Atlantic Cousins: Benjamin Franklin and His Visionary FriendsBasic Books, 2007 M01 9 - 416 pages Ben Franklin was at the heart of the Enlightenment. He drew to him some of the greatest minds of that time, people who remain among the most intriguing in history — Americans, Englishmen, and Frenchmen whose ideas continue to shape how we live. Through engaging anecdotes and short histories, Atlantic Cousins includes intimate portraits of Franklin and Thomas Paine, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, John Adams, Voltaire, the Marquis de Condorcet, Georges-Jacques Danton, Camille Desmoulins — and their arch-enemy, William Cobbett, an unrelenting monarchist and anglophile. Aside from the colorful personalities, author Jack Fruchtman documents developments from Thomas Paine's smokeless candles to the founding of the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Virginia; the debate that led to the Declaration of Independence; the abolitionist movement both in America and abroad; and Paine's Rights of Man. Atlantic Cousins contains numerous illustrations and maps that complement the material, and shows just how Ben Franklin and his circle of friends shaped this unique and remarkable period in history. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 91
Page 33
... never once found there a prohibition against slavery . Worse , he himself owned slaves , and at his death in 1770 he willed them along with Bethesda and all of his possessions to the Countess of Huntingdon . Three years after ...
... never once found there a prohibition against slavery . Worse , he himself owned slaves , and at his death in 1770 he willed them along with Bethesda and all of his possessions to the Countess of Huntingdon . Three years after ...
Page 44
... never outshone his practical ones : although he learned the linen- making trade , he soon tired of it and went to work in the ord- nance office , sending supplies and materiel to the armed forces . In the mornings before work , Greeny's ...
... never outshone his practical ones : although he learned the linen- making trade , he soon tired of it and went to work in the ord- nance office , sending supplies and materiel to the armed forces . In the mornings before work , Greeny's ...
Page 46
... never to return . He was regarded as a magnificent orator , but apparently he never lost his Scottish accent , as he had wanted to , and thus " pronounced words oddly in a studied effort not to mispronounce them . " An Oxford graduate ...
... never to return . He was regarded as a magnificent orator , but apparently he never lost his Scottish accent , as he had wanted to , and thus " pronounced words oddly in a studied effort not to mispronounce them . " An Oxford graduate ...
Contents
Prologue Franklins Atlantic Cousins | 1 |
Marat and Mesmer Charlatans or Misunderstood | 197 |
Condorcet Revolution and la République | 233 |
Copyright | |
5 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Atlantic Cousins: Benjamin Franklin and His Visionary Friends Jack Fruchtman No preview available - 2005 |
Common terms and phrases
abolitionist Académie royale advocated American Revolution animal magnetism Anthony Benezet argued assembly Autobiography Badinter Barnave became believed Benezet Benjamin Franklin Benjamin Rush blacks bridge Brissot Britain British Burke called century citizens claimed College colonies Condorcet constitution convention corruption cure Darnton Dissenters dorcet eighteenth-century elected England English Enlightenment essay France French Revolution George Girondins glass armonica Granville Sharp hoped human ideas included Jacobins Jefferson John Adams Joseph Priestley king later Letters of Benjamin liberal liberty lived London magnetism Mansfield Marat Marquis Marquis de Condorcet matter ment Mesmer minister monarchy moral nation Negro never Paine's Paris patients Pennsylvania Philadelphia Philosophical physician political Price and Priestley Priestley's Quoted religious republic republican revolutionary Richard Price Robespierre Rush's scientific scientists slave trade slavery social Thomas Paine thought tion told University Press wanted Whitefield women Writings of Thomas wrote