17 April 1790 A.D. PHILADELPHIA: Death: Benjamin Franklin at Age 84—American Seditionist & Rebel, Printer, & Scientist
17
April 1790 A.D. PHILADELPHIA: Death: Benjamin Franklin at Age 84—American
Seditionist, Printer, & Scientist
Editors. “1790 – American
statesman, printer, scientist, and writer Benjamin Franklin dies in
Philadelphia at age 84.” This Day in
U.S. Military History. N.d. https://thisdayinusmilhist.wordpress.com/2014/04/17/april-17/. Accessed 16 Apr 2015.
1790 – American
statesman, printer, scientist, and writer Benjamin Franklin dies in
Philadelphia at age 84. Born in Boston in 1706, Franklin became at 12 years
old an apprentice to his half brother James, a printer and publisher. He
learned the printing trade and in 1723 went to Philadelphia to work after a
dispute with his brother. After a sojourn in London, he started a printing and
publishing press with a friend in 1728. In 1729, the company won a contract to
publish Pennsylvania’s paper currency and also began publishing the
Pennsylvania Gazette, which was regarded as one of the better colonial
newspapers. From 1732 to 1757, he wrote and published Poor Richard’s Almanack, an
instructive and humorous periodical in which Franklin coined such practical
American proverbs as “God helps those who help themselves” and “Early to bed
and early to rise, makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise.” As his own wealth
and prestige grew, Franklin took on greater civic responsibilities in
Philadelphia and helped establish the city’s first circulating library, police
force, volunteer fire company, and an academy that became the University of
Pennsylvania. From 1737 to 1753, he was postmaster of Philadelphia and during
this time also served as a clerk of the Pennsylvania legislature. In 1753, he
became deputy postmaster general, in charge of mail in all the northern
colonies. Deeply interesting in science and technology, he invented the Franklin
stove, which is still manufactured today, and bifocal eyeglasses, among other
practical inventions. In 1748, he turned his printing business over to his
partner so he would have more time for his experiments. The phenomenon of
electricity fascinated him, and in a dramatic experiment he flew a kite in a
thunderstorm to prove that lightning is an electrical discharge. He later
invented the lightning rod. Many terms used in discussing electricity,
including positive, negative, battery, and conductor, were coined by Franklin
in his scientific papers. He was the first American scientist to be highly
regarded in European scientific circles. Franklin was active in colonial
affairs and in 1754 proposed the union of the colonies, which was rejected by
Britain. In 1757, he went to London to argue for the right to tax the massive
estates of the Penn family in Pennsylvania, and in 1764 went again to ask for a
new charter for Pennsylvania. He was in England when Parliament passed the
Stamp Act, a taxation measure to raise revenues for a standing British army in
America. His initial failure to actively oppose the controversial act drew wide
criticism in the colonies, but he soon redeemed himself by stoutly defending
American rights before the House of Commons. With tensions between the American
colonies and Britain rising, he stayed on in London and served as agent for
several colonies. In 1775, he returned to America as the American Revolution
approached and was a delegate at the Continental Congress. In 1776, he helped draft
the Declaration of Independence and in July signed the final document.
Ironically, Franklin’s illegitimate son, William Franklin, whom Franklin and
his wife had raised, had at the same time emerged as a leader of the Loyalists.
In 1776, Congress sent Benjamin Franklin, one of the embattled United States’
most prominent statesmen, to France as a diplomat. Warmly embraced, he
succeeded in 1778 in securing two treaties that provided the Americans with
significant military and economic aid. In 1781, with French help, the British
were defeated. With John Jay and John Adams, Franklin then negotiated the
Treaty of Paris with Britain, which was signed in 1783. In 1785, Franklin
returned to the United States. In his last great public service, he was a
delegate to the Constitutional Convention of 1787 and worked hard for the
document’s ratification. After his death in 1790, Philadelphia gave him the
largest funeral the city had ever seen.
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