269 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
269 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
BIOGRAPHY: BENJAMIN FRANKLIN
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Newsgroups: freenet.shrine.songs
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From: aa300 (Jerry Murphy)
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Subject: Ben Franklin biography
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Date: Wed, 24 Jan 90 15:47:24 EST
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BOOKMAN
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After less than two years of formal schooling, Franklin was pressed into his
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father's trade, but his more profound talents proved to be intellectual. He
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devoured books by John Bunyan, Plutarch, Daniel Defoe, and Cotton Mather at
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home, and, after being apprenticed to his brother James, printer of The New
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England Courant, he read virtually every book that came to the shop. He general-
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ly absorbed the values and philosophy of the English Enlightenment. Like his
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favorite author, Joseph Addison, whose essays in the Spectator he virtually
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memorized, Franklin added the good sense, tolerance, and urbanity of the
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neoclassic age to his family's Puritan earnestness. He rejected his father's
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Calvinist theology, however, and soon espoused what became a lifelong belief in
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rational Christianity.
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At the age of 16, Franklin wrote some pieces for the Courant signed "Silence
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Dogood," in which he satirized the Boston authorities and society. In one essay
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he argued that "hypocritical Pretenders to Religion" more injured the common-
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wealth than those "openly Profane." At one point James Franklin was imprisoned
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for similar statements, and Benjamin carried on the paper himself. Having thus
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learned to resist oppression, Benjamin refused to suffer his brother's own
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domineering qualities and in 1723 ran away to Philadelphia.
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Though penniless and unknown, Franklin soon found a job as a printer. After a
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year he went to England, where he became a master printer, sowed some wild oats,
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astonished Londoners with his swimming feats, and lived among the aspiring
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writers of London. Returning to Philadelphia in 1726, he soon owned his own
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newspaper, the Pennsylvania Gazette, and began to print Poor Richard's Almanack
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(1732). His business expanded further when he contracted to do the public
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printing of the province, and established partnerships with printers in other
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colonies.
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He also operated a book shop and became clerk of the Pennsylvania Assembly and
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postmaster of Philadelphia. In 1748, Franklin, aged 42, retired to live comfor-
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tably off the income from his business, managed by others, for 20 years.
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In the sayings of "Poor Richard" like "Early to bed and early to rise make a man
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healthy, wealthy, and wise" and in his scheme for moral virtue later set out in
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his famous Autobiography, Franklin summarized his view of how the poor man may
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improve himself by hard work, thrift, and honesty. Poor Richard's Almanack sold
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widely in North America, and a summarized version known as The Way to Wealth was
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translated into many languages.
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CIVIC LEADER AND SCIENTIST
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In 1727, Franklin began his career as a civic leader by organizing a club of
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aspiring tradesmen called the Junto, which met each week for discussion and
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planning. They aspired to build their own businesses, insure the growth of
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Philadelphia, and improve the quality of its life. Franklin thus led the Junto
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in founding a library (1731), a fire company (1736), a learned society (1743), a
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college (later the University of Pennsylvania, 1749), and an insurance company
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and a hospital (1751). The group also carried out plans for paving, cleaning,
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and lighting the streets and for making them safe by organizing an efficient
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nightwatch. They even formed a voluntary militia.
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Franklin began yet another career when in 1740 he invented the Pennsylvania
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fireplace, later called the Franklin stove, which soon heated buildings all over
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Europe and North America. He also read treaties on electricity and began a
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series of experiments with his friends in Philadelphia. Experiments he proposed,
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first tried in France in 1752, showed that lightning was in fact a form of
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electricity. Later that year his famous kite experiment, in which he flew a kite
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with the wire attached to a key during a thunderstorm, further established that
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laboratory-produced static electricity was akin to a previously mysterious and
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terrifying natural phenomenon. When the Royal Society in London published these
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discoveries, and the lightning rods he soon invented appeared on buildings all
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over America and Europe, Franklin became world famous. He was elected to the
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Royal Society in 1756 and to the French Academy of Sciences in 1772. His later
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achievements included formulating a theory of heat absorption, measuring the
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Gulf Stream, designing ships, tracking storm paths, and inventing bifocal
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lenses.
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POLITICIAN AND PROVINCIAL AGENT
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In 1751, Franklin was elected to the Pennsylvania Assembly, thus beginning
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nearly 40 years as a public official. He intended at first merely to enlist
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political support for his various civic enterprises, but partisan politics soon
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engulfed him. He opposed the Proprietary party that sought to preserve the power
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of the Penn family in Pennsylvania affairs, and as the legislative strategist
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and penman for the so-called Quaker party, he defended the powers of the elected
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representatives of the people. Franklin thus knew the virtues of self-government
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a generation before the Declaration of Independence.
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Franklin did not at first, however, contemplate separation from Britain, which
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he regarded as having the freest, best government in the world. In the Plan of
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Union, which he presented (1754) to the Albany Congress, he proposed partial
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self-government for the American colonies. A year later Franklin supported the
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ill-fated expedition of Gen. Edward Braddock to recapture Fort Duquesne, and he
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persuaded the Quaker-dominated Pennsylvania Assembly to pass the colony's first
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militia law. He himself led a military expedition to the Lehigh Valley, where he
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established forts to protect frontiersmen from French and Indian raiders. As
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Franklin helped the empire fight for its life, however, he saw that colonial and
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ministerial ideas of governing the colonies were far apart. When he went to
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England in 1757 as agent of the Pennsylvania Assembly, he was alarmed to hear
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Lord Granville, president of the Privy Council, declare that for the colonies,
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the king's instructions were "the Law of the Land: for the King is the Legis-
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lator of the Colonies."
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In England from 1757 to 1762, Franklin worked to persuade British officials to
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limit proprietary power in Pennsylvania. He also immensely enjoyed English
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social and intellectual life. He attended meetings of the Royal Society, visited
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David Hume in Scotland, heard great orchestras play the works of Handel, made
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grand tours of the continent, and received honorary doctor's degrees from the
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universities of St. Andrews (1759) and Oxford (1762).
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He created a pleasant family-style life at his Craven Street boarding house in
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London, and began a long friendship and scientific-humorous correspondence with
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his landlady's daughter, Mary Stevenson. Their letters reveal his gifts for
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lively friendship, for brilliant letter writing, and for humane understanding.
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At home from 1762 to 1764, Franklin traveled throughout the colonies, reorganiz-
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ing the American postal system. He also built a new house on Market Street in
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Philadelphia--now reconstructed and open to visitors--and otherwise provided for
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his family, which included the former Deborah Read, his wife since 1730; their
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daughter Sally, who married Richard Bache and had a large family of her own; and
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his illegitimate son, William. Though he was appointed governor of New Jersey in
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1762, William became a Loyalist during the American Revolution, completely
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estranged from his father.
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As an influential politician, Franklin opposed the bloody revenges of frontier
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people against innocent Indians after Pontiac's Rebellion (1763) and helped to
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defend Philadelphia when the angry pioneers threatened its peace. In 1764 he
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lost his seat in the assembly in an especially scurrilous campaign. However, his
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party sent him to England in 1764 to petition that Pennsylvania be taken over as
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a royal colony.
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DEFENDER OF AMERICAN RIGHTS
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The crisis precipitated by the Stamp Act (1765) pushed that effort into the
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background and propelled Franklin into a new role as chief defender of American
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rights in Britain. At first he advised obedience to the act until it could be
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repealed, but news of violent protest against it in America stiffened his own
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opposition. After repeal of the Stamp Act, Franklin reaffirmed his love for the
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British Empire and his desire to see the union of mother country and colonies
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"secured and established," but he also warned that "the seeds of liberty are
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universally found and nothing can eradicate them." He opposed the Townshend
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Acts (1767) because such "acts of oppression" would "sour American tempers" and
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perhaps even "hasten their final revolt." When the British Parliament passed the
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Tea Act (1773), which hurt the colonial merchants, Franklin protested in a
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series of finely honed political essays, including "An Edict by the King of
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Prussia" and "Rules by Which a Great Empire May Be Reduced to a Small One." As
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these satires circulated in England, Franklin wrote his sister: "I have held up
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a Looking-Glass in which some of the Ministers may see their ugly faces, and the
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Nation its Injustice."
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In 1773, Franklin's friends in Massachusetts, against his instructions, publi-
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shed letters by Gov. Thomas Hutchinson that Franklin had obtained in confidence.
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Apparently exposed as a dishonest schemer, Franklin was denounced before the
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Privy Council in January 1774 and stripped of his postmaster general's office.
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Although he continued to work for conciliation, the Boston Tea Party and
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Britain's oppressive response to it soon doomed such efforts. In March 1775,
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Franklin sailed for home, sure "the extream corruption . . . in this old rotten
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State" would ensure "more Mischief than Benefit from a closer Union" between
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Britain and its colonies.
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>From April 1775 to October 1776, Franklin served on the Pennsylvania Committee
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of Safety and in the Continental Congress, submitted articles of confederation
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for the united colonies, proposed a new constitution for Pennsylvania, and
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helped draft the Declaration of Independence. He readily signed the declaration,
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thus becoming a revolutionist at the age of 70.
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DIPLOMAT
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In October 1776, Franklin and his two grandsons sailed for France, where he
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achieved an amazing personal triumph and gained critical French aid for the
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Revolutionary War. Parisian literary and scientific circles hailed him as a
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living embodiment of Enlightenment virtues. Wigless and dressed in plain brown
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clothes, he was called le Bonhomme Richard. Franklin was at his best creating
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the legend of his life among the ladies of Paris, writing witty letters,
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printing bagatelles, and telling anecdotes.
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He moved slowly at first in his diplomacy. France wanted to injure Britain but
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could not afford to help the American rebels unless eventual success seemed
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assured. Franklin thus worked behind the scenes to send war supplies across the
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Atlantic, thwart British diplomacy, and make friends with influential French
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officials. He overcame his own doubts about the possibly dishonest dealings of
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his fellow commissioner Silas Deane in channeling war materials to American
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armies, but the third commissioner, Arthur Lee (1740-92), bitterly condemned
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both Deane and Franklin. Despite these quarrels, in February 1778, following
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news of the American victory at Saratoga, the three commissioners were able to
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sign the vital French alliance.
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Franklin then became the first American minister to France. For seven years he
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acted as diplomat, purchasing agent, recruiting officer, loan negotiator,
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admiralty court, and intelligence chief and was generally the main representa-
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tive of the new United States in Europe. Though nearly 80 years old, he oversaw
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the dispatch of French armies and navies to North America, supplied American
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armies with French munitions, outfitted John Paul Jones--whose famous ship the
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Bonhomme Richard was named in Franklin's honor--and secured a succession of
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loans from the nearly bankrupt French treasury.
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After the loss at Yorktown (1781) finally persuaded British leaders that they
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could not win the war, Franklin made secret contact with peace negotiators sent
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from London. In these delicate negotiations he proposed treaty articles close to
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those finally agreed to: complete American independence, access to the New-
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foundland fishing grounds, evacuation of British forces from all occupied areas,
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and a western boundary on the Mississippi. Together with John Jay, Franklin
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represented the United States in signing the Treaty of Paris (Sept. 3, 1783), by
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which the world's foremost military power recognized the independence of the new
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nation.
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Franklin traveled home in 1785. Though in his 80th year and suffering from
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painful bladder stones, he nonetheless accepted election for three years as
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president of Pennsylvania and resumed active roles in the Pennsylvania Society
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for Promoting the Abolition of Slavery, the American Philosophical Society,
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and the University of Pennsylvania. At the Constitutional Convention of 1787,
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although he was too weak to stand, Franklin's good humor and gift for compromise
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often helped to prevent bitter disputes.
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Franklin's final public pronouncements urged ratification of the Constitution
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and approved the inauguration of the new federal government under his admired
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friend George Washington. He wrote friends in France that "we are making
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Experiments in Politicks," but that American "affairs mend daily and are
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getting into good order very fast." Thus, cheerful and optimistic as always,
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Benjamin Franklin died in Philadelphia on Apr. 17, 1790.
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RALPH KETCHAM
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
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Crane, Verner W.- BENJAMIN FRANKLIN AND A RISING PEOPLE (1954; repr. 1962)
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Franklin, Benjamin - AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, ed. by L.W. Labaree
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et al. (1964)
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Hawke, David F. - FRANKLIN (1976)
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Ketcham, R. L. - BENJAMIN FRANKLIN (1965)
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Labaree, Leonard W. - et al., eds., THE PAPERS OF BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, 16 vols.
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to date (1959-1977)
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Lopez, Claude-Anne, and Herbert, E. W. - THE PRIVATE FRANKLIN (1975)
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Van Doren, Carl - BENJAMIN FRANKLIN (1938; repr. 1973)
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'Copyright 1987, Grolier Inc, Academic American Encyclopedia,
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Electronic Version'
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USED BY PERMISSION, granted January 9, 1988
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Newsgroups: freenet.shrine.songs
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From: aa300 (Jerry Murphy)
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Subject: BEN FRANKLIN'S EPITAPH
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Date: Wed, 24 Jan 90 15:48:15 EST
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The Body
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of
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Benjamin Franklin
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Printer
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(Like the cover of an old book
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Its contents torn out
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And stript of its lettering and gilding)
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Lies here, food for worms.
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But the work shall not be lost
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For it will (as he believed) appear once more
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In a new and more elegant edition
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Revised and corrected
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by
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The Author.
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(Written in 1728, when Franklin was 23 years old.)
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