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 8 of 8)
Franklin was elderly and ailing, but there was a certain logic to the choice. Though he had visited there only twice, he was the most famous and most respected American in France. In addition, Franklin had held confidential talks in Philadelphia over the past year with a variety of French intermediaries and believed that France would be willing to support the American rebellion. Franklin professed to accept the assignment reluctantly. “I am old and good for nothing,” he said to his friend Benjamin Rush, who was sitting next to him in the Congress. “But as the storekeepers say of their remnants of cloth, I am but a fag end, and you may have me for what you are pleased to give.” But he was secretly pleased.
He knew he would love Paris, and it would be safer than America with the outcome of war so unclear. (Howe was edging closer to Philadelphia at the time.) Indeed, a few of Franklin’s enemies, including the British ambassador to Paris, thought he was finding a pretense to flee the danger.
Such suspicions were probably too harsh. If personal safety were his prime concern, a wartime crossing of an ocean controlled by the enemy’s navy at his advanced age while plagued with gout and kidney stones was hardly the best course. Surely the opportunity to serve his country, and the chance to live and be feted in Paris, were reasons enough. Before departing, he withdrew more than £3,000 from his bank account and lent it to the Congress for prosecuting the war.
His grandsonTemple had been spending the summer taking care of his forlorn stepmother in New Jersey. The arrest of her husband had left Elizabeth Franklin, who was fragile in the best of times, completely distraught. Benjamin sent some money to Elizabeth, but she begged for something more. Couldn’t he “parole” William so he could return to his family? Franklin refused, and dismissed her complaints about her plight by noting that others were suffering far worse at the hands of the British.
Temple was more sympathetic. In early September, he made plans to travel to Connecticut to visit his captive father and bring him a letter from Elizabeth. But Franklin forbade him to go. Less than a week later he cryptically wrote Temple: “I hope you will return hither immediately and your mother will make no objections to it. Something offering here that will be much to your advantage.”
In deciding to take Temple to France, Franklin never consulted with Elizabeth, who would die a year later without seeing either her husband or stepson again. Nor did he inform William, who did not learn until later of the departure of his only son, a lad he had gotten to know for only a year.
Franklin also decided to take along his other grandson, his daughter’s son, Benny Bache. So it was an odd trio that set sail on October 27, 1776, aboard a cramped but speedy American warship aptly named Reprisal: a restless old man about to turn 71, plagued by poor health but still ambitious and adventurous, heading for a land from whence he was convinced he would never return, accompanied by a high-spirited, frivolous lad of about 17 and a brooding, eager-to-please child of 7. Two years later, writing of Temple but using words that applied to both boys, Franklin explained one reason he had wanted them along: “If I die, I have a child to close my eyes.”
In France, Franklin engaged in secret negotiations and brought France into the war on the side of the colonies. France provided money and, by war’s end, some 44,000 troops to the revolutionaries. Franklin stayed on as minister plenipotentiary, and in 1783 signed the Treaty of Paris that ended the war. He returned to the United States two years later. Then, as an 81- year-old delegate to the federal Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia in 1787, Franklin played perhaps his most important political role: urging compromise between the large and small states in order to have a Senate that represented each state equally and a House proportional by population. He knew that compromisers may not make great heroes, but they do make great democracies. He died in 1790 at age 84.
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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
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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
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Posted by alyssa krohnberg on February 28,2009 | 09:45 AM
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Posted by brandon on February 7,2009 | 09:30 PM
What did Benjamin Franklin do and what was his importance!?!?!?
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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.
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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