In 1937, C. Allen Alexander, an African American surgeon from
Kalamazoo, Michigan, was invited to the Tuskegee Institute to capture footage of George Washington Carver, who up until that point, had not allowed video footage to be taken of himself. Alexander shot the film over several days using 16 mm
Kodachrome film and a handheld
Kodak camera. Alexander then stored and kept the film in his bank vault until 1981 when he donated the footage to the
George Washington Carver National Monument. In 2019, The film was inducted into the National Film Registry of the
Library of Congress, as part of an effort to identify more diverse and less traditional styles of films. The film was also digitized by the
National Archives as part of its efforts to "preserve and make available the historically significant film collections of the
National Park Service." In his donation letter, Alexander claimed that he shot the film in 1937, which is also the same year as the date code on the original film stock. However, several things depicted in the film such as the
George Washington Carver Museum, and an elevator built by
Henry Ford, did not exist until 1941. This indicates that the film was likely shot around 1941 or 1942, rather than the given date of 1937. == References ==