To illustrate, Franklin tried to discourage his son from going into government work (pursuing the appointment as Royal Governor of New Jersey.) It would be far better for him to learn a trade, so that he could always go out and make his own living, rather than relying on favor from the government.
Franklin The Networker
One thing that was apparent throughout the book was that Franklin was a networker. From his boyhood, teen years, and then adulthood he was constantly organizing clubs, societies and associations. Some of them were for the betterment of a small circle of friends such as informal reading groups or a prototype Chambers of Commerce for young tradesmen in Philadelphia. Some of them were far more ambitious, such as the formation of militias, fire companies, or the school that grew into the University of Pennsylvania. Topping it all off, of course, was his work in the Continental Congress and the Constitutional Convention. If Franklin was still around today, he would probably be active in something like Ryze.
Franklin the Scientist
Everyone has heard about flying the kite in a thunderstorm, but Franklin had a far more important role in developing the theory of electricity. Through his experiments and observations about electricity, he was the person who coined the phrases positive and negative to explain electrical charge. In fact, he was the first to use "charge" in terms of electricity, too, along with the words battery, neutral, condense, and conductor. He also invented the lightening rod. He was a practical scientist, not a theoretical one, without a math or physics background that would be needed to develop systematic theories. At that time, the frontiers of science were nearby and a talented layman like Franklin could make a mark.
Franklin the Ladies Man
His son William (who became the Loyalist governor of New Jersey and was later permanently estranged from Franklin) was illegitimate, although after Franklin's later marriage to his wife Deborah he was raised by both. That marriage seemed to be more of convenience rather than any great passionate love affair. Franklin enjoyed the company of lively young women, and often exchanged a series of flirtatious letters with them. (Since phones hadn't been invented yet, you may want to think of this as "letter sex".) Isaacson's conclusion is that while he may have been a flirt, he never went all the way in these relationships, although he did manage to scandalize the more prudish John Adams.








Article comments
1 - Bryce Eddings
Listed on Advance
2 - Ed Hird
Benjamin Franklin had a remarkable impact in so many ways. A Benjamin Franklin article just received the ‘Top 100 Electricity Blogs’ Award