Read The Americanization of Benjamin Franklin Online
Authors: Gordon S. Wood
111. Ronald W. Clark,
Benjamin Franklin: A Biography
(New York: Random House, 1983), 46; BF to Mathon de la Cour, 18 Nov. 1785.
112. Rosemont, “Franklin and the Philadelphia Typographical Strikers,” 398-429.
113. BF to Catherine Ray Greene, 2 Mar. 1789; BF to Duc de La Rochefoucauld, 24 Oct. 1788. For two superb studies of printers and publishers in the early republic, see Rosalind Remer,
Printers and Men of Capital: Philadelphia Book Publishers in the New Republic
(Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1996); and Jeffrey L. Pasley,
“The Tyranny of Printers”: Newspaper Politics in the Early American Republic
(Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2001).
ILLUSTRATION CREDITS
Page | |
18 | Courtesy of The Bostonian Society/Old State House. |
58 | Courtesy of the Harvard University Portrait Collection, bequest of Dr. John Collins Warren, 1856. Photographed by Katya Kallsen. © 2004 President and Fellows of Harvard College. |
86 | Courtesy of the American Philosophical Society. |
87, left | White House Historical Association (White House Collection 1981.) |
87, right | National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution/Art Resource, NY. |
88, left | Philadelphia Museum of Art: gift of Mr. and Mrs. Wharton Sinkler. |
88, right | Philadelphia Museum of Art: purchased. |
89 | Courtesy of the American Philosophical Society. |
126 | Courtesy of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia. Gift of Maria McKean Allen and Phebe Warren Downes through the bequest of their mother, Elizabeth Wharton McKean. |
141 | Courtesy of the Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University Art Museums, bequest of Grenville L. Winthrop. Photographed by Photographic Services. © 2004 President and Fellows of Harvard College. |
161 | Private Collection. Photograph courtesy of the Frick Art Reference Library. |
173 | Franklin Collection, Yale University Library. |
175 | The Louvre. Photograph courtesy Erich Lessing/Art Resource, NY. |
176, upper left | Philadelphia Museum of Art: gift of Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, Jr, 1946. |
176, upper right | Philadelphia Museum of Art: gift of Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, Jr, 1946. |
176, lower left | Courtesy of the Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens, San Marino, California. |
176, lower right | The Walters Art Museum, Baltimore. |
178, upper left | RSA, London. |
178, upper right | The Metropolitan Museum of Art, gift of John Bard, 1872 (72.6). Photograph all rights reserved, The Metropolitan Museum of Art. |
178, lower left | The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Friedsam Collection, bequest of Michael Friedsam, 1931 (32.100.132). Photograph all rights reserved, The Metropolitan Museum of Art. |
178, lower right | Courtesy of the American Philosophical Society. |
179 | Courtesy of the University of Pennsylvania Art Collection, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. |
199 | Courtesy Winterthur Museum. |
214 | Courtesy of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadephia. Bequest of Mrs. Sarah Harrison (The Joseph Harrison, Jr., Collection). |
242 | John Neagle, American, 1796-1865; |
Page numbers in | as jealous of Franklin and Washington, 232 marriage of, 33, 90 |
abolitionism, 227—28 | and Massachusetts Constitution of 1780, |
Act of Union (1707), 116 | 193,219 |
Adams, Abigail, 33, 90, 208, 277n98 | missions to France of, 192—96 |
Adams, John | in negotiations with Howe, 167—68 |
autobiography, 14 | and Pennsylvania constitution, 165, 166 |
commonwealth theory of the empire, 123 | protégé delivering Treaty of Paris to Congress, |
on Deane, 276n84 | 211 |
declines to be commissioner to France, 169 | as wearing his heart on his sleeve, 16 |
Defence of the Constitutions of the United States, | in West’s |
as difficult to identify with, 1 | Adams, Samuel, 137, 155, 156, 189, 193 |
on William Franklin, 95, 263n87 | Addison, Joseph, 19—20 |
on Franklin and Voltaire meeting, 180 | “Advice to a Young Tradesman, Written by an |
on Franklin as curious character, 2 | Old One” (Franklin), 57 |
Franklin as older than, 11 | Albany Plan of Union, 10, 72-78, 110, 154 |
on Franklin at Second Continental Congress, | Alexander, James, 74 |
154 | Allen, William, 27, 31, 72, 101, 251n25 |
on Franklin on loyalists, 163 | American colonies. |
and Franklin’s ability to influence British | American Magazine, The, |
government, 263n84, 264n87 | American Philosophical Society, 48-49, 72, 213, |
Franklin’s patriotism questioned by, 210, 215 | 232-33 |
on Franklin’s Revolutionary fervor, 154—55, | American Revolution |
271n5 | British peace offerings in 1776 rebuffed, |
on Franklin’s theory of colds, 167—68 | 166-68 |
on Frenchwomen and Franklin, 209 | Declaration of Independence, 164, 167, 169 |
on gentlemen and commoners, 35, 36, 253n51, | early military difficulties, 184 |
255n69 | education of leaders of, 18 |
on Anne-Catherine Helvetius, 208 | Franklin as oldest of leaders, 11 |
on Hutchinson, 110 | Franklin on commission investigating military |
and Izard on Franklin, 276n81 | needs, 164 |
Caffieri, Jean-Jacques, 177, | Cool Thoughts on the Present Situation of Our Public |
Canada, 91, 98, 105, 169 | Affairs |
Carroll, Charles, 96, 231 | Cooper, Grey, 133, 134, 135 |
Carter, John, 25—26 | Cooper, Joseph, 31 |
Chamberlain, Mason, 87, 88 | Cooper, Samuel, 210 |
Chatham, William Pitt, Earl of, 91, 92, 148, | Copley, John Singleton, 41 |
149-50 | Craven Street Gazette |
Chaumont, Jacques Donatien Le Ray, Comte de, | Crockett, Davy, 3 |
175, 177 | Currey, Cecil B., 271n10, 275n76 |
Chirac, Jacques, 275n64 | Cushing, Thomas, 149 |
Chirac, Mme Jacques, 276n64 | |
Christian VII (Denmark), 131 | Dartmouth, William Legge, Earl of, 117, 140, 142, |
Clare, Lord, 134-35 | 143, 144 |
Clark, Abraham, 236 | Darwin, Erasmus, 212 |
Club of Honest Whigs, 86, 170 | David, Jacques-Louis, 174, |
Cobbett, William, 234 | Deane, Silas |
Cochin, Charles-Nicholas, | and Franklin’s blue velvet coat, 191 |
Coercive Acts (1774), 148, 153 | on French attitude toward Franklin, 177, |
Colden, Cadwallader, 61, 67, 75, 80 | 187-88, 189, 193, 276n84 |
Collinson, Peter | in mission to France, 169 |
Franklin meets in London, 85-86 | Declaration of Independence, 164, 167, 169 |
and Franklin on direct taxation of the colonies, | Declaration of Rights (1688), 121 |
107 | Declaratory Act (1766), 120, 124 |
and Franklin on English life, 96 | Decow, Isaac, 31 |
and Franklin’s Albany Union proposal, 76, 77 | Defence of the Constitutions of the United States |
and Franklin’s deputy postmaster general | (Adams), 166 |
position, 72 | Defoe, Daniel, 19, 40, 42, 51 |
and Franklin’s electrical experiments, 63, 64, 65 | democracy |
and Franklin’s meeting with Lord Bute, 94 | eighteenth-century view of, 165 |
and Franklin’s overreaching himself, 80 | Federalists on, 232 |
colonies. | Franklin as democrat, 166, 232 |
commoners, gentlemen and, 35—41, 46-47, | Democracy in America |
253n51 | Denham, Thomas, 27, 31 |
Common Sense | Dennie, Joseph, 234, 283n92 |
commonwealth theory of the empire, 123 | Devonshire, Duke of, 40 |
condescension, 38, 46, 50, 57 | Dickinson, John, 96, 100, 123 |
Condorcet, Marquis de, 182, 227 | Diderot, Denis, 173 |
Confederation Congress, Franklin’s struggle with, | Dissertation on Liberty and Necessity, Pleasure and |
221-26, 280n51, 280n57 | Pain |
Connecticut, 69, 103 | Dull, Jonathan R., 277n107 |
Connecticut compromise, 220 | Duplessis, Joseph-Siffred, 177, |
conservation of charge, law of, 64 | |
Constitutional Convention, 215-21 | “Edict of the King of Prussia, An” (Franklin), 145 |
Connecticut compromise, 220 | education, Franklin’s proposals for, 48-49 |
Virginia plan, 245 | electricity, Franklin’s experiments with, 11, |
Constitutionalists, 213 | 61-66, 86, 172 |
Constitutions of the Free-Masons, | Ellsworth, Oliver, 232 |
Continental Congresses | Experiments and Observations on Electricity, Made at |
First, 148, 149 | Philadelphia in America |
Franklin contrasts Parliament with, 160 | |
Franklin’s enemies taking control of, 211 | Federalists, 5, 232, 23^35, 236, 237, 238 |
Second, 154-56, 164 | Feke, Robert, 57, |
Conway, Stephen, 265n21 Cook, James, 86 | Felton, Silas, 238 Fielding, Henry. 36-37 |
Fisher, Edward, 87, 88 | 126-29 |
Fitzgerald, F Scott, 8 | on cultural inferiority of New World, 95-97 |
Ford, Paul Leicester, 248n11 | dedication to British Empire, 10-11, 12, |
Fothergill, John, 86, 99, 149 | 91-97,159 |
Founders | on direct taxation of colonies, 107 |
Franklin as folksy Founder, 1—3 | on English arrogance regarding colonies, |
Franklin as not most American of, 9—10 | 114-15 |
Franklin as oldest of, 11 | and French and Indian War, 78-81 |
Franklin’s contributions compared with | and George III, 93-94, 104, 122 |
others’, 221-22 | Hillsborough changes attitude toward, 139-40 |
marriages of, 33 | hopes for position in British government, |
writing by, 20 | 133-35, 138, 148 |
See also | in Hutchinson letters affair, 139—47, 158, |
Hamilton, Alexander; Jay, John; Jefferson, | 186, 269n93 |
Thomas; Madison, James; Washington, | last efforts to save empire, 147-51 |
George | as London agent of Massachusetts, 136-38 |
Fragonard, Jean-Honore, | mission to Great Britain of, 1764—1775, |
France | 104-51 |
John Adams’s missions to, 192-96 | on new colonies in the West, 81-82, 91 |
alliance with United States negotiated, 190-91 | new conception of empire of, 120-24 |
American distrust of, 187 | on parliamentary representation for the |
Franklin as symbolic American for, 171-83 | colonies, 78, 113, 115-16 |
Franklin considers settling in, 207-9 | at Privy Council hearing of 1774, 146-47, |
Franklin’s fellow commissioners, 187-90 | 186, 191 |
Franklin’s mission of, 1776-1785, 169-200 | as royalist, 93-94, 102-5, 122-23 |
images of Franklin in, 176-79, 274n53 | and Stamp Act, 107-8, 110, 111-13, 115, |
Jefferson as American minister to, 212 | 117-20,143 |
Pennsylvania constitution influencing, 165-66 | on Sugar Act, 106-7 |
problems facing Franklin’s mission to, 183-87 | vision of New World’s future, 70-72 |
reaction to Franklin’s death in, 230-32, 234 | Walpole (Grand Ohio) Company scheme, |
Royal Academy of Sciences, 172, 258n21 | 135-36 |
See also | —as businessman |
Comte de | in London, 172^1726, 28-30 |
Franklin, Abiah Folger (mother), 17 | opens own printing business, 31-32 |
Franklin, Benjamin | partnership in other print shops, 53-54 |
—and American Revolution | Pennsylvania Gazette, |
on Boston Massacre, 136 | as printer of Pennsylvania Assembly, 52 |
and Boston Tea Party, 148 | property of, 54, 158, 256n108 |
breaks with son William over, 160-63 | retires from active business, 9, 55, 56 |
on commission investigating military needs, | wealth of, 51-55 |
164 | —early life in Boston, 17-23 |
Declaration of Independence, 164, 167 | apprenticed to candle and soap maker, 18-19 |
dedication to American cause questioned, | apprenticed to his brother, 19-23 |
155-58, 271n10 | birth of, 17 |
on loyalists, 163 | birthplace of, |
Revolutionary fervor of, 154-58, 271n5 | conflicts with his brother, 22-23 |
Revolution as personal affair for, 158-63 | leaves Boston, 23 |
in Second Continental Congress, 154—56, 164 | —educational projects of |
—and British imperial relations | American Philosophical Society, 48-49, 72, 213 |
Albany Plan of Union, 10, 72-78, 110, 154 | and Franklin’s own education, 257n1 |
ambivalence about, in late 1760s, 124—26 | Junto, 42, 44 |
confrontation with Hillsborough, 137-38 | Library Company, 44-45, 47, 213 |