Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin
Benjamin Franklin was one the most accomplished founders of the United States (Morgan, 2002). As a scientist and inventor and a diplomat with a strong track record of success, he eclipses Thomas Jefferson. No American was better known or more widely admired in Europe than was Franklin. And, Franklin is the only man whose signature appears on all four of the founding documents of the American republic: the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation, the Treaty of Paris, and the Constitution. Without Franklin's guidance for compromise, the United States might not even exist today; certainly it's political and economic landscape would be far different.
Benjamin Franklin was born in Boston in 1706, the tenth son of Abia Folger, daughter of an indentured servant (Powell, 1977). His father Josiah Franklin was a candlemaker. On the other hand, Jefferson was born the son of a wealthy family in Virginia in 1743 ("Thomas Jefferson," Ames Lab). His mother, Jane Randolph Jefferson, came from one of the first families of Virginia; his father, Peter Jefferson, was a well-to-do landowner. These differences in background may help explain Franklin's knack for diplomacy while Jefferson clung to his own ideals.
Jefferson's main concern in his second term as president was foreign affairs, in which he experienced dismal failure ("Thomas Jefferson," Ames Lab). Most notably, in the course of the Napoleonic Wars Britain and France repeatedly...
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