Benjamin Franklin
Sometimes when a country is just getting organized, its
citizens are considered to be uneducated, out of touch or primitive. But exactly opposite was the truth when the
great American experiment began to take shape.
The world did not see America as provincial or simple and that is due to
a large part to the work of the man many that many have called “The First
American”. That man was Benjamin
Franklin.
Benjamin Franklin stands out amongst those we would call
“The Founding Fathers” because he was neither a military man nor a
politician. He was one of the few we
think of a one of our nation’s fathers that never served as president. But that does not mean that his contributions
to the start of this great country were not profound and far reaching.
Benjamin Franklin could easily be described as what was
popularly known in his day as a “renaissance man”. He was truly proficient in many fields of
discipline and he had a mind that was fascinated with all areas of study and
knowledge. As such he brought to the
discussions with his fellow founding fathers a knowledge of political theory,
an awareness of history and an ability to speculate on the perfect union that
was crucial to the laying the conceptual foundation of what America would come
to be when it blossomed into reality.
For many, we remember Benjamin Franklin as a great scientist
and inventor. And to be sure he
qualified in that realm as well. Every
school boy or girl has that image of him flying that kite to capture
electricity to test his theories that is so popular in our mythology of his
accomplishments. But these images are no
myth for Franklin was truly a great inventor contributing to the world such
important innovations as the lightning rod, swim fins, the catheter, the harmonica
and bifocals. In that way, Benjamin
Franklin had as much in common with Michelangelo as he did with Thomas
Jefferson and indeed he was in good company if listed with either.
But it was a political theorist and a philosopher that
Franklin made huge contributions to the development of the American experiment
in its early formations. It was he who
was able to envision the concept of a new American nation. But his talents did not end at his ability to
use his powerful mind to envision the future so well. He was also a talented communicator, writer
and teacher so he was able to use his eloquence and magnetic personality to
promote the idea of an American nation both within the colonies and
internationally.
Benjamin Franklin was truly a citizen of the world as he was
as comfortable in the courtyards of France as he was in the pubs of
Boston. In fact, he was so popular on
both sides of the Atlantic that he served as America’s first ambassador to
France and therein lies one of his greatest contributions to the independence
of the new country. He was able to use
his vast popularity and his trained powers of persuasion to cause the French to
enter the battle on the side of the colonies against the British which was a
major contributor to the success of the revolution to free America from English
control and launch the independent American nation.
Franklin’s writings have become treasured documents among
the archives of this important time in American history. But just as much as his written work, his influence
as a thinker, an intellectual and an international diplomat set the standard
for others to follow after him and truly established America as a member of the
international community of nations.
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