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==Relationships== [[File:AUSTIN CURTIS - SCIENTIST SUCCESSOR TO DR. CARVER - NARA - 535696.jpg|thumb|''"Austin Curtis β Scientist successor to Dr. Carver"'', cartoon by C. H. Alston]] Carver never married. At age 40, he began a courtship with Sarah L. Hunt, an elementary school teacher and the sister-in-law of Warren Logan, Treasurer of Tuskegee Institute. This lasted three years until she took a teaching job in California.<ref>Kremer, Gary R., ''George Washington Carver: A Biography'', Greenwood, 2011, {{ISBN|0313347964}}, p. 68.</ref> In her 2015 biography, Christina Vella reviews his relationships and suggests that Carver was bisexual and constrained by mores of his historic period.<ref>Christina Vella, ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=CXs-CgAAQBAJ George Washington Carver: A Life] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211215120050/https://books.google.com/books/about/George_Washington_Carver.html?id=CXs-CgAAQBAJ |date=December 15, 2021}}'', Southern Biography Series, Louisiana State University Press, 2015.</ref> When he was 70, Carver established a friendship and research partnership with the scientist Austin W. Curtis Jr. This young black man, a graduate of [[Cornell University]], had some teaching experience before coming to Tuskegee. Carver bequeathed to Curtis his royalties from an authorized 1943 biography by Rackham Holt.<ref>Rackham Holt, ''George Washington Carver: An American Biography'', Garden City, NY: Doubleday, Doran and Company, 1943. Quote: "He [Carver] believed that there was something providential in the coming of this young man [Austin], so intensely serious about his work and extremely competent at it, who was at the same time a genial companion; he was proud of him and loved and depended on him as his own son ... And the affection was returned in full measure. Mr. Curtis accompanied him everywhere, seeing to his comfort, shielding him from intrusion, and acting as his official mouthpiece."</ref> After Carver died in 1943, Curtis was fired from Tuskegee Institute. He left Alabama and resettled in [[Detroit]]. There he manufactured and sold peanut-based personal care products.<ref>On Curtis' later life, see "Austin W. Curtis Interviewed by Toby Fishbein in Detroit, Michigan, March 3, 1979": Transcript in Iowa State University Special Collections, George Washington Carver File, Box 2, RS: 21/7/2.</ref>
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