<h2><SPAN name="c13"></SPAN><span>13</span> <br/><span>THE SPLENDID WORD INDEPENDENCE</span></h2>
<p>As Franklin had foreseen, the King paid no heed to the
“olive branch” petition of the Second Continental Congress.
By Royal proclamation all Americans were declared Rebels.
The British had burned Charlestown in June and Falmouth in
October 1775. It was hinted they were buying mercenaries
from German princes. That foreigners should be paid by the
English to kill English subjects seemed the greatest insult of
all.</p>
<p>Franklin composed a short letter to William Strahan, his
English printer friend:</p>
<blockquote>
<p><span class="sc">Mr. Strahan:</span></p>
<p>You are a member of Parliament, and one of that majority
which has doomed my country to destruction. You have begun
to burn our towns and murder our people. Look upon your
hands! They are stained with the blood of your relations. You
and I were long friends. You are now my enemy, and I am</p>
<p><span class="center">Yours,</span>
<span class="jr"><span class="sc">B. Franklin.</span></span></p>
</blockquote>
<p>He did not send this cruel note, but instead wrote Strahan a
warm and cordial letter which Strahan answered in kind. Perhaps
he had written the first one to see how it sounded and
when he read it over did not like it. Throughout the conflict
he found ways of carrying on a correspondence with those he
cherished in England.</p>
<p>On November 29, 1775, the Congressional Committee of
Secret Correspondence was formed with five members—Benjamin
Franklin and John Dickinson of Pennsylvania, Benjamin
Harrison of Virginia, Thomas Johnson of Maryland,
and John Jay of New York. Its assignment was to establish
closer relations with foreign nations, and where possible to
make allies of those nations. With these duties, the Committee
of Secret Correspondence became the predecessor of the
United States Department of State.</p>
<p>As a member of the new committee, Franklin wrote his
friend Charles Dumas, a Swiss journalist with many political
connections: “We wish to know whether, if, as seems likely
to happen, we should be obliged to break off all connection
with Britain, and declare ourselves an independent people,
there is any state or power in Europe, who would be willing
to enter into an alliance with us for the benefits of our commerce.”
In a similar vein he sounded out Barbeu Dubourg, his
Paris printer, who had, as he knew, friends high in the French
government.</p>
<p>The French were already watching America with interest.
The harsh terms of the 1763 treaty with Great Britain still
rankled. They welcomed any struggle that would involve
England’s military forces, particularly if it could be prolonged
to seriously weaken her.</p>
<p>In December 1775, a certain Monsieur Achard de Bonvouloir,
allegedly an Antwerp merchant, arrived in Philadelphia.
Through a French bookseller he arranged to meet
Franklin, to whom he admitted that he had connections at the
Court of Versailles. In truth he was a French agent, sent by
Louis XVI’s foreign minister, Count Charles Gravier de Vergennes,
to appraise the American situation.</p>
<p>Franklin arranged for Bonvouloir to meet with the Committee
of Secret Correspondence at a quiet house in the outskirts
of Philadelphia. It turned out to be a very crucial meeting.
The French government did not object to American ships
coming into her ports to pick up cargoes, Bonvouloir said. If
the British complained of the presence of these ships as a
breach of neutrality, the government would simply plead ignorance
of what was going on. But in return for this welcome
assurance of free trade, the French wanted to make sure that
America intended to declare its independence from England.</p>
<p>Independence was a word as yet heard rarely. Though
Franklin had mentioned its possibility in his letter to Dumas,
he knew that few other members of Congress, much less the
American people, were ready for such a drastic step. The
urgent need for French cooperation made him speak out
boldly.</p>
<p>Certainly the Americans were going to separate from England,
he told Bonvouloir blandly. The country was behind the
war to a man. Everything was going splendidly. General
Washington’s army was growing.</p>
<p>There was exaggeration in his statements. Not only was talk
of independence rare, but America was peppered with Loyalists,
those who, like Franklin’s own son, were opposed to action
against the British Crown. While new recruits were joining
Washington, many simply walked off when their time of service
was up, and some were deserting outright. But Franklin’s
words were a magnificent prophecy. He was speaking from
his own profound faith in his countrymen, and his confidence
was contagious. Bonvouloir sent back a glowing report to the
French minister Vergennes; France’s secret alliance with
America began from that time.</p>
<p>If Americans were not more solidly behind the rebellion, it
was that their emotions had not been deeply aroused. Was not
the chief dispute a matter of taxes? No one likes to pay taxes,
but though people were ready to parade and protest against
them, not all were willing to risk their lives rather than pay
them. It took the protégé of Franklin, Thomas Paine, to point
out that the rebellion was for something much more important
than taxes.</p>
<p>Paine had settled in Philadelphia, taken a job with the <i>Pennsylvania
Magazine</i>, and had, in the few months he had been
in America, written some fine articles, among them one of the
first attacks on slavery to appear in the American press. Franklin
saw him in October and proposed that he write “a history
of the present transactions,” an account of events that had led
to the present crisis. Paine had only looked mysterious, saying
that he was working on something.</p>
<p>Then in January 1776, Franklin received the first copy off
the press of a pamphlet titled “Common Sense.” Though it was
published anonymously, “written by an Englishman,” he
guessed easily who had written it.</p>
<p>“Common Sense,” written simply and clearly, was a passioned
and reasoned plea for secession from England. It
showed Americans how much they had to gain from independence
and how little there was to lose. It made them hold
up their heads with the pride of being American and convinced
them they were fighting for the most precious thing in the
world—their freedom. There is no estimating the enormous
service done by “Common Sense” in uniting the colonies in a
common cause.</p>
<p>In February, Franklin sent in his resignation to the Pennsylvania
Assembly and its Committee of Safety: “Aged as I am,
I feel myself unequal to do so much business....” At the same
time he accepted another arduous assignment from Congress,
to head a delegation to Canada to try and win French Canadians
to the side of the colonies.</p>
<p>Two expeditions had already been sent to wrest Quebec
from the British, one under General Richard Montgomery,
the other under Colonel Benedict Arnold. Both had failed.
Montgomery had been killed. Arnold, severely wounded, had
retreated with his battered army to Montreal.</p>
<p>Franklin, aged seventy, set out on his mission the last week of
March 1776. There were stops in New York, Albany, and in
Saratoga where the snow was still six inches deep. From there
they rode horseback across to the Hudson and proceeded up
the river in rowboats to Fort Edward. “I began to apprehend
that I have undertaken a fatigue that at my time of life may
prove too much for me,” Franklin wrote Josiah Quincy.</p>
<p>They sailed along the coast of Lake George in open flatboats,
fighting their way through ice. When the cold grew too
bitter, they stopped to make fires, thaw out, and brew tea. By
April 25 they had reached Lake Champlain, and in clumsy
wagons drove over bad roads to the St. Lawrence, where they
again took to boats. Their hard journey ended at Montreal on
the 29th. Benedict Arnold, now a general, came to meet them,
and there was a cannon salute to the “Committee of the Honourable
Continental Congress,” and to the “celebrated Dr.
Franklin.”</p>
<p>The conferences the next day proved what Franklin had
doubtless suspected. The Canadians for the most part found
British rule preferable to French rule and were not dissatisfied.
The majority were Catholic and as such hostile to the
colonies because of unpleasant things that had been said about
their faith.</p>
<p>General Arnold and his men were penniless. Franklin loaned
them about 350 pounds of his own money in gold. On May 6,
word came that the British were sending reinforcements from
England. Franklin guessed that the Americans would be
driven from Canada; it happened just a month later. He stayed
on until May 11, then, realizing nothing more could be done,
set out for home.</p>
<p>He was in New York by the 27th, as worn out and ill as
though the vain mission had drained the last bit of his strength.
His health returned slowly. From Philadelphia, on June 21, he
wrote Washington that gout had kept him from “Congress
and company”—that he knew little of what had passed except
that “a declaration of independence was in the making.”</p>
<p>To this development, the magic of “Common Sense” deserved
credit. On April 12, North Carolina had instructed
its delegates to Congress to vote for independence. Other
colonies followed suit. On June 7, Richard Henry Lee introduced
a resolution that “these colonies are, and of a right
ought to be, free and independent states.” Three days later
Congress appointed Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Robert
Livingston of New York, Roger Sherman of Connecticut, and
Benjamin Franklin, as a committee to prepare the declaration.</p>
<p>Jefferson produced the first draft. John Adams and Franklin
made only a few alterations before it was submitted to
Congress on June 18.</p>
<p>Congress nearly drove the Committee out of its mind with
demands for extensive changes. One clause which attacked
slavery was deleted altogether. When nerves grew tense,
Franklin told a story.</p>
<p>There was a hatter he had once known who built a handsome
signboard reading, “John Thompson, hatter, makes and
sells hats for some ready money,” adorned with a picture of
a hat. He submitted it to his friends for approval. One thought
the word “hatter” unnecessary. Another that “makes” was not
needed. A third thought “for ready money” useless, since no
one then sold for credit. His next friend insisted “sells hats” be
omitted; no one expected him to give them away. All that was
left, when his friends were through with him, was his name
“John Thompson” and the drawing of the hat.</p>
<p>The moral lesson implied may have speeded up the Congressional
process. At length, the Declaration met with approval.
John Hancock, in big black writing, affixed his signature first.
According to legend, Hancock said, “We must be unanimous;
there must be no pulling different ways; we must all hang together.”
To which Franklin allegedly replied, “We must indeed
all hang together, or most assuredly we shall all hang
separately.”</p>
<p>The ideas in the Declaration were not new. Many of them
had been said by others, specifically by Thomas Paine, in
phraseology not too different from Jefferson’s. The document,
adopted by Congress on July 4, 1776, remained the greatest
charter of freedom of all time.</p>
<p>In the midst of the wonder of independence, the New Jersey
Assembly ordered the arrest of its governor, William
Franklin, as a Loyalist, another sad blow for his father. He was
first held under guard at his home, then taken to Connecticut,
where he was kept for two years in the Litchfield jail or on
parole. Temple came to live with his grandfather, attending
the Pennsylvania Academy which Franklin had started so
many years before.</p>
<p>The Declaration of Independence, splendid as it was, still
was only words on paper. The reality was far in the future
and the present looked very dark.</p>
<p>On and around Long Island was gathered the greatest British
expeditionary force in history. Some 32,000 men (including
German mercenaries whom the Americans called Hessians)
and 500 vessels were there in command of General Sir William
Howe who, after leaving Boston, had gone to Halifax for reinforcements.
And in the harbor, a mighty fleet under his
brother Admiral Lord Richard Howe. And in Manhattan,
General George Washington with less than half as many men,
ill-clad and hungry and a good portion too sick to fight.</p>
<p>To get a foothold on Long Island, Washington took half
his army to Brooklyn Heights. The results were disastrous—a
surprise attack by the British on August 27, brought American
casualties, killed and wounded, to nearly two thousand. It
was to the credit of Washington, and John Glover’s Marbleheaders
and former Salem sailors, that boats were found to
carry the survivors back to Manhattan under the cloak of
night.</p>
<p>Why did not the Howe brothers pursue them then and
there? They needed only to send a force up the Hudson or
Long Island Sound to trap the Rebels and cut to pieces
America’s principal army. Yet they dawdled a while. Why?</p>
<p>The truth was that Admiral Lord Howe, whom Franklin
had first met at the home of his sister, had come in a dual role
of warrior and peace ambassador. He was empowered to offer
full pardon to all Rebels (with the secret exception of John
Adams) and on his arrival had sent Franklin a flattering and
friendly letter making a proposal for reconciliation—which
Franklin, with the sanction of Congress, had turned down in
an equally cordial missive.</p>
<p>Soon after the Battle of Long Island, Lord Howe sent another
request to Philadelphia, by a paroled prisoner, General
John Sullivan, for delegates to come and discuss a settlement
of hostilities. Franklin, John Adams, and Edward Rutledge of
South Carolina were chosen. They met Lord Howe and his
staff on September 11, at a neglected house on Staten Island,
in a room hung with moss and branches. Americans and British
dined on cold ham, tongue, mutton, bread, and claret, all the
while making polite conversation. Then they got to business.
Lord Howe did most of the talking.</p>
<p>He felt for America as for a brother, he said, and should
lament, as a brother, should America fall.</p>
<p>“My Lord, we will use our utmost endeavors to save your
lordship that mortification,” Franklin said with a guileless
smile.</p>
<p>“The King’s most earnest desire” was to make his American
subjects happy, Howe continued. They would redress any
real grievances. It was not money they wanted. America’s solid
advantage to Great Britain was “her commerce, her strength,
her men.”</p>
<p>“Aye, my Lord,” Franklin said, chuckling, “we have a
pretty considerable manufactory of men.” He was referring
not, as Howe’s secretary presumed, to the growing army, but
to America’s rapidly increasing population.</p>
<p>Howe continued to plead for a resumption of the old relationship
with England. Franklin told him firmly that was impossible.
Had not their defenseless towns been burned in the
midst of winter, Indians encouraged to massacre their farmers,
and slaves to murder their masters—and now foreign mercenaries
brought to deluge their settlements with blood? Ah no,
after these atrocious injuries, there could be no return to their
previous status.</p>
<p>The conference ended on this impasse.</p>
<p>Following this meeting, the British drove Washington north
to Harlem Heights and on to White Plains. During the evacuation,
New York caught fire and a third of it burned. No one
ever knew who was responsible. The situation looked hopeless—unless
substantial aid could be had from outside. And
where could they go for such aid if not to France?</p>
<p>Congress chose three commissioners to represent America at
the French court—Jefferson, Franklin, and Silas Deane of Connecticut,
who was already in Paris. When Jefferson declined
because of his wife’s health, Arthur Lee, cousin of “Light-Horse
Harry” Lee of Virginia, was chosen in his place.</p>
<p>Before he left, Franklin appointed Richard Bache as deputy
postmaster and turned over to Congress all the money he could
raise as a loan—around 4,000 pounds. To his friend Joseph
Galloway, he entrusted his trunk, containing his correspondence
from the years he had spent in England, as well as the
only existing manuscript of his <i>Autobiography</i>. He took with
him two grandsons, eighteen-year-old Temple Franklin, and
Benjamin Franklin Bache, age seven. They left on the sloop
<i>Reprisal</i>, October 27, 1776.</p>
<p>Did the two youths know what a perilous journey they
were making, with the English Navy prowling the seas in
search of just such prizes as the <i>Reprisal</i>? Temple at least must
have realized that if they were captured, his gray-haired
grandfather would be considered a prize more valuable than
any ship, and would certainly be hanged as a traitor. Not only
was the crossing made safely but within two days of landing,
the passengers had the thrill of witnessing their captain
take two British “prizes,” which the <i>Reprisal</i> on December 3
brought to Auray on the coast of Brittany.</p>
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