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Rising Sun
by Margaret Gabbard
The men affectionately remembered, as
America’s Founding Fathers did nothing less than overthrow the
world’s greatest power and establish an independent nation based upon
the principles of individual liberty for the first time in the history
of the world.
It took this remarkable combination of men to achieve this. If you take
anyone of our Founding Fathers away, the American Revolution most surely
would have concluded differently. Imagine winning the revolutionary war
without the leadership of George Washington, or the creation of the
Declaration of Independence without the wisdom and brilliant expression
of Thomas Jefferson, or the meticulously crafted Constitution without
the insight of James Madison.
One man in this unique class of Founding
Fathers, however, stands out not only for his individual deeds, but also
because he was the only patriot involved in all it’s major events. It
is Benjamin Franklin. Franklin’s life, born in 1706 and deceased in
1790, spans the entire revolutionary period, and he had his hand in
every facet of the development of this new nation, from the colonial
uprising to the final ratification of the new nation’s governing
document, the United States Constitution.
It was Thomas Jefferson who predicted that of
all the revolutionary leaders Benjamin Franklin would be remembered long
after he and the others were forgotten because they recognized that
Franklin was indispensable to the establishment of America’s
independence. In a letter to William Smith after Franklin’s death,
Jefferson fondly remembered Franklin, “as our great and dear friend,
whom time will be making greater while it is sponging us from it’s
records.”
Franklin’s first political activities began as early as age 14 when he
was helping his brother James run the Boston Newspaper, The New England
Courant. Because of the paper’s political opinions, which were
critical of British rule, James was imprisoned for a short time while
the paper continued under Benjamin’s name. This early introduction
into politics was only the beginning for young Ben. By the time the
Stamp Act was passed in 1765, which sparked the colonist’s uprising,
Ben was 59 and had developed well-seasoned political opinions, which he
gladly shared with other colonists. He is credited with creating
America’s first political cartoon, published in order to galvanize the
support against British oppression. It is the famous drawing of the
snake cut into sections with the words “Join or Die,” inscribed.
Franklin left his Boston home at age 17 after
a disagreement with his brother James. He arrived in Philadelphia with
only a Dutch dollar and about a shilling in copper. Within seven years
he started The Pennsylvania Gazette and was an active community leader
in Philadelphia where he was busy organizing the many service
organizations he is credited with starting.
These include the first fire department and
night patrol in Philadelphia. He was our nation’s first Postmaster,
founded the Pennsylvania Hospital and the Library Company of
Philadelphia. But it was science that truly inspired him. He was
continually studying the discipline and took advantage of his official
trips to Europe as America’s Ambassador in order to consult with other
scientists. The result is the creation of several useful conveniences.
For instance, he invented the first stove of its kind, the Franklin
Stove, which unlike a fireplace could produce heat and direct the smoke
out of the dwelling. We are all familiar with the image of Ben flying a
kite with a metal key in a lighting storm. He was the first to prove
that lighting produced electricity.
Franklin was also a prolific writer. He had
published several papers including “Disertation on Liberty &
Necessity” before publishing his first book at age 26, Poor Richards
Almanac, which contains numerous popular sayings still common today,
such as “a penny saved, a penny earned.” The Poor Richard series was
so popular in its time that even John Paul Jones named his ship
“Bonhomme Richard,” which defeated the British “Serapis,” after
Franklin’s memorable character.
By age 42, Franklin had earned enough money
from his business ventures and inventions that he retired and devoted
much of his time to his political activities. As a member of the Second
Continental Congress, he was assigned to the Committee of Five along
with John Adams, Roger Sherman, Robert Livingston and a young Thomas
Jefferson who was only 33 at the time. The committee was charged with
the duty of writing the Declaration of Independence. After signing the
Declaration, Franklin’s diplomatic skills were called upon, and he was
dispatched to France to negotiate a critical alliance with the European
power.
Franklin was one of 17 children, and the
father of three. His first son was born out of wedlock to an unknown
mother. He later took Deborah Read Rogers as his common law wife where
he fathered a daughter and second son. His second son died at a young
age while Franklin disowned his eldest son for siding with the British.
Franklin lived
his long life without ever speaking to his son after
their disagreement.
Franklin also earned a reputation as a
philanderer, often seen in the European brothels while serving as
America’s Ambassador of France. Although Franklin claims his wife
changed his habits and made him an honest man, history has accounted for
this part of his life differently.
It is certain however, that Franklin was well
respected by his peers and his contributions to the Revolution were
instrumental in shaping American independence. Even at age 82, he was
deeply embroiled in the intellectual debate of America’s future, and
the type of government that would follow. He attended the Constitutional
Convention in Philadelphia where the delegates carefully debated every
word of the Constitution.
Franklin believed, as did many of the
delegates, that the newly crafted Constitution designed to replace the
Articles of Confederation gave the federal government too much power,
and he fought hard to shape it differently. Many of the delegates relied
upon Franklin’s aged wisdom and held back their own support because of
his concerns. But a few months before the final passage of the document,
Franklin made one of his last political contributions to the new nation
and threw his full support behind its passage.
“… I doubt too whether any other
Convention we can obtain, may be able to make a better Constitution. For
when you assemble a number of men to have the advantage of their joint
wisdom, you inevitably assemble with those men, all their prejudices,
their passions, their errors of opinion, their local interests, and
their selfish views. From such an assembly can a perfect production be
expected? It therefore astonishes me, Sir, to find this system
approaching so near to perfection as it does; … Thus I consent Sir, to
this Constitution because I expect no better, and because I am not sure,
that it is not the best. … On the whole, Sir, I can not help
expressing a wish that every member of the Convention who may still have
objections to it, would with me, on this occasion doubt a little of his
own infallibility, and to make manifest our unanimity, put his name to
this instrument.”
Franklin himself did not deliver the speech
but rather asked a colleague, James Wilson, to read it for him. His age
prohibited him from standing very long. He was too feeble to even walk
in and out of the hall each day. Instead he had prisoners carry him into
the Great Hall and prop him up in a chair. Most of his contributions
were written by him and delivered by another. But when the man who had
seen the Revolution from beginning to end gave approval for the great
document, it signaled a new era, and the beginning of a remarkable new
nation.
The Constitution was eventually adopted by the delegation, and as
Franklin sat watching each member sign their name on the nation’s new
Constitution, he remarked to one of his colleagues that during the
debates he often noticed the painting on the back of the Convention
Presidents chair, where George Washington presided. It was the painting
of half a sun. Franklin told his colleague that he had wondered if the
sun was rising or setting, and now he was certain it was rising.
Franklin’s last political role was as
President of the Society for Promoting the Abolition of Slavery. He was
one of several of the Founding Fathers that fought against the practice
throughout the debates believing slavery contradicted the principles of
individual liberty the nation was founded upon. But it was one political
battle they were unable to win. Still, Franklin never gave up and even
submitted resolutions abolishing slavery to the new government in his
last two years of life. He died April 17th, 1790.
As Franklin left Independence Hall after signing the United States
Constitution, a young citizen inquired: “What kind of government did
you give us? A monarchy or a republic?” Franklin responded “A
republic, if you can keep it!”
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