Thursday, 24 July 2014

Benjamin Franklin

NAME Benjamin Franklin

WHAT FAMOUS FOR Franklin is celebrated as a Founding Father, co-author of the Declaration of Independence, and pioneering electrical researcher whose lightning rod revolutionized safety. His diplomatic prowess secured French support during the American Revolution, while aphorisms from Poor Richard’s Almanack codified practical wisdom for generations.

BIRTH Benjamin Franklin was born on January 17, 1706 [O.S. January 6, 1705] in Boston, in the Province of Massachusetts Bay. He was born into what would become a large family during the early colonial period of American history.

FAMILY BACKGROUND Benjamin Franklin was the 10th of 17 children born to his father, Josiah Franklin, and the 8th of 10 children born to Josiah's second wife, Abiah Folger. His father, Josiah, was a candlemaker and soap maker who had emigrated from Ecton, Northamptonshire, England, in 1683. His mother, Abiah Folger, was the daughter of Peter Folger, one of the first settlers of Nantucket and a prominent Puritan figure. The family was industrious but of modest means.

CHILDHOOD Franklin's childhood in Boston was characterized by a strong work ethic and early exposure to his father's trade. He learned candlemaking and soapmaking, but quickly showed an aversion to it. He was a prodigious reader from a young age, often staying up late to read books he borrowed or purchased

At age 12, he was apprenticed to his brother, a local printer. While working at his brother's printing shop, Franklin secretly wrote articles for the newspaper and labeled them as being by "Mrs. Silence Dogood". He quarreled with his brother and at age 17 ran away to Philadelphia.

EDUCATION Benjamin Franklin learned to read early and began formal schooling at age eight. He attended South Grammar School and later George Brownell’s English school, where he excelled in reading and writing but struggled with arithmetic. By age ten, his formal education ended, and he joined his father's business, continuing his learning through self-education using his father's library.

As a boy, he taught himself geography by studying maps during his father's prayer time. Later, while working for his half-brother James, Benjamin studied arithmetic, grammar, and navigation in the evenings. To improve his writing, he copied essays from The Spectator, summarizing them, setting the notes aside, and then trying to rewrite them. Comparing his versions with the originals helped him realize the need to expand his vocabulary. 

His intellectual curiosity was boundless, leading him to pursue knowledge in various fields independently. (1)

CAREER RECORD Franklin's career was extraordinarily diverse. 

1718-1723: Worked for his brother James's printing shop in Boston.

1723-1748: Ran away to Philadelphia, worked for various printers, then established his own successful printing business.

1729-1748: Publisher of the Pennsylvania Gazette: Took over and greatly expanded the newspaper.

1732- 1758: Author of Poor Richard's Almanack: Published annually, known for its proverbs and wit.

1737-1753: Postmaster of Philadelphia: Appointed by the British Crown.

1753-1774: Joint Postmaster General for British North America: Significantly improved the colonial postal service.

1757-1762, 1764-1775: Colonial Agent in London: Represented Pennsylvania, and later other colonies, to the British government.

1775-1776: Delegate to the Second Continental Congress: Played a key role in drafting the Declaration of Independence.

1776-1785: Ambassador to France: Secured crucial French military and financial aid during the Revolutionary War, negotiated the Treaty of Paris (1783).

1785-1788: President of Pennsylvania's Supreme Executive Council: Equivalent to governor.

1787: Delegate to the Constitutional Convention : Though ailing, provided crucial counsel and promoted compromise in drafting the U.S. Constitution.

APPEARANCE  The exact measurement of Benjamin Franklin's height is approximately 5'9" or 1.75 meters, which placed him somewhat above his contemporaries as the average American male stood at around 5'6" during the late 1700s. In his later years, he reached a weight of 220 pounds (100 kilograms), likely due to indulging in fine cuisine and developing a palate for alcohol during his international experiences. 

Benjamin Franklin has been described as a stout man with broad shoulders, known to have a round puffy face and a massive balding head. He had long, curly light brown hair that he liked to tie in a bun and maintained a clean-shaven appearance. He was also known for his square hands, twinkly gray eyes, and a pointed upper lip. (2)

Benjamin Franklin c 1785 by Joseph-Siffred Duplessis - 

FASHION From a very young age, Benjamin Franklin understood that appearance was the basis on which people judged each other. He usually dressed modestly, foregoing the powdered wigs and ruffled shirts of his peers for unstyled hair and coarse, homespun suits. When appearing before Louis XV in 1767, however, he knew his signature plain dress would not do, and called upon a tailor and a wigmaker to dress him appropriately. 

During his diplomatic mission in France, he strategically adopted a fur cap from the American wilderness to captivate Parisian society.

 A three-piece silk suit that belonged to Franklin, originally a dark plum color but now faded to brownish, is thought to have been made in France around 1778. This plain suit would have created a stark contrast between Franklin and those in the elaborate dress typical of the opulent French Court.

Benjamin Franklin wore spectacles, a necessity that led to one of his most practical inventions: bifocals. 

CHARACTER Franklin possessed a complex and multifaceted character. He was incredibly industrious, pragmatic, and self-disciplined, as evidenced by his methodical approach to self-improvement. He was also highly intelligent, curious, and witty, with a knack for observation and a practical approach to problem-solving. He was a master of diplomacy and compromise, often using humor and reason to bridge divides. Despite his many accomplishments, he projected an image of humility and common sense. He was also a shrewd businessman and a deeply civic-minded individual.

SPEAKING VOICE Franklin had a clear, persuasive, and engaging speaking voice. He was known for his conversational style rather than oratorical flourishes. His arguments were often delivered with a blend of logic, wit, and relatable anecdotes, making him a highly effective debater and communicator, both in small groups and public forums.

SENSE OF HUMOUR  Franklin possessed an extraordinary sense of humor and was known for his wit and satirical writing. His humorous works included Apology for Printers (1731), where he defended printers with a wink and a chuckle. He created The Drinker's Dictionary (1737) with more than 200 hilarious synonyms for "drunk," including terms like "half-way to Concord" and "foxed". His satirical piece Fart Proudly (1781) served up flatulence wisdom with hilarity, suggesting various methods for reducing gas. 

Franklin also published satirical works like Rules by Which a Great Empire May Be Reduced to a Small One and Edict by the King of Prussia, both criticizing British attitudes toward the colonies.

 “Teach your child to hold his tongue. He will learn fast enough to speak.” – Poor Richard’s Almanack

 “He that falls in love with himself will have no rivals.” - Poor Richard’s Almanack

“Here Skugg lies snug. As a bug in a rug.” – This line appears in a letter Franklin wrote in 1772. It’s one of the earliest known uses of the now-famous phrase “snug as a bug in a rug.” He coined it whimsically in reference to a pet squirrel named Skugg.

“But in this world nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes.” – This famous line appears in a letter Franklin wrote to French scientist Jean-Baptiste Le Roy in 1789. It's one of Franklin’s most quoted maxims.

RELATIONSHIPS Franklin's romantic life was complex and well-documented.

When Franklin arrived in Philadelphia on a Sunday morning in October 1723, he was tired, hungry, and had only a few coins in his pocket. He recounted in his autobiography that he found a bakery, asked for three pennies' worth of bread, and received "three great Puffy Rolls." With one roll under each arm and eating the third, he walked up Market Street. As he passed the Read family's door, Deborah Read—his future wife—saw him and, as Franklin wrote, "thought I made, as I certainly did, a most awkward ridiculous appearance" due to his bedraggled state and the way he carried the bread.

A few weeks later, Franklin became a boarder in the Read household, and his relationship with Deborah began to develop from that point. They entered into a common-law marriage in 1730 because Deborah's first husband had disappeared, leaving her unable to legally remarry. Benjamin and Deborah went on to have two children: Francis Folger Franklin ("Frankie") who died from smallpox in 1736, and Sarah Franklin ("Sally"). 

Deborah Read Franklin Attributed to Benjamin Wilson 

Franklin also had a son, William Franklin, from a relationship with Philadelphia's "low women". 

During his travels, Franklin had relationships with several women, including Catherine "Caty" Ray, a twenty-three-year-old he met when he was forty-nine. 

In London, he lived with Margaret Stevenson, his sophisticated landlord, and developed a close relationship with her eighteen-year-old daughter Polly. 

In France, he was smitten with Madame Helvetius and proposed marriage to her in 1780, but she declined.

During his time in England, Franklin made friends with many prominent people, including the philosopher and economist Adam Smit and the chemist and clergyman Joseph Priestley.

BUSINESS CAREER By the age of ten, Benjamin Franklin was gainfully employed in the family business, which involved the thrilling task of cutting candle wicks and filling molds with molten tallow. It was every bit as delightful as it sounds. Unsurprisingly, young Ben quickly discovered that dipping wax for a living did not quite ignite his passions, and so he briefly apprenticed with a cutler—someone who makes knives—before shuffling back to the family trade, presumably only marginally more enthusiastic than before.

At twelve, Franklin was handed over to his older half-brother James, a printer of robust opinions and limited charm, to learn the trade. James soon launched The New-England Courant, a brash and rather impudent newspaper that was revolutionary for its time—it refused to grovel before authority, which was something of a novelty in colonial America. Young Ben delivered copies by day and, with remarkable cheek, wrote anonymous essays by night, slipping them under the door to be published under the name “Silence Dogood.” No one guessed it was him, which was deeply satisfying.

At seventeen, tiring of his brother’s temper and with a taste for adventure, Franklin ran away. He arrived in Philadelphia in October 1723, famously bedraggled and munching on a roll. He found work in a printing shop and, after a few months, was persuaded by Pennsylvania’s flamboyant and possibly delusional governor, Sir William Keith, to sail to London to acquire printing equipment—with the governor promising to provide letters of credit. The only snag was that the letters never materialized. Franklin arrived in London with no money, no equipment, and no particular plan.

Stranded but unfazed, he found work as a typesetter in a print shop near the Church of St Bartholomew-the-Great, which was as good a place as any to bide one’s time, especially if you liked Gothic arches and ecclesiastical echoes.

He returned to Philadelphia in 1726 and took a job with a kindly merchant named Thomas Denham, working as a clerk and bookkeeper—jobs which, though useful, are unlikely to inspire great poetry. Two years later, Franklin partnered with a friend named Hugh Meredith to open a printing house. By 1730, he had bought Meredith out and was running The Pennsylvania Gazette, which he turned into one of the most successful papers in the colonies.

But even Franklin had his financial hiccups. In 1755, during the French and Indian War, he personally guaranteed the value of horses and wagons borrowed from Pennsylvania farmers to support General Braddock’s ill-fated expedition against Fort Duquesne. When the mission promptly collapsed in spectacular fashion, Franklin faced the cheery possibility of having to repay nearly $20,000 out of his own pocket—a ruinous sum at the time. Fortunately, the government eventually covered the loss, sparing Franklin bankruptcy and allowing him to resume being brilliant at everything.

MONEY AND FAME Franklin achieved considerable wealth through his printing and publishing ventures. He became wealthy publishing The Pennsylvania Gazette and Poor Richard's Almanack. By 1748, Franklin had made enough money to retire from business and concentrate on science and inventing. His success in business allowed him financial independence that enabled his later scientific and political pursuits. Franklin became prosperous and promoted public services in Philadelphia, including a library, a fire department, a hospital, an insurance company, and an academy that became the University of Pennsylvania.

"Remember that time is money." This phrase comes from Franklin’s 1748 essay Advice to a Young Tradesman. It's perhaps his most famous piece of practical business advice and is often quoted in time-management talks to this day.

Franklin was one of the most popular men during Europe's Age of Enlightenment and the most famous American in Europe. His portrait was to be seen everywhere in Paris, in store windows and in many private houses. His image appeared on medals, medallions, rings, watches, snuff boxes and bracelets. People paid for seats in windows to watch him ride past in his coach. His reputation was universal.  (3)

FOOD AND DRINK Franklin's dietary habits evolved significantly throughout his life. He maintained a health-conscious lifestyle in his youth, adhering to a moderate diet that included a period of strict vegetarianism. As he aged and traveled, particularly in Europe, Franklin's dietary habits shifted, leading to significant weight gain. (2)

Franklin created a recipe for milk punch that he shared with friend James Bowdoin in 1763, which included rum, brandy, milk, and vanilla extract. The recipe shares characteristics of two beverages—possets and syllabubs.

MUSIC AND ARTS Franklin had a keen appreciation for music and even invented his own musical instrument, the glass armonica, which achieved considerable popularity in Europe. He developed it in 1761 after seeing water-filled wine glasses played by Edward Delaval at Cambridge in England. Franklin worked with London glassblower Charles James to build one, and it had its world premiere in early 1762. In a letter to his friend Giambattista Beccaria, Franklin wrote: "The advantages of this instrument are, that its tones are incomparably sweet beyond those of any other; that they may be swelled and softened at pleasure by stronger or weaker pressures of the finger". In Franklin's treadle-operated version, 37 bowls were mounted horizontally on an iron spindle, and the sound was produced by touching the rims with water-moistened fingers. (4)

Franklin enjoyed playing instruments (though not a virtuoso) and was known to attend concerts. 

He also had an interest in architecture and design, evident in his own homes and civic improvements he championed. 

Franklin appreciated painting and portraiture, sitting for many famous artists throughout his life.

WRITING CAREER As a teenager, Benjamin Franklin began slipping satirical essays under the door of his older half-brother’s newspaper, The New England Courant, under the deliciously improbable pseudonym of Silence Dogood, a fictional middle-aged widow with a sharp tongue and a flair for societal commentary. It was a fine start to a lifelong habit of disguising brilliance as entertainment.

In 1732, always game for a challenge, Franklin launched The Philadelphia Zeitung, the first foreign-language newspaper in the British colonies — in German, no less. Unfortunately, the German-speaking population of Pennsylvania proved to be both large and better served elsewhere: four competing publications popped up almost overnight, and Franklin’s newspaper folded within the year, having proven mostly useful as a lesson in how fast a monopoly can vanish.

That same year, Franklin—just twenty-six years old and already exhausting—launched Poor Richard’s Almanack, a publication so wildly popular it came to rival the Bible in colonial households. Stuffed with aphorisms, weather predictions, household tips, moral exhortations, farming advice, and jokes, it was everything a growing colony could want. Franklin published it annually for twenty-five years, each edition prefaced by his alter ego, “Richard Saunders,” who was cheerfully opinionated and frequently wrong about the weather.

By the 1750s, Franklin had added yet another item to his résumé: political cartoonist. In 1754, he famously published a cartoon in the Pennsylvania Gazette depicting a severed snake, each piece labeled with the initials of a colony, accompanied by the caption: “Join, or Die” (see below). It was the first known political cartoon printed in an American newspaper and a rather efficient bit of persuasion in the run-up to revolution.

In 1758, having decided that enough was enough, Franklin wrote his final entry for the Almanack. He went out with a bang, printing what is now considered colonial America's most famous literary work: Father Abraham’s Sermon. This was essentially a stitched-together patchwork of his best proverbs delivered as a speech by a wise old gentleman named Father Abraham. Among the gems were: “There are no gains without pains” and, of course, “Early to bed and early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise,” which has been making teenagers everywhere groan ever since.

Franklin’s Autobiography, though never completed, is still widely considered the quintessential self-made man’s manual. Begun in 1771 and published posthumously in 1794, it became an immediate bestseller and has remained in print almost continuously ever since. It’s part life story, part how-to guide, and part national myth — and frankly, it’s hard to tell where one ends and the others begin.

Franklin in London, 1767. Painting by David Martin, 

LITERATURE He taught himself to write effectively and loved books and reading. As a child, one of his favorite books was The Art of Swimming by Melchisédec Thévenot, which he studied and practiced extensively.

Franklin, at the age of 21, established the colonies' first circulation library for all interested citizens. 

NATURE Franklin had a deep appreciation for nature and believed in its therapeutic benefits. He was known for his practice of taking "air baths," spending about an hour in the nude each morning while taking care of correspondence, believing these were healthy. (5)

He meticulously observed natural phenomena, from the behavior of lightning to ocean currents (mapping the Gulf Stream), and meteorological patterns. While not a naturalist in the modern sense, his scientific inquiries were often rooted in understanding the natural world to harness its principles for practical benefit.

PETS While Benjamin Franklin himself did not own a dog, his son William had a Newfoundland, and Benjamin became quite fond of his "grand-dog," often walking and spoiling him with treats. This dog accompanied Franklin during his time in France, and friends remarked on Franklin’s affection for the animal.

In a letter to his daughter Franklin said he wanted the Turkey not the Eagle to be the United States national symbol. He considered the Eagle to be "a bird of bad moral character as it lives by shaping and robbing." 

HOBBIES AND SPORTS Franklin was an avid swimmer and fitness enthusiast. As a child, Benjamin Franklin adored swimming in the Schuylkill River in colonial Philadelphia and taught himself how to swim when he was 8. He studied and practiced The Art of Swimming by Melchisédec Thévenot, adding his own techniques.

Franklin invented swim flippers, creating "two oval pallets, each about ten inches long, and six broad, with a hole for the thumb". He also fitted sandals to his feet for swimming. 

One day, while in London, Franklin jumped into the Thames and swam from Chelsea to Blackfriars (around 3.5 miles), performing water tricks along the way. 

Sir William Wyndham offered to pay him handsomely for swimming lessons for his sons and even offered to help Franklin open the first swim school in England, but Franklin declined because he was homesick for Philadelphia.

Franklin enjoyed playing chess and wrote an essay on the Morals of Chess.

INVENTIONS It was Franklin who gave us the first bifocals, which he designed because he was tired of constantly switching between reading and distance glasses while traveling. His solution was charmingly direct: he cut two pairs of spectacles in half and stitched them together into one gloriously practical contraption. He unveiled this life-improving invention on May 23, 1785 and promptly stopped tripping over things while reading.

He also devised one of the earliest versions of a wetsuit — essentially a floating leather sack — and even tinkered with primitive swim fins, which he strapped to his hands rather than his feet. 

Then there was the Franklin stove — a wood-burning metal fireplace that provided more warmth with less fuel and greatly reduced the odds of setting your house ablaze. June 11, 1742 is the commonly cited date for his invention.

A Franklin Stove

And remarkably, Franklin never patented or copyrighted a single invention. He believed that good ideas should be shared freely, like sunshine or conversation. To seek profit from them, he said, would only “sour one’s Temper and disturb one’s Quiet.” Which, like most things Franklin said, sounds like something we should all embroider on a pillow.

SCIENCE AND MATHS Benjamin Franklin, whose talents were so varied and immense it’s a wonder he ever had time to sleep, also happened to be a first-rate scientist and inventor. He was, in fact, one of the great minds in the history of physics — a distinction he somehow earned while also founding newspapers, inventing stoves, and, just for fun, revolutionizing the understanding of electricity.

Franklin also coined the term battery, not because he was feeling pugnacious, but because the linked capacitors he was experimenting with reminded him of a battery of cannons — all working together in synchronized, electrified harmony.

Of course, Franklin’s crowning scientific achievement was in capturing lightning — that capricious and terrifying force of nature — with nothing more than a kite, some string, and a metal key. The experiment was technically first carried out in France, but Franklin gave it the personal touch on a stormy day on June 10, 1752. He launched a kite from a Philadelphia field, waited for the heavens to comply, and watched as sparks danced from his key. It was a dangerous and frankly insane thing to do. Later imitators were not so lucky — at least two of them were promptly electrocuted. Franklin, for his part, lived on to invent the lightning rod and suggest we pin them to our roofs (and, briefly, to ladies’ hats — a short-lived fashion trend, thankfully).

From this research, he proposed that lightning and electricity were one and the same and introduced the terms positive and negative to describe electrical charges — a neat bit of labeling that would outlast his rather inaccurate assumption that current flowed in the opposite direction from what it actually does. Electrical engineers still draw it that way today, mainly out of respect, or possibly inertia.

Beyond electricity, Franklin also charted the Gulf Stream using a thermometer and a great deal of persistence during his eight crossings of the Atlantic. He realized that warm ocean currents flowed with purpose — something sailors had been vaguely aware of but hadn’t gotten around to mapping.

He also suggested, half-jokingly, that people should get up earlier in summer to make better use of daylight — the first flutter of an idea that would eventually become Daylight Saving Time, for which you may or may not wish to thank him.

PHILOSOPHY & THEOLOGY  Franklin's spiritual journey was complex and evolved significantly throughout his life. He believed in a god of his own creation and lived by the morals of his own choosing in his early years. In 1728, he wrote his Articles of Belief, proposing a great hierarchy of Gods that populated the universe. 

By 1732, Franklin recognized God's direct interference in human affairs and acknowledged the free will of man. 

A significant spiritual change occurred around 1735 when he began accepting the Bible as the inspired and authoritative Word of God. He wrote: "Christ by his Death and Sufferings has purchas'd for us those easy Terms and Conditions of our Acceptance with God, propos'd in the Gospel, to wit, Faith and Repentance". (6) 

Franklin believed in the power of prayer. During the Constitutional Convention — a famously hot, fractious, and un-air-conditioned affair — he stood up one day and suggested that the delegates begin each morning’s session with a prayer. “We need help,” was the subtext, “and divine intervention might be quicker than negotiation.”

And while Franklin admired reason, he also respected restraint. When his friend Thomas Paine was preparing to publish The Age of Reason — a passionate, if tactless, dismantling of organized religion — Franklin gently urged him to reconsider. “The world is bad enough with the Bible,” he told Paine. “What would it be like without it?”

Though he had once owned slaves, he came to regard the institution as morally repugnant. In 1775, he joined forces with the equally progressive Dr. Benjamin Rush to form the first American anti-slavery organization — the Society for the Relief of Free Negroes — an astonishingly forward-thinking endeavor for its time.

So complete was his change of perspective that Franklin added a clause to his will requiring that his daughter free her slave if she wanted to inherit anything. It was, in essence, an early example of what today we might call values-based estate planning.

After visiting a school for Black children — an experience arranged by a friend — Franklin wrote candidly that what many mistook for inherent ignorance was, in fact, the result of forced servitude, poor education, and a deliberately oppressive environment. It was a statement far ahead of its time, and a striking rejection of the prejudices that had once shaped his own views. 

Benjamin Franklin lived his life by 13 rules which he called "the 13 virtues." He wrote them when he was 20. (1)

Franklin was foundational in defining the U.S. ethos as a marriage of practical values with the scientific and tolerant values of the Enlightenment.

Benjamin Franklin was one of the co-founders of the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia. It supported scientific studies as well as philosophy.   

PUBLIC CAREER On July 1, 1731, Franklin and a few of his bookish chums—members of a philosophical society that apparently believed enlightenment was best pursued by committee—pooled their pennies and founded what would become the first public library in Philadelphia. They called it the Library Company. The next year they ordered their first batch of books—weighty theological works and moral instruction manuals mostly, because it was the 1730s and fun hadn’t been invented yet. But by 1741, the shelves had become more adventurous, featuring volumes on geography, poetry, science, and even the occasional travelogue involving pirates or plagues.

The idea of borrowing books instead of buying them caught on spectacularly, and soon other cities were copying Franklin’s model, to the benefit of poor readers and frugal philosophers everywhere.

Franklin had a habit of solving problems that hadn’t quite been solved yet. In 1736, bothered by how quickly things tended to burn down in colonial towns, he founded the Union Fire Company—one of the first volunteer firefighting organizations in America. As with most things Franklin touched, it was both sensible and oddly ahead of its time.

By 1749, Franklin had turned his prodigious mind to education. He published Proposals Relating to the Education of Youth in Pennsylvania, a document that outlined a refreshingly modern vision of schooling. Gone were the usual Latin declensions and moralizing lectures; in came mathematics, science, and modern languages—things one might actually use if one hoped to make a living or invent bifocals. The proposals led to the establishment of the Philadelphia Academy in 1751, which eventually grew into the University of Pennsylvania. Franklin was its first president, because of course he was.

The curriculum he designed was so practical and forward-thinking it made other schools look like monasteries. The first graduating class, in 1757, featured seven men, six Bachelors and one Master of Arts—impressive for a school that had barely unpacked its bookshelves.

Franklin also had a rather full extracurricular schedule. In 1737, he became postmaster of Philadelphia, and eventually the first joint deputy postmaster-general for all British North America. The postal service was, unsurprisingly, a bit of a mess, so Franklin climbed into a carriage and set about measuring the distances himself, inventing a rudimentary odometer in the process—because why not invent a new device before lunch?

He also found time to get elected to the Pennsylvania Assembly in 1750, where he remained until 1764, transforming Philadelphia into a functional city with paved streets, a fire brigade, a proper police force, and lit lamps that didn’t involve carrying a torch and hoping for the best.

In 1751, alongside Dr. Thomas Bond, he helped found the Pennsylvania Hospital—the first in what would eventually become the United States. This was a significant development, not least because it meant Philadelphians now had a place to recover when they fell off ladders or were run over by experimental postal carriages.

In 1754, Franklin attended the Albany Congress, a sort of prequel to American unity where he proposed the Albany Plan—a sensible framework for colonial cooperation that was rejected for being, well, too sensible. Franklin believed to his dying day that if people had just listened to him then, they might have skipped the whole Revolutionary War thing.

In 1757 Franklin packed his wigs and sailed off to London as Pennsylvania’s representative. After a brief stint back in Philadelphia, he returned to England in 1764 for another ten-year stay, trying to reason with Parliament on behalf of the colonies, a task roughly as satisfying as lecturing cows on the benefits of vegetarianism.

When war finally broke out in 1775, Franklin returned home, now a revolutionary in waistcoat and spectacles. He soon helped secure the crucial alliance with France, without which America might still be spelling colour with a "u." French troops and a very useful navy eventually turned the tide against Britain.

Franklin, naturally, helped negotiate the peace as well.

From 1776 to 1785, he served as America's ambassador to France, a job he handled with wit, charm, and a silk suit . While there, he also campaigned for the expansion of American ideas across Europe, reminding anyone who would listen that the colonies were not a backwater of farmers and rebels, but a place of bold thinkers and bigger dreams.

And here’s a final marvel: Franklin was the only person to sign all four of the foundational documents that shaped the United States—the Declaration of Independence (1776), the Treaty of Alliance with France (1778), the Treaty of Peace with Britain (1782), and the U.S. Constitution (1787).

In short, if history were a group project, Franklin would have done most of the work—and probably invented the pencil.

POLITICS Franklin was a central figure in colonial and revolutionary politics. He advocated for colonial unity, represented American interests in Britain and France, and was instrumental in drafting the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution. He promoted compromise and pragmatic solutions, notably at the Constitutional Convention

SCANDAL Franklin’s personal life occasionally attracted scandal, particularly regarding his illegitimate son William and his flirtatious behavior in France. His political enemies accused him of opportunism and duplicity, but his reputation for integrity generally prevailed.

The Hutchinson Letters Affair was a major political scandal in the early 1770s that helped accelerate tensions between the American colonies and Britain. At the center of the controversy were private letters written several years earlier by Thomas Hutchinson, the royal governor of Massachusetts, and Andrew Oliver, his lieutenant governor. In these letters to British officials, the two men argued that the American colonies had too much liberty and suggested that a stronger executive authority should be established to control them—remarks that colonists interpreted as a betrayal of their rights and an endorsement of authoritarian rule.

The letters came into the hands of Benjamin Franklin, who was serving as the colonial agent in London. Hoping to expose the true attitudes of royal officials without inciting unrest, Franklin quietly forwarded the letters to political leaders in Massachusetts under the condition that they not be published. However, despite Franklin's wishes, the letters were eventually leaked and published in the Boston Gazette in June 1773, triggering a wave of political and civil revolt. Colonists were outraged to learn that two of their own top officials had seemingly urged the British government to tighten its grip on the colonies. The incident seriously damaged Hutchinson’s reputation and made him a hated figure among patriots, eventually leading to his recall to England in 1774.

The fallout for Franklin was also dramatic. On January 29, 1774, he was summoned before the British Privy Council for a hearing. There, he faced a humiliating and hostile attack by Solicitor General Alexander Wedderburn, who accused Franklin of illegally obtaining the letters with the intent of inciting rebellion in the colonies. The hearing marked a turning point in Franklin's political stance; previously a moderate who hoped for reconciliation, he left convinced that the British government would never treat the colonies fairly. The affair helped radicalize Franklin and deepen the colonial crisis, moving the colonies another step closer to revolution.


MILITARY RECORD Benjamin Franklin did not have a traditional military record as a soldier. However, he was actively involved in colonial defense:

He organized and led Pennsylvania's colonial militia during the French and Indian War, helping to build fortifications and raise troops. Franklin's command of the militia touched basic points in the power struggle between the Assembly and proprietary party. His appointment caused significant political controversy, with opponents claiming Franklin had designs to assume full personal power in the province.

Franklin was largely responsible for the 1778 alliance with France  which helped win the Revolutionary War for America. Once the French King sent troops and a fleet, it made defeat for Britain inevitable. At the end of the war he helped draw up the peace treaty.

HEALTH AND PHYSICAL FITNESS Franklin was generally robust and healthy for much of his life, which he attributed partly to his active lifestyle and relatively moderate habits. 

In London, Franklin took ill with severe breathing problems (probably from London's foul, polluted air) and for eight weeks, Margaret Stevenson nursed him back to health.

In his later years, Franklin suffered from gout, kidney stones, and other ailments, which caused him considerable pain. Despite this, he remained intellectually active almost until his death.

HOMES Franklin 's homes included:

Boston: The Franklins lived on Milk Street, Boston for the first six years of Benjamin's life, until January 25, 1712. The Franklins moved from their rented home on Milk Street and bought a house from Peter Sargeant at the south-west corner of Union and Hanover Streets. It was about five times as large as their Milk Street home. (1)


Philadelphia: He established himself in Philadelphia, where he and Deborah set up house on Market Street as a common-law marriage

London: From 1757 to 1775, Franklin took up residence at No. 27 Craven Street in London,  near Whitehall, where he rented rooms from Mrs. Margaret Stevenson.. This address is now the Benjamin Franklin House, the world's only remaining home of Benjamin Franklin outside the USA. 

Paris: During his time as ambassador, he lived at a house in Passy, a suburb of Paris, which became a hub for American diplomacy and a salon for European intellectuals.

TRAVEL Franklin was one of the most widely traveled Americans of his era:

To Philadelphia (1723): Ran away from Boston to seek his fortune.

To London (1724-1726, 1757-1762, 1764-1775): Spent many years in London for printing training and later as a colonial agent, accumulating significant experience in British society and politics.

To France (1776-1785): His crucial diplomatic mission to Paris during the American Revolution.

Throughout the Colonies: Traveled extensively as Postmaster General, improving routes and services.

His travels exposed him to diverse cultures and political systems, profoundly shaping his worldview.

DEATH Benjamin Franklin died on April 17, 1790, at his home in Philadelphia at the age of 84. His final illness was brought on by empyema, a condition involving pus in the lungs caused by repeated attacks of pleurisy, which he had suffered throughout his life. In his last days, Franklin experienced high fever, chest pain, cough, and severe difficulty breathing. Five days before his death, an abscess in his lungs burst, leading to a coma. He died peacefully at around 11 o’clock at night, with his grandsons William Temple and Bennie at his side. His last reported words, spoken to his daughter who had suggested he reposition himself for comfort, were: “a dying man can do nothing easy”.

Franklin’s funeral took place on April 21, 1790, and was the largest ever seen in Philadelphia at that time. An estimated 20,000 people attended—remarkable given the city’s population was only about 28,000. The funeral procession started at the State House and included clergy from all denominations, including the Hebrew congregation, walking before the coffin. The pallbearers were among the most prominent leaders of Pennsylvania, including the president of the state, the chief justice, and other dignitaries. The procession was joined by politicians, scientists, printers, members of the American Philosophical Society, and the College of Physicians. The order and silence of the crowd reflected the deep respect and sense of loss felt by all classes of citizens.

Notably absent were President George Washington and members of Congress, who were in New York City at the time.

Franklin was buried in Christ Church Burial Ground in Philadelphia, one of America’s most historic colonial cemeteries. His grave is beside those of his wife, Deborah, who had died 25 years earlier, and his son Francis Folger Franklin. Franklin had once written a witty epitaph for himself, but his actual grave, as specified in his will, is marked simply: “Benjamin and Deborah Franklin.” Today, the gravesite is visible from the street through iron rails, and it is a tradition for visitors to leave pennies on the grave in his honor.

Franklin’s death was mourned internationally. The French National Assembly went into mourning, and memorial services were held throughout France. Count Mirabeau famously said, “He was able to restrain thunderbolts and tyrants.” In the United States, Franklin’s passing was recognized as the loss of one of the nation’s greatest citizens, and his funeral procession was described as a moment when Philadelphia “buried more of itself than ever before.”


APPEARANCES IN MEDIA Franklin has been the subject of numerous media portrayals. 

1. Books and Literature

Ben and Me (1939) by Robert Lawson – A humorous children’s book told from the point of view of a mouse who lives in Franklin’s hat and secretly helps him invent and discover things.

Franklin appears in novels like Esther Forbes’s Johnny Tremain (1943) and William Martin’s Citizen Washington (1999), often as a wise, sardonic mentor figure.

2. Film and TV

1776 (1972, musical film & stage play) – Franklin is a major character, portrayed as witty, bawdy, and politically savvy. Howard Da Silva played him in both the Broadway and film versions.

John Adams (2008, HBO miniseries) – Tom Wilkinson plays Franklin as a shrewd and world-weary diplomat. The show highlights his role in securing French support for the Revolution.

He has appeared in episodes of The Simpsons, Family Guy, and Liberty’s Kids (a PBS series), often as a slightly eccentric but brilliant inventor and statesman.

Ken Burns released Benjamin Franklin (2022), a two-part PBS documentary narrated by Mandy Patinkin, offering a detailed and humanized portrait.

3. Video Games

Assassin’s Creed III – Franklin appears as a non-playable character (NPC) in this American Revolution–era game, handing out side quests involving his famous “missing pages.”

Civilization series – He sometimes appears as a Great Person or in scenarios involving the Enlightenment or the founding of America.

4. Commercials and Pop Culture References

Franklin's image has been used in everything from car insurance ads to Drunk History (where he’s often played for laughs as a saucy genius with a quill).

His face, of course, appears on the U.S. $100 bill—a recurring gag in many films and TV shows about wealth or crime.

ACHIEVEMENTS Franklin’s achievements are vast:

Founding Father of the United States

Drafted and signed the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution

Secured French alliance during the American Revolution

Invented the lightning rod, bifocals, and Franklin stove

Advanced the understanding of electricity

Founded key civic institutions: Library Company, University of Pennsylvania, American Philosophical Society

Published Poor Richard’s Almanack and influential essays

Promoted religious tolerance, public education, and abolition of slavery

Sources (1) Encyclopaedia of Trivia (2) History Oasis (3) The Giant Book of Facts and Trivia by Isaac Asimov (4) Wikipedia (5) Journal of the American Revolution (6) Christian Heritage Fellowship

Wednesday, 23 July 2014

Aretha Franklin

NAME Aretha Louise Franklin

WHAT FAMOUS FOR Known as the "Queen of Soul," she was a legendary American singer, songwriter, and pianist, famous for her extraordinary vocal range and emotionally powerful performances.

BIRTH Born March 25, 1942, in Memphis, Tennessee, USA.

FAMILY BACKGROUND Aretha was the daughter of Clarence LaVaughn "C. L." Franklin, a renowned Baptist minister and civil rights activist known as "the man with the million-dollar voice," and Barbara Siggers Franklin, an accomplished gospel singer and pianist. Her father was pastor of New Bethel Baptist Church in Detroit and a close friend of Martin Luther King Jr. Both parents had children from previous relationships in addition to their four children together.

CHILDHOOD Franklin's early years were marked by upheaval and musical immersion. The family moved from Memphis to Buffalo when she was two, then permanently to Detroit when she was five. Her parents' troubled marriage ended in separation in 1948 due to her father's infidelities. Her mother died of a heart attack in 1952, just before Aretha's 10th birthday. She was raised by her grandmother Rachel, various church members, and visiting gospel luminaries like Mahalia Jackson

The Franklin home was a gathering place for civil rights leaders and prominent musicians including Martin Luther King Jr., Sam Cooke, and Clara Ward.

EDUCATION  Aretha Franklin and famed Motown songwriter Lamont Dozier both attended Hutchins Junior High School in Detroit. Aretha was a year younger than Dozier. He has recounted in interviews that he saw Aretha perform at her father's church on Sundays, mesmerized by her talent even as a young student. (1)

Franklin began her first year at Northern High School in Detroit, but dropped out during her second year to focus on her music career.

Aretha Franklin was an autodidact who learned to play piano by ear. She had a brief and informal connection to the Juilliard School, which some sources mention, but she did not complete a degree there. Her true education came from the gospel church and the musical luminaries who surrounded her.

CAREER RECORD Started as a gospel singer, recording her first album at age 14.

Signed with Columbia Records at 18, later rising to stardom with Atlantic Records in 1966, where she recorded defining hits: “Respect,” “Chain of Fools,” “Think,” “A Natural Woman.”

Continued success into 1980s-2000s with hits like “Freeway of Love,” and collaborations with artists like George Michael.

Performed at major events including President Obama’s 2009 inauguration.

APPEARANCE Franklin was known for her regal stage presence, expressive eyes, and commanding physical bearing. Her appearance evolved over the decades, but she consistently projected an image of dignity and power. She was recognized for her changing hairstyles that reflected cultural and political movements, from beehive updos in the 1960s to natural afros during the Civil Rights era.

Aretha Franklin in 1968

FASHION Franklin was a fashion icon who favored glamorous, statement-making gowns, luxurious furs, vibrant colors, and elaborate accessories. Her style ranged from form-fitting dresses in the 1960s to flowing caftans in later decades. She was notably ahead of her time in advocating for size inclusivity in fashion, reportedly asking designers like Calvin Klein to "please make 14s" and calling out the lack of stylish clothing in larger sizes. (2)

CHARACTER Franklin was intensely private, fiercely independent, and deeply protective of her family and personal life. Despite her powerful stage persona, she was reportedly shy and reserved in private settings. Colleagues described her as a woman of few words who kept her career and personal life strictly separate. She was known for her strong moral compass, charitable nature, and commitment to helping others.

SPEAKING VOICE Franklin possessed a deep, rich, resonant speaking voice that mirrored the power of her singing voice. Those who knew her described her speaking voice as warm yet commanding, reflecting both her southern roots and natural authority.

SENSE OF HUMOUR Franklin was known for having a subtle, sharp wit and enjoyed playful banter with close friends and family. However, she was generally reserved about displaying her humor publicly, preferring to keep her more lighthearted side private.

RELATIONSHIPS Franklin had four sons: Clarence (born 1955), Edward (born 1957), Ted "Teddy" White Jr. (born 1964), and Kecalf Cunningham (born 1970). 

She was married twice: Aretha Franklin's first wedding was to Ted White in 1961, when she was 18 or 19 years old. The ceremony took place about six months after they met in Detroit. The relationship was marked by domestic abuse and they divorced in 1969. 

Her second wedding was to actor Glynn Turman on April 11, 1978. This ceremony was held at her father Reverend C.L. Franklin’s New Bethel Baptist Church in Detroit. They divorced in 1984. 

Franklin had four sons: Clarence (born 1955 when Aretha was 12), Edward (born 1957), Ted "Teddy" White Jr. (born 1964), and Kecalf Cunningham (born 1970). 

She had various romantic relationships throughout her life and was engaged to Willie Wilkerson in 2012, though the engagement was called off. Franklin was notably private about her personal relationships and the fathers of her children, though some of her romances inspired her music. 

Franklin and William Wilkerson at the 2011 US Open by Boss Tweed from New York

MONEY AND FAME Franklin’s success brought her considerable wealth, though her estate was ultimately valued at around $18 million at the time of her death—far less than the initial $80 million estimate. 

One of the highest-earning female artists of her generation, she was famously meticulous about her finances. A savvy businesswoman, she insisted on being paid in cash before every performance, placing the money directly into her handbag, which either stayed with her security team or sat on the piano during her set. 

Known to travel with large sums of cash, she nevertheless led a comparatively modest lifestyle next to some of her peers. After her death, her estate became the focus of a legal dispute when multiple handwritten wills were discovered.

FOOD AND DRINK Franklin was passionate about soul food and Southern cuisine. She loved cooking and was accomplished in the kitchen, often preparing elaborate meals for guests. Her favorite foods included fried chicken, chitlins, hot water cornbread, mac and cheese, and peach cobbler. She demonstrated her cooking skills on shows like Martha Stewart and Oprah, sharing recipes like her famous Chicken Italiano. Franklin also enjoyed dining at restaurants like Red Lobster and Wendy's. (3)

MUSIC CAREER Aretha Franklin’s career wasn’t just successful—it was the sort of success that leaves permanent dents in the history of music, the kind you can’t buff out even if you wanted to.

Like all good legends, her story starts in church. Little Aretha, barely tall enough to peek over the piano, was singing gospel at her father’s New Bethel Baptist Church in Detroit. By 14, she had recorded her first gospel album, Songs of Faith, and if you listen to it today, you get the distinct impression that here was someone who’d been born fully capable of rearranging your internal organs using only her voice.

In 1960, at just 18, Franklin signed with Columbia Records. This should have been the beginning of global domination, except Columbia, in a stroke of magnificent short-sightedness, tried to mold her into a lounge-friendly pop act. The records were fine—lovely, even—but they didn’t really unleash the full gospel thunderstorm she was packing.

Enter 1966 and Atlantic Records, where producer Jerry Wexler had the sense to say, in effect, “Why don’t you just sing the way you actually sing?” The result was an avalanche of hits: “Respect” (1967’s unstoppable anthem), “(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman,” “Chain of Fools,” “Think,” and “I Say a Little Prayer.” With these, Aretha became the undisputed “Queen of Soul”—a title she never relinquished—her voice carrying the grit of the church, the polish of pop, and the urgency of civil rights and feminism.

One of her most legendary moments came at the 1998 Grammy Awards. Opera giant Luciano Pavarotti was due to perform Puccini’s Nessun Dorma but, moments before showtime, he fell ill. This is the kind of situation that would send most singers running for the exit. Aretha, however, stepped in “literally at a moment’s notice” and sang the aria herself—transposing it into her own key and style—earning a standing ovation and the eternal gratitude of the show’s producers. It was a reminder that her talent could leap genres without breaking a sweat.

The ’70s and ’80s brought further glories: collaborations with the likes of George Michael (“I Knew You Were Waiting (For Me)”), dancefloor shakers like “Freeway of Love,” and a deal with Arista Records that let her stretch into pop and contemporary styles. She also delivered the kind of high-profile performances—President Obama’s inauguration, televised tributes—that reminded everyone she was still in a league of her own.

By the time the dust settled, Franklin had racked up 112 singles on the Billboard charts, 20 No.1 R&B hits, and 17 Top-10 pop singles, selling over 75 million records. She earned 18 Grammys, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, and the honor of being the first woman inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (1987). She was, in short, a walking, singing collection of “firsts” and “mosts.”

Aretha Franklin didn’t just sing songs; she redefined what a song could be. She fused gospel, jazz, R&B, and pop into something unmistakably hers, while playing piano and arranging music with quiet mastery. Her voice was a force of nature—capable of tenderness and fury in the same breath—and it set the bar for every singer who came after. Today, her influence remains so pervasive that even artists who don’t know they’re channeling Aretha are, in some small way, channeling Aretha.

MUSIC AND ARTS Music was the core of her life. Her musical influences included gospel artists like Clara Ward and Mahalia Jackson, as well as jazz and soul singers such as Dinah Washington, Sam Cooke, and Ray Charles.

Beyond singing, Franklin was an accomplished pianist and songwriter who played by ear and resisted formal lessons. She was a major supporter of jazz education and various musical charities. Her musical influences spanned gospel, blues, jazz, and classical music, and she maintained deep connections to Detroit's rich musical heritage.

In 1972, director Sydney Pollack filmed her Amazing Grace concerts but forgot to use clapperboards, making it impossible to sync sound and picture. The footage sat unused for 46 years before being salvaged and released.

LITERATURE Franklin was an avid reader with particular interests in African-American history and literature. Despite leaving formal education early, she valued learning and continued to educate herself throughout her life.

NATURE Franklin enjoyed spending quiet time in gardens and found peace in natural surroundings, especially later in her life. She appreciated tranquil outdoor spaces as retreats from her demanding career.

PETS Franklin kept pets during her life, often favoring small dogs. she supported animal welfare causes

HOBBIES AND SPORTS Franklin's hobbies included piano playing, cooking, reading, bowling, and golf. According to her 1964 ASCAP membership form, she specifically enjoyed bowling and golf as recreational activities. 

SCIENCE AND MATHS While not formally trained, she had an intuitive grasp of musical structure and rhythm akin to mathematical precision.

PHILOSOPHY & THEOLOGY Franklin's worldview was deeply rooted in gospel music, Baptist faith, and social justice. Her early life in the church, combined with her father's activism, shaped her commitment to civil rights and humanitarian causes. She maintained strong religious faith throughout her life and saw her music as a form of ministry and social commentary.

Aretha Franklin’s 1972 gospel album Amazing Grace is her best-selling LP and stands as the highest-selling live gospel album of all time. It sold over 2 million copies in the United States, earning double platinum certification, and it remains a landmark in both her career and the history of gospel music. (1)

POLITICS Franklin was a prominent civil rights supporter and registered Democrat. She sang at Martin Luther King Jr.'s funeral, performed at President Obama's inauguration, and was actively involved with organizations like the NAACP and Southern Christian Leadership Conference. In 1970, she offered to pay Angela Davis's bail. The FBI monitored her activities for 40 years due to her civil rights involvement.

Her song "Respect" became an anthem for both the civil rights and women's rights movements.

SCANDAL Franklin faced various personal challenges that occasionally attracted media attention, including teen pregnancies, tumultuous relationships, domestic abuse, performance cancellations, and IRS issues. However, her public image remained largely positive throughout her career. S

HEALTH AND PHYSICAL FITNESS Franklin struggled with weight fluctuations and health issues throughout her life. She battled advanced pancreatic neuroendocrine cancer for nearly a decade before her death, though she kept her illness largely private. She experienced significant weight loss following surgery in 2010 and made efforts to adopt healthier lifestyle habits.

HOMES Franklin primarily resided in Detroit, considering it her hometown despite being born in Memphis. She owned several properties including a mansion at 18261 Hamilton Road in Detroit (purchased in 1993) and her childhood home at 7415 La Salle Boulevard where she lived from age 5 to 18. She also lived periods in New York, Los Angeles, and Encino, California, but returned to Detroit in 1982 to care for her ailing father.

Franklin's birthplace, 406 Lucy Avenue, Memphis, by Thomas R Machnitzki

TRAVEL  Franklin toured widely across the United States and abroad until the mid-1980s, when a terrifying bout of turbulence on a flight from Atlanta to Detroit in 1984 left her with a deep-seated fear of flying. Though she enrolled in a “Fearless Flyers” course in an effort to conquer it, the fear never lifted. From that point on, she traveled to all performances by custom bus, a choice that significantly curtailed her touring schedule and even cost her the lead role in a planned musical biography of gospel great Mahalia Jackson.

DEATH Aretha Franklin died on August 16, 2018, at her Detroit home, surrounded by family. The cause of death was advanced pancreatic neuroendocrine cancer, a rare form of the disease that she had battled privately for approximately eight years. She was 76 years old.

The funeral service took place on August 31, 2018, at Greater Grace Temple in Detroit, Michigan. The service was attended by family, friends, celebrities, political leaders, and fans. Notable guests and speakers included Bill Clinton, Rev. Jesse Jackson, Smokey Robinson, Stevie Wonder, Ariana Grande, Jennifer Hudson, and more.

The funeral was filled with powerful tributes and performances from legendary musicians, gospel choirs, and contemporary stars, celebrating her life and musical achievements.

After the service, Aretha Franklin was interred at Woodlawn Cemetery in Detroit, next to her father C.L. Franklin, her sisters Carolyn and Erma, and her brother Cecil.

APPEARANCES IN MEDIA Franklin appeared in films including The Blues Brothers (1980), and made frequent television appearances on variety shows, award ceremonies, and news programs. Her performances at major events like presidential inaugurations and award shows became legendary television moments.

The biopic Respect (2021) and the concert film Amazing Grace (2018) tell her life story and showcase her talent.

ACHIEVEMENTS First woman inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame

18 Grammy Awards

Presidential Medal of Freedom (2005)

Kennedy Center Honors recipient (1994)

Ranked No. 1 on Rolling Stone’s 2023 list of the “200 Greatest Singers of All Time”

Sources: (1) Songfacts (2) Refinery  (3) Taste Of Home

Tuesday, 22 July 2014

Anne Frank

NAME Annelies Marie Frank

WHAT FAMOUS FOR Anne Frank is world-renowned for her diary, The Diary of a Young Girl (also known as The Diary of Anne Frank), which she wrote while hiding with her family and four other people in an annex during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands. 

BIRTH Anne Frank was born on June 12, 1929, at the Maingau Red Cross Clinic in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. She was born into a period of economic turmoil in Germany, with unemployment high and poverty severe, during the time when Adolf Hitler and his Nazi Party were gaining increasing support. This timing would prove crucial to her family's future decisions and her ultimate fate.

FAMILY BACKGROUND Anne Frank came from a middle-class German-Jewish family with deep roots in Frankfurt. 

Her father, Otto Heinrich Frank (1889-1980), was born into an assimilated family that had lived in Germany for centuries. The Franks had particular connections to Frankfurt am Main, with evidence showing that part of the family had lived there since the 16th century.

Her mother, Edith Frank (née Holländer), grew up in a practicing Jewish household. Otto and Edith were married in 1925 and initially lived in Otto's hometown of Frankfurt. 

Her elder sister, Margot, was born in 1926. Margot was considered more diligent and reserved than Anne.

The family were Reform Jews who did not practice all the customs and traditions of Judaism, living in an assimilated community of Jewish and non-Jewish citizens.

CHILDHOOD Anne spent the first four years of her life in Frankfurt am Main, where she was described as a cheerful and naughty toddler. The family housekeeper, Kathi, later remembered Anne sitting down in a puddle of rain and making Kathi tell her a story there. 

In 1934, when Anne was four and a half years old, the Frank family moved to Amsterdam in the Netherlands after Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party gained control over Germany.

During her early years in the Netherlands, Anne suffered from health problems, and the family called her 'Zärtlein' (delicate puppet). In November 1937, her mother Edith wrote that Anne stayed home from school to sleep in the afternoon, describing her as "very cheerful, but sensitive and nervous, too". Despite these health challenges, Anne was known for her vibrant personality and love of being the center of attention. (1)

EDUCATION Anne Frank attended the 6th Montessori School in Amsterdam from 1934 until 1941. This school, located just a few blocks from her home, played a crucial role in her formative years, instilling in her a deep love for learning and writing. The Montessori education method, with its interactive and engaging approach, fostered Anne's creativity, independence, and love for learning.

Anne Frank at the 6th Montessori School, 1940

In 1941, after German forces occupied the Netherlands, Anne was compelled to transfer from her public school to a Jewish school due to Nazi regulations. All Jewish children, including Anne, had to attend separate Jewish schools as anti-Jewish laws increased. While in hiding, Anne and her sister Margot continued their studies. Margot took an 'Elementary Latin' course by correspondence and received high marks, while Anne spent most of her time reading and studying.

CAREER RECORD Anne aspired to become a journalist and writer. In her diary entry of April 5, 1944, she wrote: "I finally realized that I must do my schoolwork to keep from being ignorant, to get on in life, to become a journalist, because that's what I want! I know I can write..., but it remains to be seen whether I really have talent". She expressed her desire to achieve more than the traditional women's roles of her time, writing: "I can't imagine living like Mother, Mrs. van Daan and all the women who go about their work and are then forgotten. I need to have something besides a husband and children to devote myself to!"

APPEARANCE Anne Frank indicate she had dark hair and dark eyes. Photographs show her with a bright and often mischievous expression

Anne did not think she was pretty, but she was confident that her personality and other good traits made up for any perceived physical shortcomings. She was described as rather small among her classmates, but when she performed in school plays as a queen or princess, she suddenly seemed much taller than the others. 

Frank in May 1942, two months before she and her family went into hiding

FASHION The historical context of wartime rationing and the family's circumstances while in hiding likely limited opportunities for fashion expression. Her diary does occasionally touch upon her personal feelings about clothing and her desire to look presentable, reflecting a normal teenage girl's interest in self-expression, even in extraordinary circumstances.

CHARACTER Anne Frank possessed a vibrant and complex personality. She was described as playful and comical but with a serious side. Otto Frank described her as creating turbulence when she entered a room, often bringing friends home and being very popular because she always had plans for games and activities. Anne loved being the center of attention and was known for her outgoing nature.

She was a sharp observer of other people and demonstrated remarkable introspection for her age. As she matured during her time in hiding, Anne became increasingly thoughtful and reflective, examining her relationships with family members and analyzing her own character development. She was forthright and perceptive, with a clear understanding of her own growth and changes. (1)

SPEAKING VOICE There are no known recordings of Anne Frank's speaking voice. However, her diary gives insight into her "voice" through her writing—it is expressive, articulate, witty, and deeply personal, reflecting her youthful energy and developing maturity.

SENSE OF HUMOUR Anne Frank possessed a typical teenage sense of humor, including an interest in topics that adults might consider inappropriate. Researchers recently discovered that she wrote "dirty jokes" in her diary, using brown paper to hide these pages from prying eyes. On September 28, 1942, when she was 13, Anne wrote: "I'll use this spoiled page to write down 'dirty jokes,'" followed by several jokes about sex education, prostitution, and birth control. These entries reveal that despite her extraordinary circumstances, Anne maintained the curiosity and humor typical of a teenage girl. (2)

RELATIONSHIPS Anne had complex relationships with her family members. She was closest emotionally to her father, Otto, who later said: "I got on better with Anne than with Margot, who was more attached to her mother". Anne frequently wrote about her difficult relationship with her mother, initially expressing contempt and later developing understanding and tolerance.

Anne's relationship with her sister Margot evolved during their time in hiding. Initially, Anne sometimes expressed jealousy towards Margot, particularly when criticized for lacking Margot's gentle nature. However, as Anne matured, the sisters formed a closer relationship, with Anne writing in January 1944: "Margot's much nicer... She's becoming a real friend".

During her time in hiding, Anne developed romantic feelings for Peter van Pels, the teenage son of the family sharing their secret annex. She came to consider him a close friend, confidant, and eventually an object of romantic desire.

Peter van Pels  photo May–July 1942

MONEY AND FAME The Frank family was middle-class before the war. Otto Frank worked hard to establish his pectin business in Amsterdam, later expanding to sell herbs and spices. However, when Jews were no longer allowed to run their own businesses, Otto lost his company.

Anne achieved worldwide fame posthumously when her diary was published in 1947, two years after her death. Her father Otto was the only survivor from the secret annex and made the decision to publish her diary, fulfilling Anne's own dream of becoming a published writer.

FOOD AND DRINK Food was a significant concern during Anne's time in hiding, and she wrote extensively about meals in the secret annex. Initially, the food was of reasonable quality, with helper Miep Gies procuring meat and other rations through connections with butchers and grocers. The family had established a substantial stock of food at the start, including 150 tins of canned vegetables.

As the war progressed, food quality deteriorated significantly. The group often ate the same thing for weeks, experiencing periods devoted to specific vegetables like chicory, spinach, lettuce, or beans. Potatoes were almost always on the menu from breakfast to dinner. Anne wrote about the unpleasant nature of their meals, particularly describing kale and mash on March 14, 1944: "You wouldn't believe the way kale that has probably been in the barrel for a few years can stink".

Image by Gemini

Through business contacts, powdered milk, wheat starch, and sugar were available for making nutritious puddings. The food situation became critical in 1944 when suppliers were arrested, leading to severe shortages.

MUSIC AND ARTS Anne had interests in various forms of artistic expression. She wrote stories and poems in addition to her diary. There is evidence of musical adaptations of her diary, including compositions by Michael Nyman. 

She participated in school plays at her Montessori school, where she excelled in dramatic performances. Her teacher noted that Anne had no shyness and enjoyed imitating other people, making her a natural performer.

DIARY  It is a curious and humbling thing, when you stop to consider it, that one of the most enduring records of the Second World War—a global conflagration involving tens of millions of people, fearsome weaponry, and lots of shouting—is the diary of a teenage girl with a red-and-white checked notebook and nowhere to go.

Anne Frank, whose full name was Annelies Marie Frank (but who probably wouldn’t have appreciated being called that unless she was in trouble), received the now-iconic diary for her 13th birthday on June 12, 1942. It was the sort of gift you give a child who reads a lot and has thoughts too big for her own head, and she took to it like a duck to water—writing with a candour, wit, and insight that would put most adults to shame.

By this point, of course, life for the Frank family was becoming rather grim. The Nazis had been busily occupying the Netherlands, and being Jewish in Amsterdam was becoming an increasingly perilous affair. So the Franks went into hiding—along with another family and a grumpy dentist—in a concealed annex behind Otto Frank’s business premises. Anne promptly began recording the minutiae of their lives: the arguments, the meals, the creaking floorboards, the endless sense of waiting. Her diary runs from June 1942 until August 1944, when someone (no one knows who) betrayed them and the Gestapo showed up, as the Gestapo tended to do.

But what’s truly extraordinary is not just that Anne kept a diary, but that she began revising it. In March 1944, she heard a BBC broadcast urging Dutch citizens to preserve wartime records, and Anne—never one to do things by halves—set about editing and rewriting her entries, preparing for the postwar world she believed she would one day rejoin. She didn’t just keep a diary; she drafted short stories, mused about her future as a journalist, and generally outwrote everyone in the attic.

There are, rather confusingly, three versions of Anne’s diary. There’s Version A, which is what she originally wrote—warts, feelings, and all. Then there’s Version B, which is the edited version she hoped might be published. And finally, there’s Version C, which was assembled by Otto Frank after the war, once Miep Gies (a remarkable woman in her own right, and the sort of person you always hope humanity will produce in times of horror) handed him Anne’s surviving writings.

Version C was a combination of the first two, with certain passages omitted—mostly the ones in which Anne said unflattering things about her mother, or discussed, with rather astonishing frankness, the business of growing up female. It was this version that made it into the first Dutch edition on June 25, 1947, and into English on April 30, 1952 as The Diary of a Young Girl.

Since then, Anne’s diary has become one of the most widely read books in the world, translated into more than 70 languages and read by everyone from schoolchildren to presidents. It is, in a sense, the voice of the Holocaust: not because it tells you everything, but because it tells you one thing—intimately, painfully, beautifully—and reminds you that behind every statistic was a child with dreams, allergies, and a great sense of humour.

Despite the best efforts of conspiracy theorists and assorted grumblers, the diary’s authenticity has been confirmed many times over. The ink, the handwriting, even the glue—all match the materials available in wartime Amsterdam. The Netherlands Institute for War Documentation examined it meticulously, and it is now as thoroughly verified as any document can be.

To read Anne Frank’s diary is to spend time in the company of a remarkably sharp and observant young mind. It is funny, heartbreaking, deeply human. And it contains, quite possibly, one of the most hopeful sentences ever written: “I still believe, in spite of everything, that people are really good at heart.”

Whether she truly believed that at all times is anyone’s guess. But the fact that she wrote it, in a secret annex, while hiding from people who wished her dead, is perhaps the most powerful argument we have for remembering her—not as a symbol, but as a person who refused to stop believing in goodness even in a world gone terrifyingly mad.

Het Achterhuis, the first Dutch edition of Anne Frank's diary, published in 1947

LITERATURE The family had an extensive library, and both parents encouraged their children to read.

Anne Frank was an avid reader who spent most of her time in hiding reading and studying. She read everything she could get her hands on, including books intended for adults, which sometimes created conflict with her parents who thought such books inappropriate for her age. T

Anne's love for writing grew during her time in hiding. She treated her diary as a friend, addressing many entries to "Dear Kitty". She regularly wrote and edited her diary entries, particularly after March 1944, demonstrating her developing skills as a writer. She also wrote short stories and essays, showing her versatility as a young author.

NATURE Confined to the Annex, Anne yearned for nature. Her diary entries express a deep longing for fresh air, sunshine, and the beauty of the outdoors. She found solace and inspiration in gazing at the sky, the chestnut tree outside their window, and the fleeting glimpses of birds. 

Anne found comfort and spiritual meaning in nature. She wrote about heaven, nature, and God as sources of happiness and inner wealth despite her difficult circumstances. 

PETS Before going into hiding, the Frank family owned a cat named Moortje. On July 6, 1942, when the family left for the secret annex, they left a note for their neighbors, the Kupers, asking them to take care of their cat. This detail illustrates the sudden and dramatic nature of their departure into hiding.

There were two cats in the building where the Franks hid.: one for the warehouse (Boche) and one for the attic (Tommy). The warehouse cat, Boche, was always the aggressor in fights between the two, which led to his name—“the German” or “Boche”—while the attic cat was called “the Englishman” or “Tommy.” The name “Boche” is a derogatory slang for “German,” especially as used by the French during World War I and II

HOBBIES AND SPORTS Anne's primary hobby was writing, particularly her diary, which she kept throughout her time in hiding. She spent time writing short stories and poems beyond her diary entries.

Facsimile of the diary of Anne Frank by Rodrigo Galindez - Flickr:

Anne also engaged in observing the behavior of others in the annex and fantasizing about life after the war. All hobbies and activities had to be quiet to avoid detection by those who might discover their hiding place.

SCIENCE AND MATHS Anne studied mathematics with her father while in hiding, though she reportedly hated the subject. 

PHILOSOPHY & THEOLOGY Anne's relationship with religion evolved significantly during her time in hiding. Initially, the Frank family was not particularly devout, with Otto and Anne showing lukewarm attitudes toward religion. However, in the second half of 1943, Anne came to know God and found Him to be a source of courage.

Anne's diary shows her philosophical development as she wrestled with questions about human nature, her identity, and her place in the world. She wrote about her beliefs, dreams, and ambitions, subjects she felt she could not discuss with anyone else. As her confidence in writing grew and she began to mature, she explored more abstract subjects including her belief in God and how she defined human nature.

Anne also grappled with her Jewish identity and the persecution she experienced because of it.

POLITICS Anne Frank was a victim of Nazi persecution due to her Jewish heritage. Her family fled Germany in 1934 when she was four and a half years old after Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party gained control. In 1941, Anne lost her German citizenship and became stateless. Despite spending most of her life in the Netherlands, she never officially became a Dutch citizen.

The systematic persecution of Jews directly affected Anne's life, forcing her family into hiding in July 1942 when her sister Margot received a call-up notice for deportation to a work camp. Anne documented the various restrictions placed upon Dutch Jews in her diary entry of June 20, 1942.

SCANDAL On the morning of August 4, 1944, after 761 days in hiding, Anne Frank, her family, and the others in the Secret Annex were discovered and arrested by German police. The raid was led by SS Hauptscharführer Karl Josef Silberbauer of the Sicherheitsdienst (SD), accompanied by Dutch police officers. The officers arrived at the building at Prinsengracht 263 in Amsterdam between 10:30 and 11:00 am. They questioned warehouse employees and were directed upstairs, where they found and unmasked the entrance to the Secret Annex hidden behind a bookcase.

Image by Perplexity

The eight people in hiding—Anne, her parents Otto and Edith, her sister Margot, Hermann and Auguste van Pels, their son Peter, and Fritz Pfeffer—were shocked and terrified. They were forced to hand over their valuables. Silberbauer emptied Otto Frank’s briefcase, scattering Anne’s diary papers on the floor to use the case for collecting valuables. The group, along with two of their helpers, Victor Kugler and Johannes Kleiman, were arrested and taken away. The raid lasted over two hours.

After their arrest, the group was first taken to the SD headquarters on Euterpestraat, where they were interrogated. The officers tried to extract information about other Jews in hiding, but the group refused to betray anyone. The helpers and the people in hiding were then separated: Kleiman and Kugler were sent to a detention center at Amstelveenseweg, while the eight from the Annex were sent to the Weteringschans prison.

On August 8, 1944, the group was transferred to Westerbork transit camp in the Netherlands. Because they had been caught in hiding, they were classified as criminals and sent to the camp’s Punishment Barracks for hard labor.

On September 3, 1944, Anne, her family, and the others were put on the last train from Westerbork to Auschwitz concentration camp in German-occupied Poland. The journey took three days. Upon arrival, the men and women were separated; Otto Frank was parted from his family. Of the 1,019 people on the transport, 549 were sent directly to the gas chambers. Anne, who had just turned 15, was among the youngest spared for forced labor.

On November 1, 1944, Anne and her sister Margot were transferred from Auschwitz to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in Germany. Conditions there were appalling, with overcrowding, disease, and starvation rampant. Both Anne and Margot died of typhus in early 1945, just weeks before the camp was liberated by British troops.

View of the Bergen-Belsen ncamp after liberation

Otto Frank was the only member of the Secret Annex to survive the Holocaust. After the war, he returned to Amsterdam, where Miep Gies, one of the helpers, gave him Anne’s preserved diary papers

MILITARY RECORD Anne Frank had no military record. She was a civilian, a child, and a victim of military aggression and persecution. However, her father Otto Frank had served as a lieutenant in the German army during World War I before becoming a businessman.

HEALTH AND PHYSICAL FITNESS During her early years in the Netherlands, Anne suffered from various health problems, earning her the family nickname 'Zärtlein' (delicate puppet). Her mother noted that Anne needed afternoon naps and was described as sensitive and nervous.

During her two years in the Secret Annex, her physical health was relatively stable, though the lack of fresh air, sunlight, and proper nutrition would have taken a toll. Her diary occasionally mentions minor ailments. After their arrest and deportation to concentration camps, her health rapidly deteriorated due to extreme malnutrition, forced labor, and disease. She and her sister Margot contracted typhus in Bergen-Belsen.

HOMES Anne Frank lived in several homes during her short life. She was born and spent her first four years in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, first at Marbachweg 307 in Frankfurt-Eckenheim, then moving in 1931 to Ganghoferstraße 24 in Frankfurt-Ginnheim. In 1934, the family moved to Amsterdam, where they lived in an apartment on Merwedeplein in the Rivierenbuurt neighborhood, where many Jewish-German refugees settled.

From July 6, 1942, until August 4, 1944, Anne lived in the secret annex behind her father's business at 263 Prinsengracht Street in Amsterdam. This hiding place, concealed behind a moveable bookcase, consisted of several small rooms where eight people lived in cramped conditions.

Anne Frank's birthplace at Marbachweg 307 in Frankfurt-Eckenheim, by Karsten Ratzke

TRAVEL Anne Frank's travel was limited due to her young age and the circumstances of her time. Her most significant journey was the family's move from Frankfurt, Germany, to Amsterdam, Netherlands, in 1934 when she was four and a half years old. This move was motivated by the family's need to escape Nazi persecution in Germany.

After their arrest, she was forcibly transported by train from Westerbork transit camp in the Netherlands to Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp in Poland, and then from Auschwitz to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in Germany.

DEATH Anne Frank died in February or early March 1945 in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, Germany. She succumbed to typhus, an epidemic that swept through the camp due to inhumane conditions, starvation, and lack of sanitation. Her sister Margot also died of typhus just days before Anne. Their deaths occurred only a few weeks before the camp was liberated by British forces.

APPEARANCES IN MEDIA Anne Frank has appeared in the media in many powerful and wide-ranging forms—books, plays, films, documentaries, and even virtual experiences. While the Diary itself remains the most important artifact, her story has inspired countless adaptations and portrayals that continue to shape public memory of the Holocaust. 

Here's a look at the major ones:

1. Stage Adaptations

The Diary of Anne Frank (1955 Broadway Play)  Written by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett, this adaptation was the first major dramatization of Anne’s diary. It premiered on Broadway in 1955, won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama and the Tony Award for Best Play, and played a huge role in bringing her story to global attention.

Otto Frank approved the script, although some critics felt it softened or universalized the story by minimizing Jewish themes and Anne’s darker thoughts.

In the 1990s, Wendy Kesselman revised the play to include more of Anne’s writing—especially material related to her Jewish identity and growing self-awareness—that had been previously edited out. This version is now more widely used in schools and theaters.

2. Film and TV Adaptations

The Diary of Anne Frank (1959 film) Directed by George Stevens, this Hollywood film was based on the Broadway play and starred Millie Perkins as Anne. It won three Academy Awards and helped cement Anne’s image in postwar popular culture. Like the play, it was heavily dramatized and leaned toward sentimentality, often glossing over more complex aspects of her personality. Shelley Winters, who won best supporting actress for her role as Petronella van Daanin the movie, donated her Oscar to the Anne Frank museum in Amsterdam.

Anne Frank: The Whole Story (2001 miniseries) A more detailed and harrowing retelling, this Emmy-winning TV miniseries starred Hannah Taylor-Gordon as Anne and Ben Kingsley as Otto Frank. Unlike earlier versions, it covered not only the hiding period but also the family's capture, deportation, and eventual deaths in the camps. It was praised for its historical depth and emotional realism.

My Best Friend Anne Frank (2021) A Dutch-language Netflix film told from the perspective of Anne’s childhood friend Hannah Goslar. This fresh angle focuses on female friendship and their tragic reunion at Bergen-Belsen. The film adds emotional resonance by showing Anne through the eyes of someone who loved her.

3. Documentaries

Anne Frank Remembered (1995) This Oscar-winning documentary, narrated by Kenneth Branagh and Glenn Close, includes interviews with people who knew Anne, including Miep Gies. It’s often cited as one of the most moving and well-researched explorations of her life.

Auschwitz: The Nazis and the Final Solution (BBC, 2005) Though not solely about Anne, this landmark series includes her story as part of its broader Holocaust narrative, contextualizing her fate within the Nazi system.

Anne Frank Parallel Stories (2019) Narrated by Helen Mirren, this documentary weaves Anne’s story with that of five Holocaust survivors, creating a modern conversation about memory and resilience.Mirren reads excerpts from the diary in a recreated version of Anne’s room.

4. Museums, Exhibits & Virtual Media

Anne Frank House (Amsterdam) Opened in 1960, the museum preserves the Secret Annex and serves as a powerful educational space. Its website includes virtual tours, educational resources, and digitized diary pages.

5. Cultural References and Influence

Anne Frank has been referenced in countless novels, poems, speeches, songs, and even political debates—sometimes controversially. Her quote, “I still believe, in spite of everything, that people are really good at heart,” is frequently cited, sometimes detached from its historical context.

In rare cases, her image has been misused or commercialized in ways that sparked backlash and calls for respectful remembrance.

6. Footage of Anne Frank

The Anne Frank House museum has posted the only known footage of Anne Frank herself on YouTube, showing her appearance in a neighbor's wedding video from July 22, 1941, where she appears for nine seconds. This brief film clip represents the only moving image of Anne Frank that exists.

ACHIEVEMENTS Anne Frank's primary achievement, though posthumous, is profound:

Immortalizing the Holocaust Experience: Her diary provides one of the most intimate, human, and widely accessible accounts of the Holocaust, giving voice to the millions who perished.

Symbol of Hope and Resilience: Despite the horror she faced, her writings maintain a remarkable spirit of hope, intellectual curiosity, and belief in the good of humanity, making her a symbol of resilience in the face of unspeakable evil.

Literary Impact: The Diary of a Young Girl is a literary classic, studied in schools worldwide, and continues to resonate with readers of all ages, fostering understanding and empathy.

Advocacy for Human Rights: Her story has inspired countless initiatives and organizations dedicated to human rights, tolerance, and combating prejudice and discrimination.

Sources (1) Anne Frank House (2) Bustle