| 1706 |
- January 17. Born in Boston, the youngest son of
Josiah and Abiah (Folger) Franklin. (January 6, 1705 by "Old Style" reckoning).
|
| 1715 |
- Final formal year of schooling
- Heard Increase Mather preach
|
| 1717 |
- Begins reading Plutarch, Defoe, and Cotton Mather
- Invents a pair of swim fins for his hands
- Briefly indentured as a cutler
|
| 1718 |
- Apprenticed to his brother James, a printer.
- Blackbeard the Pirate is captured; Franklin writes
a ballad on the occasion
|
| 1720 |
- Moved away from home into a boarding house
- Stopped attending church so he could use Sunday
to study
- At a Boston town meeting, Ben's father Josiah
is chosen as a town scavenger for 1721
|
| 1721 |
- Brother James Franklin starts publishing The
New England Courant
- Smallpox epidemic in Boston and controversy over
vaccination
- Becomes "a thorough Deist"
|
| 1722 |
- Becomes a vegetarian (in part he is motivated
by a distaste for flesh, but also because he can save money and buy more books)
|
| 1723 |
- Takes over the publishing of the Courant
after brother James is jailed due to "contempt" charges.
- (Sept.) Runs away from apprenticeship, goes to
New York and then to Philadelphia, where he gains employment as a printer.
- Takes lodging with John Read whose daughter Deborah
will become Franklin's wife in 1730
|
| 1724 |
- Returns home to Boston to try and borrow money
from his father to start print shop. Is denied.
- Returns to Philadelphia and courts Deborah Read.
- Under encouragement from PA Governor William Keith
travels to London in order buy printing equipment. Keith's letters of credit for him never materialized and Franklin is stranded
in London. Remains in London working as a printer working for Samuel Palmer.
|
| 1725 |
- Publishes his first pamphlet: "A Dissertation
upon Liberty and Necessity, Pleasure and Pain"
- Leaves Palmer the printer for the larger shop
of John Watts.
- Attends theater, reads voraciously, and hangs
out at coffee houses
- Back in Pennsylvania, Deborah Read marries John
Rogers in August
|
| 1726 |
- In July, returns to Philadelphia and works for
Thomas Denham, a merchant who had loaned him the money to return home. Franklin works as a bookkeeper and shopkeeper in a
store which sells imported clothes and hardware.
|
| 1727 |
- Suffers first pleurisy attack
- Leaves job with Denham
- Is rehired by printer Keimer
- It is in 1727 or 1728 that Franklin has an affair
with a woman that results in the birth of his illegitimate son William in 1728 or 1729
- In England, George I dies and is succeeded by
George II
- In early October quits Keimer after quarreling
only to be rehired later in the month -- Keimer can find no one to cut currency like Franklin.
- Helps to establish the Junto, a a society of young
men who met together on Friday evenings for "self-improvement, study, mutual aid, and conviviality."
|
| 1728 |
- In June, establishes a Philadelphia printing partnership
with Hugh Meredith; rents a building that serves as home and printshop
- Composes "Articles of Belief and Acts of Religion"
- Deborah Read's husband John Rogers steals a slave
and absconds from Philadelphia
|
| 1729 |
- Writes a pamphlet entitled "The Nature and Necessity
of a Paper Currency"
- Purchases The Pennsylvania Gazette
from Samuel Keimer
|
| 1730 |
- Elected the official printer for Pennsylvania
- Takes a common law wife Deborah Reed Rogers on
9/1
- Franklin buys out his printing partner Hugh Meredith
- Fire destroys the southern part of Philadelphia
and Franklin starts agitating for fire protection programs
|
| 1731 |
- Joins the St. Johns Freemasons Lodge
- Drew up the Library Company's articles of association
on July 1st. The Library Company is the first lending library in the country, though it is still private.
- Sponsored his journeyman Thomas Whitmarsh as his
printing partner in South Carolina, Franklin buys the printing press and types in return for 1/3 of the profits over a six-year
term -- in effect becoming a printing franchiser.
- Franklin rents commercial space to his mother-in-law
who sells "her well-known Ointment for the ITCH," a "Family Salve or Ointment, for Burns or Scalds."
- Prints an article in the Gazette on the
imminent passage of the "mortifying" Molasses Act
|
| 1732 |
- Birth of his son Francis Folger.
- In May, Franklin started printing America's first
German-language newspaper, Philadelphische Zeitung, which soon failed.
- Publishes the first edition of "Poor Richard's
Almanack" on December 28
|
| 1733 |
- Francis Folger Franklin is baptized at the Anglican
Christ Church. Deborah attends this church, while Benjamin had stopped attending a Presbyterian church the year before.
|
| 1734 |
- Is elected Grand Master of the Grand Masonic Lodge
of Masons of PA
- Buy property on Philadelphia's Market Street.
Eventually he will put together several lots of land on Market Street. These will house his print shop and retail space. Today,
this property forms Franklin Court.
- Bribes post riders to carry his PA Gazette.
Postmaster Andrew Bradford had forbidden riders to carry the Gazette.
|
| 1735 |
- Brother James Franklin dies; Benjamin sends his
widow 500 copies of Poor Richard for free so she can make money by selling them
- Andrew (the Philadelphia Lawyer) Hamilton defends
John Peter Zenger in a seminal Freedom of the Press case. Hamilton will be a patron of Franklin's
|
| 1736 |
- Named Clerk of the PA Assembly
- Prints currency for NJ
- Son Francis (Franky) Folger dies at age 4 of smallpox
- Organized the Union Fire Company (Franklin regularly
attends meetings of the Library Company, the Masonic Lodge, the Junto, and now the Fire Company)
- Prints "A Treaty of Friendship held with the Chiefs
of the Six Nations at Philadelphia"
- First public use of the PA State House
|
| 1737 |
- Appointed Postmaster of Philadelphia
|
| 1739 |
- Franklin's house robbed
- George Whitefield, the Great Awakening preacher,
arrives in Philadelphia for the first time
- Leads an environmental protest against polluting
"Slaughter-Houses, Tan-Yards, Skinner Lime-Pits, &c. erected on the publick Dock, and Streets, adjacent"
|
| 1740 |
- Official printer for New Jersey
- George Whitefield preaches to enthusiastic crowds
numbering in the thousands; buys 5,000 acres on which he intends to build a school for African-Americans. School not built.
Franklin prints much material for Whitefield.
|
| 1741 |
- Advertises the "Franklin Stove"
- Published the first edition of "The General Magazine
and Historical Chronicle," one of America's earliest magazines. It failed after six issues.
|
| 1742 |
- Franklin organized and publicized a project to
sponsor plant collecting trips by renowned Philadelphia botanist John Bartram.
|
| 1743 |
- Attends Archibald Spencer's Boston lectures on
natural philosophy (including electricity)
- Comes out with "A Proposal for Promoting Useful
Knowledge" (the founding document of the prototype of the American Philosophical Society)
- Daughter Sally born and baptized at Christ Church
|
| 1744 |
- The American Philosophical Society begins meeting
|
| 1745 |
- Death of Josiah Franklin, Benjamin's father
|
| 1746 |
- Begins extensive electrical experiments
|
| 1747 |
- Franklin writes "The Plain Truth," a pamphlet
arguing for better military preparedness in PA. In the pamphlet is the first political cartoon published in America.
- Peter Collinson of London sends Franklin an electric
tube. "For my own part, I never was before engaged in any study that so totally engrossed my attention and my time as this
has lately done.
|
| 1748 |
- Becomes a soldier in the PA militia after turning
down a commission as a Colonel citing military inexperience.
|
| 1751 |
- Letters on electricity published in London by
Peter Collinson
|
| 1752 |
- Conducts kite experiment
- Received Copley Medal of the royal Society of
London for research in electricity. Deputy Postmaster General of N.A.
- Wrote a plan for a union of the colonies for security
and defense.
|
| 1752 |
- Helps found the Philadelphia Contributionship
for Insuring of Houses from Loss Against Fire
|
| 1753 |
- Received honorary degrees from Harvard and Yale.
- Appointed joint Deputy Postmaster General of North
America.
|
| 1754 |
- Proposes plan of colonial union at Albany Congress
|
| 1757-62 |
- In England as agent for Pennsylvania Assembly,
Massachusetts, Georgia, New Jersey
|
| 1759 |
- Receives honorary degree of Doctor of Laws from
the University of St. Andrews, Scotland
|
| 1762 |
- Mapped Postal routes in the colonies. Invents
glass armonica
|
| 1764-65 |
|
| 1766 |
- Examined in House of Commons in support of repeal
of the Stamp Act
|
| 1768 |
- Named Colonial Agent for Georgia.
|
| 1769 |
- Named Colonial Agent for New Jersey.
|
| 1770 |
- Elected Colonial Agent for Massachusetts.
|
| 1771 |
|
| 1771-72 |
- Begins writing his Autobiography.
|
| 1774 |
- Dressed down before London's Privy Council by
Solicitor General Wedderburn for leaking letters in the "Hutchinson Affair."
|
| 1775 |
- Elected as a Pennsylvania delegate of Pennsylvania
to 2nd Continental Congress; serves as chairman of Pennsylvania Committee of Safety
- Elected Postmaster General of the Colonies
|
| 1776 |
- Presides over Constitutional Convention of PA.
- Serves on a committee of five who draft the Declaration
of Independence.
- Arrives in Paris on 12/21 as one of the Commissioners
of Congress to the French Court
|
| 1777 |
- Meets Madame Brillon, an amour.
|
| 1778 |
|
| 1779-81 |
- Appointed to negotiate peace treaty with England.
|
| 1780 |
- Madame Helvetius rejects Franklin's offer of marriage.
|
| 1783-84 |
- Signed Peace Treaty
- Invented bifocals
|
| 1785-86 |
- Elected President of Pennsylvania Executive Council
- Invents the instrument for taking down books from
a shelf
|
| 1789 |
- Writes anti-slavery treatise
- He becomes president of the Society for Promoting
the Abolition of Slavery
|
| 1790 |
- April 17, dies in Philadelphia at the age of 84.
20,000 mourners attend his funeral at Philadelphia's Christ Church Burial Ground.
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