چهارشنبه 20 آبان 1388

THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF BENJAMIN FRANKLIN

   نوشته شده توسط: فریده جلیلوند    

part one

Benjamin Franklin

 

Benjamin Franklin

 

Benjamin Franklin was one of the greatest influences on the United States in its early years. Besides being a great statesman and political figure, he was also an inventor, writer, linguist, philanthropist, and astrologer. Historians hail him as the first true American, and his sayings and writings are still relevant today. He began his career as a printer and writer when he ran away to Philadelphia at the age of 17. His annual "Poor Richard's Almanack" sold ten thousand copies a year. After his death, approximately $4,400 was left in a 200-year trust to both Boston and Philadelphia

BENJAMIN FRANKLIN was born in Milk Street, Boston, on January
6, 1706.  His father, Josiah Franklin, was a tallow chandler who
married twice, and of his seventeen children Benjamin was the youngest son.  His schooling ended at ten, and at twelve he was bound apprentice to his brother James, a printer, who published the "New England Courant." To this journal he became a contributor, and later was for a time its nominal editor. But the brothers quarreled, and Benjamin ran away, going first to New York, and thence to Philadelphia, where
he arrived in October, 1723.  He soon obtained work as a printer, but after a few months he was induced by Governor Keith to go to London, where, finding Keith's promises empty, he again worked as a compositor till he was brought back to Philadelphia by a merchant named  Denman, who gave him a position in his business. On Denman's death he returned to his former trade, and shortly set up a printing house of his own from which he published "The Pennsylvania Gazette," to which he contributed many essays, and which he made a medium for
agitating a variety of local reforms. In 1732 he began to issue his famous "Poor Richard's Almanac" for the enrichment of which he borrowed or composed those pithy utterances of worldly wisdom which are the basis of a large part of his popular reputation.  In 1758, the year in which he ceases writing for the Almanac, he printed in it "Father Abraham's Sermon," now regarded as the most famous piece of literature
produced in Colonial America

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