Saturday, August 3, 2019
Benjamin Franklin :: Biography Biographies Benjamin Franklin Essays
Benjamin Franklin    In his many careers as a printer, moralist, essaylist, civic  leader, scientist, inventor, statesman, diplomat, and  philosopher, Benjamin Franklin Became both a spokesman  and a model for the national character of later generations  of Americans. After less than two years of formal  schooling, Franklin was pressed into his father's trade. At  the age of 16, Franklin wrote some pieces in a  courant,"Silence Dogwood." Though penniless and  unknown, Franklin soon found a job as a printer. Aafter a  year he went to England, where he became a master  printer, sowed some wild oats, astonished Londoners with  his swimming feats, and lived among the famous writers of  London. In 17227, Franklin began his career as a civic  leader by organizing a club of aspiring tradesmen called the  JJunto, which met each week for discussion and planning.    Franklin began yet another career when in 1740 he  invented the Pennsylvania fireplace, later called the Franklin  stove, which soon heated buildings all over Europe and  North America. He also read treaties on electricity and and  began a series of experiments with his friends in  Philadelphia. Experiments he proposed, first tried in France  in 1752, showed that lightning was in fact a form of el!  ectricity. Later that year his famous kite experiment, in  which he flew a kite with the wire attached to a key during  a thunderstorm. His later achievements included formulating  a theory of heat absorption, measuring Gulf Stream,  designing ships, tracking storm paths, and inventing bifocal  lenses. In 1751, Franklin was elected to the Pennsylvania  Assembly, causing the beginning of nearly 40 years as a  puublic official. At home from 1762 to 1764, Franklin  traveled throghout the colonies, reorganizing the  AAmerican postal system. He also built aa new house on  Market Street in Philadelphia, now reconstructed and open  to visitors, and otherwise provided for his family. From  April 1775 to October 1776, Franklin served on the  Pennsylvania Committee of Safety and in the Continental  Congress, submitted articles of confederation for the united  colonies, proposed a new constitution for Pennsylvania,  and helped draft the Decclaration of Independence.  					    
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