After earning his graduate degree Carver accepted an offer from Booker T. Washington to head the agricultural department at Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute in Macon County, Alabama. While at Tuskegee he invented a mobile horse-drawn agricultural classroom and laboratory to demonstrate soil chemistry, developed alternative feed and fertilizer methods that poor farmers could use, and worked to disseminate agricultural information to farmers.

His most notable achievement was his research on crop rotation; he found that raising nitrogen-fixing plants such as peanuts, soybeans, and sweet potatoes replaced soil nutrients that had been lost due to intensive cotton farming which resulted in higher yields when the land was returned to cotton farming. In order to encourage crop rotation, he researched alternative commercial uses for peanuts, soybeans and sweet potatoes, developing more that 300 potential food, industrial and commercial products for peanuts alone. Most of these discoveries did not find widespread application.

Due to his research with and promotion of peanuts Carver became famous first nationally and then internationally. He was awarded the Spingarn Medal from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in 1923 and honorary Doctor of Science degrees from Simpson College in 1928 and from Selma University in 1942. Carver died at Tuskegee on January 5, 1943.

Extent

.05 Cubic Feet (1 folder)

Language of Materials

English

Abstract

This collection provides insight into George Washington Carver’s relationship with young people, on race relations in South Carolina, and on William Wallace Fridy’s decision to become a Methodist minister.

The collection consists of copies of two letters from George Washington Carver to William Wallace Fridy and a copy of a photograph of Fridy with Carver. One of the letters notes Carver’s desire that Fridy attend Yale; Fridy graduated from Yale Divinity School in 1938.

Acquisition Source

Donated by Dr. William Wallace Fridy, Jr. in 2011. Accession 11-087

Related Materials

Mss 0384 George Washington Carver Collection

Processing Information

The collection was processed and a finding aid created by James Cross in 2023

Title
A Guide to the George Washington Carver Letters to William Wallace Fridy
Status
Completed
Author
James Cross
Date
2023
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Repository Details

Part of the Clemson University Libraries Special Collections and Archives Repository

Contact:
230 Kappa St.
Clemson SC 29634 U.S.A. US