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Benjamin Franklin

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Title: Benjamin Franklin


1
Benjamin Franklin
  • (1706-1790)

2
Benjamin Franklin
  • Born in Boston on Jan. 17, 1706
  • The son of a soap maker, Franklin early rebelled
    against the narrowness of the life offered him in
    Boston.

3
Benjamin Franklin
  • Raised as Puritan, but rejected his parents
    religion in favor of Deism
  • Arrived at both his religious and social
    philosophies by his own experimentation and
    intelligence.
  • He only had approx. 1 yr. of formal schooling at
    the Boston Grammar School.
  • He eventually acquired learning from his own
    experience
  • vast readings in American, British, and West
    European books newspapers

4
Benjamin Franklin
  • Apprenticed to his brother James
  • Assisted in writing and printing of the NEW
    ENGLAND COURANT (1721-1723).
  • The brothers wrote satires of the Massachusetts
    authorities, and Franklin contributed essays
    (anonymously) that appeared under the pseudonym,
    SILENCE DOGOOD.

5
Benjamin Franklin
  • At age 17, after quarreling w/his brother, he
    secretly ran off to Philadelphia with only the
    clothes on his back.
  • He explains fully in his autobiography the
    reasons for his departure.
  • Partly he felt restricted by the censorship of
    the press
  • Partly because he had felt that his brother had
    exploited him in the role of apprentice-publisher.

6
Benjamin Franklin
  • Worked for a year in a printing house in
    Philadelphia.
  • With assistance by Gov. Keith, went to England
    for about 3 yrs. to seek his fortune.
  • Printing jobs there.
  • Returned in 1726 to Philadelphia and soon
    prospered as a printer.
  • He bought reformed a newspaper, The
    PENNSYLVANIA GAZETTE (1730),
  • started his own stationer's shop
  • rose to public prominence as the designated
    public printer for the colony

7
Benjamin Franklin
  • He married Deborah Read in 1730. (d. 1774)
  • Devoted, illiterate, and a good housewife, she
    bore him two children
  • Tolerant of her husband's infidelities
  • reared his illegitimate son William Franklin

8
Benjamin Franklin
  • 1731 started the Philadelphia Library, the
    first American circulating library.
  • 1732, he created POOR RICHARD'S ALMANAC.
  • It is perhaps the most sustained of his literary
    productions. Its proverbs illustrate his
    understanding that Puritan virtues had immense
    utilitarian value.
  • A Deist and Natural Rights philosopher believing
    in the perfectibility of man, he felt obligated
    to show others how they, too, could rise from
    rags to riches by consciously leading a frugal,
    industrious life.

9
Benjamin Franklin
  • As his wealth increased, he earned a deserved
    reputation as a promoter of benevolent projects
    in Philly.
  • his civic accomplishments led to his involvement
    in local politics.
  • By 1748, at age 42, he felt wealthy enough to
    retire from his business as a printer to devote
    himself to science and politics.
  • His most important discoveries were in the new
    field of electricity.
  • His experiments led to the discovery that
    lightning is a form of electricity and to a
    theory of electricity which forms the basis of
    our modern understanding of it.
  • His scientific achievements in this area brought
    him international acclaim.

10
Benjamin Franklin
  • Soon, his growing involvement in politics
    overshadowed his interest in science.
  • At the Albany Congress of 1754, he advanced his
    prophetic plan of union which embodied the
    federal principle.
  • He always asserted that adoption of his plan,
    rejected by the colonies and Parliament, would
    have averted the American Revolution.
  • He became a leading member of the Pennsylvania
    Assembly, and in 1757 he was sent to England to
    present the Assembly's grievances against the
    Proprietors of Pennsylvania.

11
Benjamin Franklin
  • In England, he gradually found himself caught up
    in the battle against Parliament's attempts to
    legislate for the colonies.
  • He helped to repeal the Stamp Act as an
    impractical measure
  • Many of his finest satires and political essays
    date from this period.
  • Left England in 1775 and returned to find America
    at war.
  • As a member of the Second Continental Congress
    and later as America's minister to France, he
    gained his greatest fame.

12
Benjamin Franklin
  • His plan for the union was the single strongest
    influence on the Articles of the Confederation
    and his 1776 Constitution for Pennsylvania
    afforded practical examples of the operation of
    the unicameral legislature, an executive of weak
    powers, and a denial of compulsive force by
    central authority - all soon to be features of
    the new federal govt.

13
Benjamin Franklin
  • 1778 Went to France helped win recognition of
    the United States' independence and a treaty of
    alliance with France.
  • Helped John Adams John Jay formed a Peace
    Commission W/Great Britain.
  • .

14
Benjamin Franklin
  • Began his Autobiography in 1771 at Twyford,
    England. Completed his memoirs up to the year
    1757.
  • to guide his son William
  • He died in Philadelphia on April 17, 1790

15
Benjamin Franklin
  • His style that evolved was a result of his
    journalistic work of necessity clear and
    forceful, plain and brief.
  • His practical-minded readers found it free of
    nonsense but full of moralizing.
  • In his essay ON LITERARY STYLE three requirements
    for good writing that it be "smooth, clear and
    short"

16
Benjamin Franklin
  • His career as a printer in Philly encompassed
    three large journalistic projects during a span
    of about 12 years
  • The PENNSYLVANIA GAZETTE (a newspaper)
  • POOR RICHARD'S ALMANACK
  • GENERAL MAGAZINE AND HISTORICAL CHRONICLE

17
Benjamin Franklin
  • For volume and rapidity of production few writers
    have matched Franklin. An estimate is that the
    number of documents written by him numbers in the
    vicinity of 20,000.

18
Benjamin Franklin
  • Much of his writing is satirical fun, usually in
    the form of essays or letters to the editor.
  • He tried to make himself morally perfect by
    self-discipline. He failed to do so, but he did
    carry out another kind of self-transformation.
    By hard work and cleverness, he changed himself
    from the poorly educated son of a candle and soap
    maker into a world-famous scientist, diplomat,
    philosopher, and writer.

19
Benjamin Franklin
  • The contrast between Franklin's humble beginnings
    and his vast success has made him a symbol of
    America.
  • He is perhaps America's least appreciated major
    writer. His achievements in other fields usually
    take precedence over his achievements as an
    essayist, satirist, political controversialist,
    letter writer, and autobiographer.

20
Benjamin Franklins Autobiography
  • Each of the 3 parts of Franklin's AUTOBIOGRAPHY
    reflects the time and circumstances of its
    composition.
  • When Franklin wrote the first portion while
    visiting the Shipleys in Hampshire, he liked
    England. He was enjoying a welcome period of
    relief from his official duties, and he assumed
    the role of a retired country gentlemen giving a
    private acct. of his unusual and adventurous
    history.

21
Benjamin Franklin
  • The piece began to take the shape of a short
    picturesque novel. It has the young Benjamin
    Franklin as a hero.
  • themes are
  • his ambition to be in business for himself
  • his education in writing
  • his inner struggle over religious questions
  • his uneven progress toward marriage

22
Benjamin Franklin
  • the older Franklin publicize his youth and also
    demonstrate to himself a continuity between the
    retired gentleman who is writing and the boy and
    young man who was already receiving attention
    from men like himself.
  • There is a distinct juxtaposition of youth and
    age in this part of the Autobiography, symbolized
    by the device of writing it as a letter to his
    son William.
  • One is led to believe that William was about the
    age of the young Benjamin, somewhere in his teens
    or twenties
  • in 1771, he was about 40 yrs. old and Gov. of NJ

23
Benjamin Franklin
  • First edition published in France in 1791
  • The first English translation, "The Private Life
    of the Late Benjamin Franklin, LL.D. Originally
    Written By Himself, And Now Translated From The
    French," was published in London in 1793.

24
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