The Americanization of Benjamin Franklin

BOOK: The Americanization of Benjamin Franklin
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ALSO BY GORDON S. WOOD

The Creation of the American Republic, 1776—1787 

The Radicalism of the American Revolution 

The American Revolution: A History

THE PENGUIN PRESS a member of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.

Hudson Street New York, New York 10014

Copyright © Gordon Wood,

All rights reserved

Illustration credits appear on pp. 285-86.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Wood, Gordon S.

The Americanization of Benjamin Franklin / Gordon S. Wood.

p. cm.

Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index.

MSR ISBN 0-7865-4787-1 

AEB ISBN 0-7865-4788-X

DESIGNED BY MARYSARAH QUINN

Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

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First edition (electronic): February 2003

Making or distributing electronic copies of this book constitutes copyright infringement and could subject the infringer to criminal and civil liability.

TO CHRISTOPHER, ELIZABETH, AND AMY

PREFACE


OF MAKING MANY BOOKS
there is no end,” and with the upcoming tricentennial celebration of Benjamin Franklin’s birth in 2006, this seems to be especially true of Franklin biographies. But this book is not meant to be a traditional biography of Franklin. It does not contain every event in his long life, nor does it deal with all of his multitudinous relationships and writings. Instead, it is a relatively selective study, focusing on specific aspects of this extraordinary man’s life that reveal a Benjamin Franklin who is different in important ways from the Franklin of our inherited common understanding.

First of all, the book attempts to penetrate beneath the many images and representations of Franklin that have accumulated over the past two hundred years and recover the historic Franklin who did not know the kind of massively symbolic folk hero he would become. At the same time it hopes to make clear how and why Franklin acquired these various images and symbols. It tries to place Franklin’s incredible life in its eighteenth-century context and explain why he retired from business and became a gentleman, why he came to admire the British Empire and sought to become its architect, why he began writing his
Autobiography
when he did, and why he belatedly joined the American Revolution, and joined it with a vengeance. It seeks to clarify the personal meaning the Revolution had for him and to describe his extraordinary achievements as America’s envoy to France—achievements that were never fully appreciated by many of his countrymen at the time. It attempts also to account for the way in which the French came to see Franklin as the symbol of America even before his fellow Americans did. Indeed, without understanding Franklin’s intimate connection with France we will never make sense of the remarkable degree of hostility Franklin faced in the last years of his life from members of Congress and other influential Americans. Even after his death in 1790 the hostility continued, especially as Franklin emerged as the representative American, as the hardworking self-made businessman, for hundreds of thousands of middling Americans in the early decades of the nineteenth century.

This early-nineteenth-century image of Franklin was not the image of Franklin known to people in his own lifetime; it was a product of the turbulent capitalism of the age of Jackson, the age so brilliantly depicted by Alexis de Tocqueville in his
Democracy in America.
And it is that popular image that seems to have the most resonance even today. Despite the continuing power of Franklin’s symbolic significance as the entrepreneurial American, however, the historic Franklin of the eighteenth century was never destined to be that symbol. Franklin was not even destined to be an American. How he became one is the theme of this book.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

THIS BOOK HAS BEEN
in my mind for many years. I first became interested in writing about Franklin when I reviewed several volumes of his papers in the early 1970s. I let my thoughts about this extraordinary character stew for a decade. Then in 1983 the late William B. Cohen, chair of the Department of History of Indiana University, invited me to present a lecture on Franklin as part of Indiana University’s bicentennial celebration of the signing of the Treaty of Paris, which ended the Revolutionary War against Britain. This invitation forced me to put some of my thoughts about Franklin on paper. So I am grateful to Professor Cohen and Indiana University for the invitation that got me started on this book. Franklin next became an important figure in my book
The Radicalism of the American Revolution,
and the several paragraphs devoted to him there anticipate some of what is in this study. Indeed, what happened to Franklin and Franklin’s image between the middle of the eighteenth century and the early decades of the nineteenth century seems to me to demonstrate vividly the radical social and cultural changes that the American Revolution brought about.

Much of the book was written when I was a fellow at the Institute for United States Studies in London in the winter and spring of 2002, and I want to thank the institute and its staff for their hospitality. For their editorial expertise I am grateful to my wife, Louise, and my daughter Elizabeth, and my friends Lesley Herrmann and Barbara Oberg. I am especially indebted to Ellen Cohn, who is currently the editor in chief of the Franklin Papers, not only for her careful reading of the manuscript, which saved me from many errors, but also for her making available to me a CD-ROM of the Franklin Papers, which includes those papers not yet published in the magnificent letterpress edition of Yale University Press. I am grateful too to my agent, Andrew Wylie, for all his support. My thanks also to Sophie Fels at The Penguin Press for her considerable and always cheerful aid in preparing the manuscript. My final thanks go to my editor at The Penguin Press, Scott Moyers, who is every author’s dream of what an editor ought to be. He could not have been more helpful, and I am very grateful to him.

GORDON S. WOOD

Providence, Rhode Island

CONTENTS

Preface

Acknowledgments

List of Illustrations

INTRODUCTION

CHAPTER
1

Becoming a Gentleman

CHAPTER
2

Becoming a British Imperialist

CHAPTER
3

Becoming a Patriot

CHAPTER
4

Becoming a Diplomat

CHAPTER
5

Becoming an American

Notes

Index

ILLUSTRATIONS

Franklin’s birthplace on Milk Street, Boston, across from the Old South Church

Franklin, portrait of a new gentleman, by Robert Feke, 1748

Franklin’s house on Craven Street, London

Franklin, by Benjamin Wilson, c. 1759

Franklin, mezzotint by James McArdell, 1761

Franklin, by Mason Chamberlain, 1762

Franklin, mezzotint by Edward Fisher, 1763

Deborah Franklin, by Benjamin Wilson, c. 1759

Franklin, by David Martin, 1766

Franklin, porcelain medallion by Josiah Wedgwood, 1778

William Franklin, by Mather Brown, c. 1790

Franklin as a Frenchman, engraving by Francois Martinet, 1773

The Oath of the Horatii
, by Jacques-Louis David, 1785

Franklin, engraving by Augustin de Saint-Aubin, 1777, after a drawing by Charles-Nicholas Cochin

To the Genius of Franklin
, etching by Marguerite Gérard, after a design by Jean-Honoré Fragonard, 1778

Franklin, porcelain medallion, Sévres ware, 1778

Franklin, French school, c. 1783

Franklin, bust by Jean-Jacques Caffiéri, 1777

Franklin, bust by Jean-Antoine Houdon, 1778

Franklin, by Joseph-Siffred Duplessis, 1778

Franklin, by Jean-Baptiste Greuze, 1777

Franklin, by J. F. de L’Hospital, 1778

Treaty of Paris, unfinished, by Benjamin West, 1783

Franklin, by Charles Willson Peale, 1785

Pat Lyon at the Forge, by John Neagle, 1826

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