top of page

Bring Back Ben's America


On April 17, 1790, the son of a poor candle-maker died.


The fifteenth of seventeen children, he apprenticed as a printer and published a popular almanac. He retired at age 42, then taught himself five languages, invented the rocking chair, bifocal glasses, and the lightning rod, which earned him degrees from Harvard and Yale.


He helped found the University of Pennsylvania, a hospital, America’s first postal system and fire department. He became the governor of Pennsylvania, signed the Declaration of Independence, and called for prayer at the Constitutional Convention.


He was president of America’s first anti-slavery society.


His name was Ben Franklin.


In his Poor Richard’s Almanac, May 1757, Franklin wrote: “Work as if you were to live 100 years; pray as if you were to die tomorrow.”


In a pamphlet for Europeans titled Information to Those Who Would Remove to America, 1754, Franklin wrote, “Atheism is unknown there; infidelity rare and secret; so that persons may live to a great age in that country without having their piety shocked by meeting with either an atheist or an infidel. And the Divine Being seems…pleased to favor the whole country.”


Used with permission from AmericanMinute.Com-William J. Federer (114).


How about you? Any thoughts on this Fourth of July long weekend? Don’t forget to comment below.


Comentários


bottom of page