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~ Diplomat ~
In October 1776, Franklin and his two grandsons sailed
for France, where he achieved an amazing personal triumph and
gained critical French aid for the Revolutionary War. Parisian
literary and scientific circles hailed him as a living embodiment
of Enlightenment virtues. Wigless and dressed in plain brown
clothes, he was called le Bonhomme Richard. Franklin was at his
best creating the legend of his life among the ladies of Paris,
writing witty letters, printing bagatelles, and telling anecdotes.
He moved slowly at first in his diplomacy. France
wanted to injure Britain but could not afford to help the American
rebels unless eventual success seemed assured. Franklin
thus worked behind the scenes to send war supplies across the
Atlantic, thwart British diplomacy, and make friends with influential
French officials. He overcame his own doubts about the possibly
dishonest dealings of his fellow commissioner Silas Deane in
channeling war materials to American armies, but the third commissioner,
Arthur Lee (1740-92), bitterly condemned both Deane and Franklin.
Despite these quarrels, in February 1778, following news of the
American victory at Saratoga, the
three commissioners were able to sign the vital French alliance.
Franklin then became the first American minister to
France. For seven years he acted as diplomat, purchasing agent,
recruiting officer, loan negotiator, admiralty court, and intelligence
chief and was generally the main representative of the new United
States in Europe. Though nearly 80 years old, he oversaw the
dispatch of French armies and navies to North America, supplied
American armies with French munitions, outfitted John
Paul Jones -- whose famous ship the Bonhomme Richard was
named in Franklin's honor--and secured a succession of loans
from the nearly bankrupt French treasury.
After the loss at Yorktown
(1781) finally persuaded British leaders that they could not
win the war, Franklin made secret contact with peace negotiators
sent from London. In these delicate negotiations he proposed
treaty articles close to those finally agreed to: complete American
independence, access to the Newfoundland fishing grounds, evacuation
of British forces from all occupied areas, and a western boundary
on the Mississippi. Together with John Jay, Franklin represented
the United States in signing the Treaty
of Paris (Sept. 3, 1783), by which the world's foremost military
power recognized the independence of the new nation.
Franklin traveled home in 1785. Though in his 80th
year and suffering from painful bladder stones, he nonetheless
accepted election for three years as president of Pennsylvania
and resumed active roles in the Pennsylvania Society for Promoting
the Abolition of Slavery, the American Philosophical Society,
and the University of Pennsylvania. At the Constitutional Convention
of 1787, although he was too weak to stand, Franklin's good humor
and gift for compromise often helped to prevent bitter disputes.
Franklin's final public pronouncements urged ratification
of the Constitution and approved the
inauguration of the new federal government under his admired
friend George Washington. He wrote friends
in France that "we are making Experiments in Politicks,"
but that American "affairs mend daily and are getting into
good order very fast." Thus, cheerful and optimistic as
always, Benjamin Franklin died in Philadelphia on Apr. 17, 1790. |