Benjamin Franklin.
Possibly there never has lived a man who has excited more comment than has
the subject of this narrative, who was born in Boston, January 17th, 1706. His
father was a soap boiler and tallow chandler, and he was the fifteenth in a family of seventeen children.
Young Benjamin was expected by his parents to become a minister of the
Gospel, and for this purpose was placed in school at the age of eight, but the
reduced circumstances of his father compelled his return home two years later,
and he began the work of cutting wicks in his father's establishment. Afterwards
he was bound to his brother James, who was a printer, where he worked hard all
day, and often spent half the night in reading.
The secret of his great success can be readily perceived, when we know that
his favorite books were [Cotton] Mather's "Essays to Do Good," and [Daniel] DeFoe's "Essays of
Projects," and many others of a like nature: instead of the modern "Three
Fingered Jack," "Calamity Jane," "The Queen of the Plains," or the more 'refined' of to-day's juvenile reading.
When he was about sixteen he wrote, in a disguised hand, an article for his
brother's paper. This article was published anonymously, and excited great
curiosity. Other articles followed, at length the identity of the author was
discovered, and for some unknown reason the elder brother was offended. From
that hour Benjamin resolved to leave Boston, as his brother's influence was used
to his disadvantage in that city.[428]
Embarking, he worked his passage to New York, where he arrived at the age of
seventeen, almost penniless, and without recommendations. Failing to obtain work
here he continued on to Philadelphia, where he arrived, disappointed but not
discouraged. He now had but one dollar, and a few copper coins, in the world.
Being hungry, he bought some bread, and with one roll under either arm, and
eating the third, he passed up the street on which his destined wife lived, and
she beheld him as he presented this ridiculous appearance. Obtaining employment,
he secured board and lodging with Mr. Reed [Read], afterward his father-in-law.
Being induced to think of going into business for himself, through promises
of financial help from influential parties, he sailed to London for the purpose
of buying the necessary requisites for a printing office. Not until his arrival
in that great city, London, did he learn of the groundlessness of his hope for
aid from the expected quarter. In a strange land, friendless and alone, without
money to pay his return passage, such was his predicament; yet he lost not his
courage, but obtained employment as a printer, writing his betrothed that he
should likely never return to America. His stay in London lasted, however, but
about eighteen months, during which time he succeeded in reforming some of his beer-drinking companions.
In 1826 he returned to America as a dry-goods clerk, but the death of his
employer fortunately turned his attention once more to his especial calling, and
he soon after formed a partnership with a Mr. [Hugh] Meredith. This was in 1728. Miss
Reed, during his stay abroad, had been induced to marry another man who proved
to be a scoundrel; leaving her to escape punishment for debt,[429] and, it is alleged, with an
indictment for bigamy hanging over his head. Franklin attributed much of this
misfortune to himself, and resolved to repair the injury so far as lay within
his power. Accordingly he married her in 1830. This proved a most happy union.
His business connection with Mr. Meredith being dissolved, he purchased the
miserably conducted sheet of Mr. Keimer, his former employer, and under
Franklin's management it became a somewhat influential journal of opinion.
It was through this channel that those homely sayings, with such rich
meanings, first appeared in print. His great intelligence, industry and
ingenuity in devising reforms, and the establishment of the first circulating
library, soon won for him the esteem of the entire country. 1732 is memorable as
the year in which appeared his almanac in which was published the sayings of the
world-famous 'Poor Richard.' This almanac abounded with aphorisms and quaint
sayings, the influence of which tended mightily to economy, and it was
translated into foreign languages, in fact was the most popular almanac ever
printed.
After ten years' absence he returned to his native city, Boston, and his
noble instincts were shown, as he consolingly promised his dying brother that
he would care for his nephew, his brother's son. Returning to Philadelphia he
became postmaster of that city, established a fire department, becomes a member
of the Assembly, to which office he is elected ten consecutive years.
Although he was not an orator, no man wielded more influence over the
legislative department than did Franklin. As is well-known, he invented the
celebrated Franklin Stove, which proved so economical, and for[430] which he refused a patent. For
years he entertained the theory that galvanic electricity, and that which
produced lightning and thunder were identical; but it was not until 1752 that he
demonstrated the truth by an original but ingenious contrivance attached to a
kite, and to Franklin we owe the honor of inventing the lightning rod, but not
its abuse which has caused such widespread animosity to that valuable instrument
of self-preservation.
These discoveries made the name of Franklin respected throughout the
scientific world. Forever after this period, during his life, he was connected
with national affairs. At one time he was offered a commission as General in the
Provincial Army, but distrusting his military qualifications he unequivocally
declined. Sir Humphrey Davy said: "Franklin seeks rather to make philosophy a
useful inmate and servant in the common habitations of man, than to preserve her
merely as an object for admiration in temples and palaces." While it is said of
him by some that he always had a keen eye to his own interests all are forced to
add he ever had a benevolent concern for the public welfare.
The burdens bearing so heavily upon the colonies: Pennsylvania, Maryland,
Georgia, and Massachusetts, appointed Franklin as their agent to the
mother-country. Arriving in London in 1757, despite his mission, honors awaited
him at every turn. There he associated with the greatest men of his time, and
the universities of Edinburgh and Oxford honored him with the title of L.L.D.
and the poor journeyman printer of a few years before, associated with princes
and kings. At the end of five years he returned to America, and in 1762 received
the official thanks of the Assembly. Two years later he was[431] again sent to
England, and he opposed the obnoxious stamp act, and where he carried himself
with decorum and great ability before the entire nobility. Upon his return to
America he was made a member of the Assembly the day he landed, where he
exerted his whole influence for a Declaration of Independence, and soon after
had the pleasure of signing such a document.
In 1776 Congress sent him to France, where he became one of the greatest
diplomats this country has ever known. During his voyage over he made
observations relative to the Gulf Stream, and the chart he drew of it nearly
one hundred years ago, still forms the basis of maps on the subject. As is well
known, to Franklin more than all others, are we indebted for the kindly
interference by France in our behalf, whose efforts, though ineffective in the
field, helped the revolutionary cause wonderfully in gaining prestige. At the
close of the war Franklin was one of the commissioners in framing that treaty
which recognized American independence. His simple winning ways won for him
admiration in any court of embroidery and lace, while his world-wide reputation
as a philosopher and statesman won for him a circle of acquaintances of the most
varied character. On the 17th of April, 1790, this great statesman died, and
fully 20,000 people followed him to the tomb. The inscription he had designed
read:
"The body of Benjamin Franklin, printer; Like the cover of an
old book— Its contents torn out, and script of its lettering and gilding: Lies
here food for worms."
Yet the work itself shall not be lost. For it will, as he believed, appear
once more, in a new and more beautiful edition, corrected and amended by the
Author.[432]
Truly, America has been rich in great men, of which Franklin was not the least.
Dr. Franklin, in his will, left his native town of Boston, the sum of one
thousand pounds, to be lent to the young married artificers upon good security
and under odd conditions. If the plan should be carried out as successfully as
he expected, he reckoned that this sum would amount in one hundred years to one
hundred and thirty-one thousand pounds. It was his wish, and so expressed in his
will that one hundred thousand pounds should be spent upon public works, "which
may then be judged of most general utility to the inhabitants; such as
fortifications, bridges, aqueducts, public buildings, baths, pavements, or
whatever makes living in the town more convenient to its people, and renders it
more agreeable to strangers resorting thither for health or temporary
residence." It was also his wish that the remaining thirty-one thousand pounds
should again be put upon interest for another hundred years, at the end of which
time the whole amount was to be divided between the city and the State. The
bequest at the end of the first one hundred years may not attain the exact
figure he calculated, but it is sure to be a large sum. At the present time it
is more than one hundred and seventy-five thousand dollars, and it has many
years yet to run.[433]
Memorial for Benjamin Franklin