05/15/2026
As we go to look at this week’s Signer of the Declaration we come to a man who is perhaps the best known of all the Signers. As a matter of fact, there is so much information to distil, I might justly view my labor as making me a poor Richard. While his life had many shocks and jolts, it would not be accurate to say he discovered electricity. Many actions and quotes are accredited to him. Many he did and even some he did not. This week, as we look back, as though through bifocals, it’s all about the benjamins. Benjamin Franklin that is.
Franklin was born in 1706 in Boston, Massachusetts. He started grammar school at the age of eight, but by the time he was ten, he went to work and left formal education behind. At twelve, he apprenticed as a printer to his brother, James, and at 15, Benjamin, anonymously, published his first article. Through his satirical articles he poked fun at the people of Boston and commented on matters of the day including fashion, politics, merchant practices and education. He had written them under the pseudonym “Mrs. Silence Dogood.” James had not realized the letters were coming from his teenage brother. When the secret was revealed, Bejamin fled. He left Boston for New York and then Philadelphia at the age of sixteen.
Though Franklin’s time in formal education had been short, he educated himself. He was an avid reader. It is here that I will pause from our narrative to speak to you the reader directly for a moment. I have a question for you. How many of these gifted, intelligent individuals who educated themselves with books do we need to talk about before the lesson sinks in. Want to be smarter? Want the knowledge to make better informed decisions? If the answer is yes, I expect to see you at the library. Now, back to the story.
Eventually he would set up shop as a printer in Philadelphia. He published a newspaper, The Pennsylvania Gazette, and an annual, Poor Richard’s Almanack. Poor Richard’s gave us many quotes that we still use today such as “a penny saved is a penny earned.” Franklin prospered and at the age of forty-two he was able to leave the business under the control of a partner while he engaged in other pursuits. Among these pursuits, he created the first American hospital, library (I like him even more), and volunteer fire department. He helped lay the foundation for what would become the University of Pennsylvania. A number of inventions came from Franklin including bifocals and the lightning rod. He even delved into music by inventing the glass harmonica. Due to his work to improve the colonial mail system, Parliament appointed him as postmaster general. As early as 1736, he had worked as clerk for the Pennsylvania Assembly and was elected to a position in the body in 1751.
For all that he did at home in the colonies, it is worth remembering that he also spent many years living overseas in Europe. He first spent about eighteen months in England in his teenage years, but he returned for an extended stay in 1757. There he was able to represent colonial viewpoints to the English. In 1765, he was summoned before the House of Commons to explain the negative reaction to the Stamp Act which had taken place in the colonies. Eventually, in 1774, he got himself in hot water with the British authorities and returned to the colonies.
In 1775, Franklin became a member of the Continental Congress. Nearing the age of 70, he was the oldest man in the body and was the most widely famous. While serving, he was assigned to the committee that was to draft a Declaration of Independence. Beyond that, it was Franklin’s effort at persuasion that convinced one of Pennsylvania’s delegates to vote in favor of independence instead of against it. Franklin signed the Declaration on August 2, along with most of the Signers.
Not long after, Franklin was back overseas, but this time to France. Now he would use his gifts of persuasion to beseech France to aid the American colonists in their revolution. He was very popular in France and helped secure their assistance in the war effort. Unlike many of his fellow Signers who felt economic hardship during the war, Franklin actually grew his wealth. This is not to say though that Franklin felt no loss. Franklin’s first son, William, was the royal governor of New Jersey. William sided with the British and was imprisoned by Congress in January of 1776. His father refused to help him gain parole. William was eventually released in 1778, and the two men reconciled before Benjamin died.
Franklin wasn’t done signing important documents just yet. He helped develop the peace agreement between the United States and Great Britain, the Treaty of Paris, 1783. He got to put his name down on that document as well. Bidding farewell to his French friends, Franklin returned to the United States in 1785. Back home he helped craft the Constitution and signed it too. In 1790, at the age of eighty-four, Franklin at last shed his mortal coil. His days of working for the American cause were done, but for his toil, Americans will always remember him.
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D’Agnes, Joseph and Denise Kiernan. Signing Their Lives Away: The Fame and Misfortune of the Men Who Signed the Declaration of Independence. Philadelphia: Quirk Books. 2009.
“Signers of the Declaration: short biographies of each of the 56 Declaration signers: Benjamin Franklin.” July 4, 2004. https://www.ushistory.org/declaration/signers/franklin.html