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George Washington Carver National Monument is a unit of the National Park Service in Newton County, Missouri. The national monument was founded on July 14, 1943, by Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who dedicated $30,000 to the monument. It was the first national monument dedicated to an African American and first to a non-president. [4]
The farmhouse of Moses Carver (built in 1881), near the place where George Carver lived as a youth. Carver was born into slavery, in Diamond Grove, (now Diamond, Newton County, Missouri), near Crystal Palace, sometime in the early 1860s.
Diamond is a city in north central Newton County, Missouri, United States, located southeast of Joplin. The population was 831 at the 2020 census. [4] It is part of the Joplin, Missouri, Metropolitan Statistical Area. Diamond is primarily renowned as the birthplace of George Washington Carver.
George Caleb Bingham House: ... Washington University Hilltop Campus Historic District ... George Washington Carver National Monument: 1943: Diamond
George Washington Carver National Monument: George Washington Carver National Monument. October 15, 1966 3 miles (4.8 km) south of Monument ... Diamond: 4: Jolly Mill ...
The Diamond Grove Prairie Conservation Area is an 852-acre natural area located adjacent to the Missouri municipality of Diamond. The conservation area is characterized by rolling tallgrass prairie and prairie savanna. [2] The conservation area is located relatively near, although not adjacent to, the George Washington Carver National Monument.
Moses Carver (29 August 1812 – 19 December 1910) [1] was an American settler and adoptive father of George Washington Carver, his former slave. Biography [ edit ]
Diamond George Washington Carver National Monument; City of St. Louis. St. Louis Charles Sumner High School; First African Baptist Church (St. Louis, Missouri)