The Life of Benjamin Franklin, Volume 1
The Life of Benjamin Franklin, Volume 1: Journalist, 1706-1730
J. A. Leo Lemay
Copyright Date: 2006
Published by: University of Pennsylvania Press
Pages: 568
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt3fj12x
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The Life of Benjamin Franklin, Volume 1
Book Description:

Named "one of the best books of 2006" by The New York Sun Described by Carl Van Doren as "a harmonious human multitude," Benjamin Franklin was the most famous American of his time, of perhaps any time. His life and careers were so varied and successful that he remains, even today, the epitome of the self-made man. Born into a humble tradesman's family, this adaptable genius rose to become an architect of the world's first democracy, a leading light in Enlightenment science, and a major creator of what has come to be known as the American character. Journalist, musician, politician, scientist, humorist, inventor, civic leader, printer, writer, publisher, businessman, founding father, and philosopher, Franklin is a touchstone for America's egalitarianism. The first volume traces young Franklin's life to his marriage in 1730. It traces the New England religious, political, and cultural contexts, exploring previously unknown influences on his philosophy and writing, and attributing new writings to him. After his move to Philadelphia, made famous in his Autobiography, Franklin became the Water American in London in 1725, where he was welcomed into that city's circle of freethinkers. Upon his return to the colonies, the sociable Franklin created a group of young friends, the Junto, devoted to self-improvement and philanthropy. He also started his own press and began to edit and publish the Pennsylvania Gazette, which became the most popular American paper of its day and the first to consistently feature American news.

eISBN: 978-0-8122-0911-2
Subjects: History
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  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. i-vi)
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. vii-viii)
  3. List of Illustrations
    List of Illustrations (pp. ix-x)
  4. Preface
    Preface (pp. xi-xvi)
  5. PART I Boston:: Youth, 1706–1723
    • PROLOGUE: Quandary
      PROLOGUE: Quandary (pp. 3-4)

      In August 1723 seventeen-year-old Franklin found himself jobless and ostracized. He had been working for his older brother, James Franklin, who was now twenty-six. Six months before, when James was forbidden by the authorities to continue printing his newspaper unless it were first supervised by the secretary of Massachusetts, he brought out the newspaper under the name of Benjamin Franklin. Since Franklin was apprenticed to James, the latter returned him the cancelled indenture so that he could, if challenged, show it to the Massachusetts authorities. At the same time, Franklin and James signed another, secret indenture, whereby Franklin agreed to...

    • ONE Boston
      ONE Boston (pp. 5-32)

      Boston was a small town of fewer than 8,000 persons at the edge of the wilderness, but it was the largest city in English North America in 1706 and had an excellent harbor. During the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, it dominated colonial American trade. Most of New England shipped via Boston to overseas ports, making shipping the key to the town’s flourishing economy. Shipbuilding was the most important local industry. In 1698, Massachusetts Governor Lord Bellomont classed the ships belonging to Boston, listing twenty five of the largest category, one hundred to three hundred tons. He wrote: “I may...

    • TWO Child to Adolescent
      TWO Child to Adolescent (pp. 33-52)

      Hearing from his brother Josiah that his namesake, four-year-old Benjamin, wanted to become a soldier, Uncle Benjamin wrote to him, advising against the warrior’s life:

      Sent to My Name upon a Report of his Inclination

      to Martial affaires 7 July 1710

      Beleeve me Ben. It is a Dangerous Trade—

      The Sword has Many Marr’d as well as Made.

      By it doe many fall, Not Many Rise;

      Makes Many poor, few Rich and fewer Wise;

      Fills Towns with Ruin, fields with blood beside;

      ’Tis Sloth’s Maintainer, And the Shield of pride;

      Fair Citties Rich to Day, in plenty flow,

      War fills...

    • THREE Printer’s Devil
      THREE Printer’s Devil (pp. 53-78)

      The standard sources state that James Franklin served an apprenticeship to a printer in London and returned to Boston with a press and types in 1717.¹ Those assertions are probably incorrect, though they reflect Franklin’s statement in the Autobiography that “in 1717 my Brother James return’d from England with a Press and Letters to set up his Business in Boston.” The historian of American printing Isaiah Thomas repeated and added to Franklin’s statement in the early nineteenth century: “I have been informed that James Franklin served an apprenticeship with a printer in England, where his father was born, and had...

    • FOUR Massachusetts Controversies 1716–1723
      FOUR Massachusetts Controversies 1716–1723 (pp. 79-86)

      When Governor Samuel Shute arrived in Boston in 1716, Franklin was ten and probably cared little about Massachusetts politics. By the time Shute gave up the contest with the locals and clandestinely slipped away to England on 1 January 1722/3, the nearly seventeen-year-old Franklin knew the political scene intimately. Though no organized political parties existed in Massachusetts, most colonies had a group of assembly members who identified themselves with the “rights and liberties of the people” (especially with the assembly’s right to control the taxes). On the other hand, the Royal (or Proprietary, in Maryland and Pennsylvania) Party was intent...

    • FIVE Nathaniel Gardner and the Couranteers
      FIVE Nathaniel Gardner and the Couranteers (pp. 87-108)

      The styles, personae, and even jests of the New-England Courant’s first writers influenced young Benjamin Franklin. His personal file of the newspaper survives, containing issues from No. 1, which appeared on 7 August 1721, through no. 111, for 16 September 1723, the week before he ran away from Boston. Franklin annotated most of the first forty-three issues (7 August 1721 to 28 May 1722), giving the names of the local authors. Thirty-eight papers have annotations: the Courant of 7 August is lacking and those for 2, 23, and 30 October, and for 11 December 1721 have no local poems or...

    • SIX James Franklin: America’s First Newspaperman
      SIX James Franklin: America’s First Newspaperman (pp. 109-142)

      Unlike James Franklin, previous American newspaper editors did little more than reprint, copying the English and European news as the foreign newspapers came into port. In addition, they listed the ships entering and leaving the harbor, printed government announcements, and gave obituaries (usually written by ministers) of local notables. James Franklin changed American journalism. He featured local controversies, belletristic material, and news of New England events. He cut down drastically on the English and foreign news and relegated them to the second page. The historian Charles E. Clark shrewdly observed that in the New-England Courant, “News from Britain as well...

    • SEVEN Silence Dogood in Context
      SEVEN Silence Dogood in Context (pp. 143-171)

      In 1722, at sixteen years of age, Benjamin Franklin wrote the first American essay series and proved that he had become the peer of Boston’s best authors. Though focusing on the essay series, this chapter also gives its contexts and briefly characterizes the other materials Franklin annotated that appeared in the same issues of the New-England Courant. In the Autobiography, Franklin told about his subterfuge in publishing the Silence Dogood essays.

      He [James Franklin] had some ingenious Men among his Friends who amus’d themselves by writing little Pieces for this Paper, which gain’d it Credit, and made it more in...

    • EIGHT “Saucy and Provoking”: Franklin Takes Charge
      EIGHT “Saucy and Provoking”: Franklin Takes Charge (pp. 172-206)

      James Franklin’s continuing attacks on the religious and civil authorities of Massachusetts made his position risky. The governor and council, the Prerogative Party in general, the Mathers, and many conservative Congregationalists felt that he should be restrained, if not punished. When they took action against him, his younger brother took charge.

      The 24 September 1722 New-England Courant broke the Connecticut apostasy story and horrified New England’s Congregationalists. The Courant declared that on 13 September, the day after Yale’s commencement, the Reverend Dr. Timothy Cutler (Yale’s president), together with “Four or Five other Dissenting Ministers, some of whom have been ordain’d...

    • NINE Assessing Franklin as a Youth, to Age Seventeen
      NINE Assessing Franklin as a Youth, to Age Seventeen (pp. 207-212)

      Franklin confessed to only one ambition: when he told in the Autobiography how he taught himself to write by imitating the Spectator, he concluded: “By comparing my Work afterwards with the original, I discover’d many faults and amended them; but I sometimes had the pleasure of Fancying that in certain Particulars of small Import, I had been lucky enough to improve the Method or the Language and this encourag’d me to think I might possibly in time come to be a tolerable English Writer, of which I was extreamly ambitious” (14). By the time he ran away from home and...

  6. PART II Adrift:: Age Seventeen to Twenty-four, 1723–1730
    • TEN The Runaway
      TEN The Runaway (pp. 215-258)

      Franklin’s has been the most popular autobiography in the world since its 1790 publication. Its account of his journey to Philadelphia and first impressions of the town are touchstones in American literature. Leaving Boston, “we had a fair Wind, in three Days I found my self in New York near 300 Miles from home, a Boy of but 17, without the least Recommendation to or Knowledge of any Person in the Place, and with very little Money in my Pocket” (A 20). To move the story quickly, Franklin temporarily omitted an interesting incident that called for an ironic reflection. Becalmed...

    • ELEVEN The Water American: London Escapades
      ELEVEN The Water American: London Escapades (pp. 259-297)

      After the London Hope entered the English Channel, Captain Thomas Annis kept his word and gave Franklin “an Opportunity of examining the Bag for the Governor’s Letters.” With sinking heart, Franklin found no letters addressed to him and none that he was asked to deliver. He selected “6 or 7 that by the Handwriting I thought might be the promis’d Letters, especially as one of them was directed to Basket the King’s Printer, and another to some Stationer.” Franklin promised to deliver them, still hoping that Governor Keith had recommended him and given him a letter of credit. As soon...

    • TWELVE At Sea 1726
      TWELVE At Sea 1726 (pp. 298-317)

      What did Franklin do when he had nothing to do? One thing was to write. Returning from England, Franklin kept a “Journal of occurrences in my voyage to Philadelphia.” He began it on Friday, 22 July 1726, the day after the Berkshire left London. The enforced idleness of sailing across the ocean was a time for observations and introspection. The twenty-year-old Franklin revealed his curiosity, cast of mind, and everyday thoughts more fully in this journal than in any other single piece of writing. On all six of his later long sea voyages, he had writing he wanted to do...

    • THIRTEEN Merchant to Master Printer 1726–1728
      THIRTEEN Merchant to Master Printer 1726–1728 (pp. 318-331)

      On Tuesday, 11 October 1726, at 10 P.M., Franklin and Thomas Denham landed at Philadelphia. Perhaps they rounded up a few old friends and celebrated. The political news was that Sir William Keith had been superseded as governor on 22 June 1726 by Major Patrick Gordon and that just ten days ago, Keith had been elected an assemblyman from Philadelphia County. His party had swept the Philadelphia City and the Philadelphia County elections. It looked as if he might be elected Speaker of the House. Franklin probably found the news amazing. Three days later, Saturday, 14 October, just before the...

    • FOURTEEN The Junto
      FOURTEEN The Junto (pp. 332-356)

      Franklin formed the Junto in the fall of 1727. Perhaps he drew up the scheme and the rules for a club for mutual improvement in early October after he quarreled with Samuel Keimer and quit his job. He then had a little unexpected leisure. Clubs characterized the eighteenth century. Every town—indeed, almost every tavern and inn—was the meeting place of a club. Dr. Alexander Hamilton’s Itinerarium affords the best panorama of colonial American clubs. During the summer of 1744, he traveled from Annapolis, Maryland, to Maine and back, encountering clubs in every colonial town—and some at taverns...

    • FIFTEEN Business, 1728–1730, and “Articles of Religion”
      FIFTEEN Business, 1728–1730, and “Articles of Religion” (pp. 357-377)

      The press and types ordered by Hugh Meredith’s father probably arrived on the “Pink, Society, William Simpson from London” (American Weekly Mercury, 16 May 1728). Meredith’s time as apprentice was up with Samuel Keimer. About 1 June 1728, Franklin and Meredith left Keimer “by his Consent” (did he give each a letter of recommendation?) before he learned that they were opening a rival printing house. From a Quaker pewterer, Simon Edgell, they rented a brick house on the north side of Market Street, just a few doors below Second Street, on the site of the present 139 Market Street.¹ It...

    • SIXTEEN The Busy-Body
      SIXTEEN The Busy-Body (pp. 378-396)

      On Tuesday, 4 February 1728/9, one week after “Martha Careful” and “Caelia Shortface” complained of Keimer’s indelicacy in reprinting an article on abortion, the twenty-three-year-old Benjamin Franklin began the Busy-Body essay series. He meant to popularize Andrew Bradford’s American Weekly Mercury in order to assure the failure of Samuel Keimer’s Universal Instructor in all Arts and Sciences: and Pennsylvania Gazette. Bradford welcomed the essays, for they would increase the circulation of his newspaper and would probably harm his competitor, Keimer. Franklin wrote the first five Busy-Body essays and also the eighth; his Junto friend Joseph Breintnall wrote the sixth and...

    • SEVENTEEN Paper Currency
      SEVENTEEN Paper Currency (pp. 397-413)

      A Modest Enquiry into the Nature and Necessity of a Paper Currency (1729) marked Franklin’s first important contribution to Pennsylvania politics, revealed his independence as an economic thinker, and set forth a number of theories that he pursued with increasing sophistication and better data throughout his life.¹ In passing, the pamphlet also dealt with the population of Great Britain and the colonies as well as with class relations. Pennsylvania’s major political dispute in the 1720s concerned paper currency. The Junto debated the issue, with Franklin “on the Side of an Addition [of paper currency], being persuaded that the first small...

    • EIGHTEEN Journalist
      EIGHTEEN Journalist (pp. 414-456)

      Having stolen Franklin’s idea for a newspaper that would challenge and supersede Andrew Bradford’s American Weekly Mercury, Samuel Keimer brought out the first issue of his Universal Instructor in All Arts & Sciences: and The Pennsylvania Gazette on 24 December 1728.² In the Universal Instructor No. 13 (20 March 1728/9), Keimer remarked that he printed 250 copies a week, but he said so in an attempt to gain more advertisements and no doubt exaggerated. Franklin recalled that Keimer had “at most only 90 Subscribers” (A 64) when he sold the paper seven months later. In addition to copies for subscribers,...

    • NINETEEN Assessing Franklin, Age Seventeen to Twenty-four
      NINETEEN Assessing Franklin, Age Seventeen to Twenty-four (pp. 457-462)

      The irrepressible pride that got Franklin into trouble in Boston continued during his late teens and early adulthood in Philadelphia and London. When he returned to Boston at age eighteen in 1724 with a pocket full of cash, a genteel new suit, and an expensive watch, he humiliated James Franklin in front of his journeymen and apprentices. He behaved like an adolescent showoff. Discussing his trip to London in the Autobiography, Franklin presents himself as an unsuspecting innocent boy, duped by Governor Keith, but if Franklin had not believed himself so superior to Samuel Keimer and to Andrew Bradford, he...

  7. APPENDIX: New Attributions
    APPENDIX: New Attributions (pp. 463-464)
  8. SOURCES AND DOCUMENTATION
    SOURCES AND DOCUMENTATION (pp. 465-466)
  9. List of Abbreviations
    List of Abbreviations (pp. 467-472)
  10. NOTES
    NOTES (pp. 473-510)
  11. Index
    Index (pp. 511-550)
  12. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS (pp. 551-551)
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