Benjamin Franklin Joins the Revolution
Returning to Philadelphia from England in 1775, the "wisest American" kept his political leanings to himself. But not for long
- By Walter Isaacson
- Smithsonian.com, August 01, 2003, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 8)
Benjamin and William chose a neutral venue for their summit: Trevose, Galloway’s grand fieldstone manor house north of Philadelphia. The evening started awkwardly, with embraces and then small talk. At one point, William pulled Galloway aside to say that he had avoided, until now, seriously talking politics with his father. But after a while, “the glass having gone around freely” and much Madeira consumed, they confronted their political disagreements.
William argued that it was best for them all to remain neutral, but his father was not moved. Benjamin “opened himself and declared in favor of measures for attaining to independence” and “exclaimed against the corruption and dissipation of the kingdom.” William responded with anger, but also with a touch of concern for his father’s safety. If he intended “to set the colonies in flame,” William said, he should “take care to run away by the light of it.”
So William, with Temple at his side, rode back to New Jersey, defeated and dejected, to resume his duties as royal governor. The boy would spend the summer in New Jersey, then return to Philadelphia to be enrolled in the college his grandfather had founded there, the University of Pennsylvania. William had hoped to send him to King’s College (now Columbia) in New York City, but Benjamin scuttled that plan because he believed the school had become a hotbed of English loyalism.
It is hard to pinpoint when America decided that complete independence from Britain was necessary and desirable. Franklin, who for ten years had alternately hoped and despaired that a breach could be avoided, made his own private declaration to his family at Trevose. By early July 1775, a year before his fellow American patriots made their own stance official, he was ready to go public with his decision.
But it is important to note the causes of Franklin’s evolution and, by extension, that of a people he had come to exemplify. Englishmen such as his father who had immigrated to a new land gave rise to a new type of people. As Franklin repeatedly stressed in letters to his son, America’s strength would be its proud middling people, a class of frugal and industrious shopkeepers and tradesmen who were assertive of their rights and proud of their status. Like many of these new Americans, Franklin chafed at authority. He was not awed by established elites. He was cheeky in his writings and rebellious in his manner. And he had imbibed the philosophy of the new Enlightenment thinkers, who believed that liberty and tolerance were the foundation for a civil society.
For a long time he had cherished a vision in which Britain and America flourished in one great expanding empire. But he felt that it would work only if Britain stopped subjugating Americans through mercantile trading rules and taxes imposed from afar. Once it was clear that Britain remained intent on subordinating the colonies, the only course left was independence.
The bloody Battle of Bunker Hill and the burning of Charleston, both in June 1775, further inflamed the hostility that Franklin and his fellow patriots felt toward the British. Nevertheless, most members of the Continental Congress were not quite as far down the road to revolution. Many colonial legislatures, including Pennsylvania’s, had instructed their delegates to resist any calls for independence.
On July 5, the same day that Franklin signed the Olive Branch Petition, which blamed Britain’s “irksome” and “delusive” ministers for the troubles and “beseeched” the king to come to America’s rescue, he made his rebellious sentiments public. In a letter to his longtime London friend (and fellow printer) William Strahan, he wrote in cold and calculated fury: “You are a Member of Parliament, and one of that Majority which has doomed my country to destruction. You have begun to burn our towns, and murder our people. Look upon your hands! They are stained with the blood of your relations! You and I were long friends: You are now my enemy, and I am Yours. B. Franklin.”
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Comments (15)
did benjamin build fort fractions? what is fort fractions?
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Posted by Anne on December 3,2012 | 12:08 PM
Thank you for this info.
Posted by wardjule on November 9,2012 | 10:13 AM
what did ben do after the revoloution
Posted by bob on April 24,2012 | 12:03 PM
this really helped me with my project...
Posted by inderia on May 13,2010 | 06:47 PM
need more light or insight on archaeology based histories.
Posted by emmem on April 13,2010 | 07:26 AM
Hi,me and my friend in school are doing a report on benjamin franklin. We have to find out the date of his birthday, and the date of his death. We also have to find out what his was famous for, we have to find out his early life and the late part of his life and i think this is the perfect website to find out all the information we need.
Posted by alyssa krohnberg on February 28,2009 | 09:45 AM
i loved the history of him.
Posted by brandon on February 7,2009 | 09:30 PM
What did Benjamin Franklin do and what was his importance!?!?!?
Posted by Angie on January 27,2009 | 01:57 PM
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Posted by bryan hill on January 10,2009 | 02:41 PM
Enjoyed some fill in stories on Ben Franklin. Recently finished a very good biography.Also I just returned from South America where I acquired a early 19th century bronze bust of Franklin by a french sculptor named F. Barbedienne. The antique dealer in Buenos Aires had no idea who the subject was. With your article I now have a wonderfully rounded biograhy of America's first modern man. Deane Knox, Denver, Co.
Posted by Deane L. Knox on December 29,2008 | 06:57 PM
Wow! Thanks for giving me that information! It really helped a lot!
Posted by Hannah Keyt on December 15,2008 | 10:54 AM
how many things did benjamin franklin made when he was alive
Posted by maya nelson on December 5,2008 | 12:01 PM
Benjamin Franklin was one of the last of the great polymaths of his age, and besides being the only signatory of all of the founding documents, in my opinion, he ranks as one of the greatest of all Americans. Likely he and Thomas Jefferson would be in a rage at the state of our government today, given the incompetence and corruption of our current government. All the things Ben stood for in regards to life, liberty, trust and truth of government, and individual freedom are to which we should look when we see the attempts of the Bush administration to trample our individual rights, and lie repeatedly to us about their actions in administration of our country. I have read some exceptionally fine articles on your site about the founding fathers and they renew my inspiration in our original constitution, our roots as a nation of people and country, and renew my determination to see all Americans rid ourselves of the plague of our current government, which abuses every aspect of our great country and its foundings.
Posted by James on July 6,2008 | 08:46 PM