ANCESTRY AND EARLY YOUTH IN BOSTON
Twyford,[3]at the Bishop
of St. Asaph's,
1771.
EAR SON: I have ever had pleasure in obtaining any little
anecdotes of my ancestors. You may remember the inquiries I made
among the remains of my relations when you were with me in England,
and the journey I undertook for that purpose. Imagining it may be
equally agreeable to you to know the circumstances of my life, many
of which you are yet unacquainted with, and expecting the enjoyment
of a week's uninterrupted leisure in my present country retirement,
I sit down to write them for you. To which I have besides some
other inducements. Having emerged from the poverty and obscurity in
which I was born and bred, to a state of affluence and some degree
of reputation in the world, and having gone so far through life
with a considerable share of felicity, the conducing means I made
use of, which with the blessing of God so well succeeded, my
posterity may like to know, as they may find some of them suitable
to their own situations, and therefore fit to be
imitated.
That felicity, when I reflected on it, has induced me
sometimes to say, that were it offered to my choice, I should have
no objection to a repetition of the same life from its beginning,
only asking the advantages authors have in a second edition to
correct some faults of the first. So I might, besides correcting
the faults, change some sinister accidents and events of it for
others more favourable. But though this were denied, I should still
accept the offer. Since such a repetition is not to be expected,
the next thing most like living one's life over again seems to be a
recollection of that life, and to make that recollection as durable
as possible by putting it down in writing.Hereby, too,
I shall indulge the inclination so natural in old men, to be
talking of themselves and their own past actions; and I shall
indulge it without being tiresome to others, who, through respect
to age, might conceive themselves obliged to give me a hearing,
since this may be read or not as anyone pleases. And, lastly (I may
as well confess it, since my denial of it will be believed by
nobody), perhaps I shall a good deal gratify my
ownvanity.[4]Indeed, I
scarce ever heard or saw the introductory words,
"Without vanity I may
say," etc., but
some vain thing immediately followed. Most people dislike vanity in
others, whatever share they have of it themselves; but I give it
fair quarter wherever I meet with it, being persuaded that it is
often productive of good to the possessor, and to others that are
within his sphere of action; and therefore, in many cases, it would
not be altogether absurd if a man were to thank God for his vanity
among the other comforts of life.Gibbon and Hume, the great British historians, who were
contemporaries of Franklin, express in their autobiographies the
same feeling about the propriety of just self-praise.And now I speak of thanking God, I desire with all humility
to acknowledge that I owe the mentioned happiness of my past life
to His kind providence, which lead me to the means I used and gave
them success. My belief of this induces me to hope, though
I must not presume, that the same goodness will still be
exercised toward me, in continuing that happiness, or enabling me
to bear a fatal reverse, which I may experience as others have
done; the complexion of my future fortune being known to Him only
in whose power it is to bless to us even our
afflictions.The notes
one of my uncles (who had the same kind of curiosity in collecting
family anecdotes) once put into my hands, furnished me with several
particulars relating to our ancestors. From these notes I learned
that the family had lived in the same village, Ecton, in
Northamptonshire,[5]for three
hundred years, and how much longer he knew not (perhaps from the
time when the name of Franklin, that before was the name of an
order of people,[6]was assumed
by them as a surname when others took surnames all over the
kingdom), on a freehold of about thirty acres, aided by the smith's
business, which had continued in the family till his time, the
eldest son being always bred to that business; a custom which he
and my father followed as to their eldest sons. When I searched the
registers at Ecton, I found an account of their births, marriages
and burials from the year 1555 only, there being no registers kept
in that parish at any time preceding. By that register I perceived
that I was the youngest son of the youngest son for five
generations back. My grandfather Thomas, who was born in 1598,
lived at Ecton till he grew too old to follow business longer, when
he went to live with his son John, a dyer at Banbury, in
Oxfordshire, with whom my father served an apprenticeship. There my
grandfather died and lies buried. We saw his gravestone in 1758.
His eldest son Thomas lived in the house at Ecton, and left it with
the land to his only child, a daughter, who, with her husband, one
Fisher, of Wellingborough, sold it to Mr. Isted, now lord of the
manor there. My grandfather had four sons that grew up, viz.:
Thomas, John, Benjamin and Josiah. I will give you what account I
can of them at this distance from my papers, and if these are not
lost in my absence, you will among them find many more
particulars.Thomas was
bred a smith under his father; but, being ingenious, and encouraged
in learning (as all my brothers were) by an Esquire Palmer, then
the principal gentleman in that parish, he qualified himself for
the business of scrivener; became a considerable man in the county;
was a chief mover of all public-spirited undertakings for the
county or town of Northampton, and his own village, of which many
instances were related of him; and much taken notice of and
patronized by the then Lord Halifax. He died in 1702, January 6,
old style,[7]just four
years to a day before I was born. The account we received of his
life and character from some old people at Ecton, I remember,
struck you as something extraordinary, from its similarity to what
you knew of mine. "Had he died on the same day," you said, "one
might have supposed a
transmigration."John was
bred a dyer, I believe of woollens, Benjamin was bred a silk dyer,
serving an apprenticeship at London. He was an ingenious man. I
remember him well, for when I was a boy he came over to my father
in Boston, and lived in the house with us some years. He lived to a
great age. His grandson, Samuel Franklin, now lives in Boston. He
left behind him two quarto volumes, MS., of his own poetry,
consisting of little occasional pieces addressed to his friends and
relations, of which the following, sent to me, is a
specimen.[8]He had
formed a short-hand of his own, which he taught me, but, never
practising it, I have now forgot it. I was named after this uncle,
there being a particular affection between him and my father. He
was very pious, a great attender of sermons of the best preachers,
which he took down in his short-hand, and had with him many volumes
of them. He was also much of a politician; too much, perhaps, for
his station. There fell lately into my hands, in London, a
collection he had made of all the principal pamphlets relating to
public affairs, from 1641 to 1717; many of the volumes are wanting
as appears by the numbering, but there still remain eight volumes
in folio, and twenty-four in quarto and in octavo. A dealer in old
books met with them, and knowing me by my sometimes buying of him,
he brought them to me. It seems my uncle must have left them here
when he went to America, which was about fifty years since. There
are many of his notes in the
margins.This obscure
family of ours was early in the Reformation, and continued
Protestants through the reign of Queen Mary, when they were
sometimes in danger of trouble on account of their zeal against
popery. They had got an English Bible, and to conceal and secure
it, it was fastened open with tapes under and within the cover of a
joint-stool. When my great-great-grandfather read it to his family,
he turned up the joint-stool upon his knees, turning over the
leaves then under the tapes. One of the children stood at the door
to give notice if he saw the apparitor coming, who was an officer
of the spiritual court. In that case the stool was turned down
again upon its feet, when the Bible remained concealed under it as
before. This anecdote I had from my uncle Benjamin. The family
continued all of the Church of England till about the end of
Charles the Second's reign, when some of the ministers that had
been outed for non-conformity, holding
conventicles[9]in
Northamptonshire, Benjamin and Josiah adhered to them, and so
continued all their lives: the rest of the family remained with the
Episcopal Church.Josiah, my
father, married young, and carried his wife with three children
into New England, about 1682. The conventicles having been
forbidden by law, and frequently disturbed, induced some
considerable men of his acquaintance to remove to that country, and
he was prevailed with to accompany them thither, where they
expected to enjoy their mode of religion with freedom. By the same
wife he had four children more born there, and by a second wife ten
more, in all seventeen; of which I remember thirteen sitting at one
time at his table, who all grew up to be men and women, and
married; I was the youngest son, and the youngest child but two,
and was born in Boston, New England.[10]My mother,
the second wife, was Abiah Folger, daughter of Peter Folger, one of
the first settlers of New England, of whom honorable mention is
made by Cotton Mather,[11]in his
church history of that country,
entitledMagnalia Christi
Americana, as
"a godly, learned
Englishman," if I
remember the words rightly. I have heard that he wrote sundry small
occasional pieces, but only one of them was printed, which I saw
now many years since. It was written in 1675, in the home-spun
verse of that time and people, and addressed to those then
concerned in the government there. It was in favour of liberty of
conscience, and in behalf of the Baptists, Quakers, and other
sectaries that had been under persecution, ascribing the Indian
wars, and other distresses that had befallen the country, to that
persecution, as so many judgments of God to punish so heinous an
offense, and exhorting a repeal of those uncharitable laws. The
whole appeared to me as written with a good deal of decent
plainness and manly freedom. The six concluding lines I remember,
though I have forgotten the two first of the stanza; but the
purport of them was, that his censures proceeded from good-will,
and, therefore, he would be known to be the
author."Because to be a libeller (says he)I hate it with my heart;From
Sherburne town,[12]where now I
dwellMy name I do put here;Without offense your real friend,It is Peter Folgier."My elder
brothers were all put apprentices to different trades. I was put to
the grammar-school at eight years of age, my father intending to
devote me, as the tithe[13]of his sons,
to the service of the Church. My early readiness in learning to
read (which must have been very early, as I do not remember when I
could not read), and the opinion of all his friends, that I should
certainly make a good scholar, encouraged him in this purpose of
his. My uncle Benjamin, too, approved of it, and proposed to give
me all his short-hand volumes of sermons, I suppose as a stock to
set up with, if I would learn his
character.[14]I continued,
however, at the grammar-school not quite one year, though in that
time I had risen gradually from the middle of the class of that
year to be the head of it, and farther was removed into the next
class above it, in order to go with that into the third at the end
of the year. But my father, in the meantime, from a view of the
expense of a college education, which having so large a family he
could not well afford, and the mean living many so educated were
afterwards able to obtain—reasons that he gave to his friends in my
hearing—altered his first intention, took me from the
grammar-school, and sent me to a school for writing and arithmetic,
kept by a then famous man, Mr. George Brownell, very successful in
his profession generally, and that by mild, encouraging methods.
Under him I acquired fair writing pretty soon, but I failed in the
arithmetic, and made no progress in it. At ten years old I was
taken home to assist my father in his business, which was that of a
tallow-chandler and sope-boiler; a business he was not bred to, but
had assumed on his arrival in New England, and on finding his
dyeing trade would not maintain his family, being in little
request. Accordingly, I was employed in cutting wick for the
candles, filling the dipping mould and the moulds for cast candles,
attending the shop, going of errands,
etc.I disliked the trade, and had a strong inclination for the
sea, but my father declared against it; however, living near the
water, I was much in and about it, learnt early to swim well, and
to manage boats; and when in a boat or canoe with other boys, I was
commonly allowed to govern, especially in any case of difficulty;
and upon other occasions I was generally a leader among the boys,
and sometimes led them into scrapes, of which I will mention one
instance, as it shows an early projecting public spirit, tho' not
then justly conducted.There was a salt-marsh that bounded part of the mill-pond, on
the edge of which, at high water, we used to stand to fish for
minnows. By much trampling, we had made it a mere quagmire. My
proposal was to build a wharf there fit for us to stand upon, and I
showed my comrades a large heap of stones, which were intended for
a new house near the marsh, and which would very well suit our
purpose. Accordingly, in the evening, when the workmen were gone, I
assembled a number of my playfellows, and working with them
diligently like so many emmets, sometimes two or three to a stone,
we brought them all away and built our little wharf. The next
morning the workmen were surprised at missing the stones, which
were found in our wharf. Inquiry was made after the removers; we
were discovered and complained of; several of us were corrected by
our fathers; and, though I pleaded the usefulness of the work, mine
convinced me that nothing was useful which was not
honest.I think you may like to know something of his person and
character. He had an excellent constitution of body, was of middle
stature, but well set, and very strong; he was ingenious, could
draw prettily, was skilled a little in music, and had a clear,
pleasing voice, so that when he played psalm tunes on his violin
and sung withal, as he sometimes did in an evening after the
business of the day was over, it was extremely agreeable to hear.
He had a mechanical genius too, and, on occasion, was very handy in
the use of other tradesmen's tools; but his great excellence lay in
a sound understanding and solid judgment in prudential matters,
both in private and publick affairs. In the latter, indeed, he was
never employed, the numerous family he had to educate and the
straitness of his circumstances keeping him close to his trade; but
I remember well his being frequently visited by leading people, who
consulted him for his opinion in affairs of the town or of the
church he belonged to, and showed a good deal of respect for his
judgment and advice: he was also much consulted by private persons
about their affairs when any difficulty occurred, and frequently
chosen an arbitrator between contending parties. At his table he
liked to have, as often as he could, some sensible friend or
neighbor to converse with, and always took care to start some
ingenious or useful topic for discourse, which might tend to
improve the minds of his children. By this means he turned our
attention to what was good, just, and prudent in the conduct of
life; and little or no notice was ever taken of what related to the
victuals on the table, whether it was well or ill dressed, in or
out of season, of good or bad flavor, preferable or inferior to
this or that other thing of the kind, so that I was bro't up in
such a perfect inattention to those matters as to be quite
indifferent what kind of food was set before me, and so unobservant
of it, that to this day if I am asked I can scarce tell a few hours
after dinner what I dined upon. This has been a convenience to me
in traveling, where my companions have been sometimes very unhappy
for want of a suitable gratification of their more delicate,
because better instructed, tastes and appetites.My mother
had likewise an excellent constitution: she suckled all her ten
children. I never knew either my father or mother to have any
sickness but that of which they dy'd, he at 89, and she at 85 years
of age. They lie buried together at Boston, where I some years
since placed a marble over their grave,[15]with this
inscription:Josiah
Franklin,andAbiah his
wife,lie here interred.They lived lovingly together in wedlockfifty-five years.Without an estate, or any gainful employment,By constant labor and industry,with God's blessing,They maintained a large familycomfortably,and brought up thirteen childrenand seven grandchildrenreputably.From this instance, reader,Be encouraged to diligence in thy calling,And distrust not Providence.He was a pious and prudent man;She, a discreet and virtuous woman.Their youngest son,In filial regard to their memory,Places this stone.J. F. born 1655, died 1744, Ætat 89.A. F. born 1667, died 1752, —— 85.By my rambling digressions I perceive myself to be grown old.
I us'd to write more methodically. But one does not dress for
private company as for a publick ball. 'Tis perhaps only
negligence.To return: I continued thus employed in my father's business
for two years, that is, till I was twelve years old; and my brother
John, who was bred to that business, having left my father,
married, and set up for himself at Rhode Island, there was all
appearance that I was destined to supply his place, and become a
tallow-chandler. But my dislike to the trade continuing, my father
was under apprehensions that if he did not find one for me more
agreeable, I should break away and get to sea, as his son Josiah
had done, to his great vexation. He therefore sometimes took me to
walk with him, and see joiners, bricklayers, turners, braziers,
etc., at their work, that he might observe my inclination, and
endeavor to fix it on some trade or other on land. It has ever
since been a pleasure to me to see good workmen handle their tools;
and it has been useful to me, having learnt so much by it as to be
able to do little jobs myself in my house when a workman could not
readily be got, and to construct little machines for my
experiments, while the intention of making the experiment was fresh
and warm in my mind. My father at last fixed upon the cutler's
trade, and my uncle Benjamin's son Samuel, who was bred to that
business in London, being about that time established in Boston, I
was sent to be with him some time on liking. But his expectations
of a fee with me displeasing my father, I was taken home
again.[3]A
small village not far from Winchester in Hampshire, southern
England. Here was the country seat of the Bishop of St. Asaph, Dr.
Jonathan Shipley, the "good Bishop," as Dr. Franklin used to style
him. Their relations were intimate and confidential. In his pulpit,
and in the House of Lords, as well as in society, the bishop always
opposed the harsh measures of the Crown toward the
Colonies.—Bigelow.[4]In
this connection Woodrow Wilson says, "And yet the surprising and
delightful thing about this book (theAutobiography)
is that, take it all in all, it has not the low tone of conceit,
but is a staunch man's sober and unaffected assessment of himself
and the circumstances of his career."[5]SeeIntroduction.[6]A
small landowner.[7]January 17, new style. This change in the
calendar was made in 1582 by Pope Gregory XIII, and adopted in
England in 1752. Every year whose number in the common reckoning
since Christ is not divisible by 4, as well as every year whose
number is divisible by 100 but not by 400, shall have 365 days, and
all other years shall have 366 days. In the eighteenth century
there was a difference of eleven days between the old and the new
style of reckoning, which the English Parliament canceled by making
the 3rd of September, 1752, the 14th. The Julian calendar, or "old
style," is still retained in Russia and Greece, whose dates
consequently are now 13 days behind those of other Christian
countries.[8]The
specimen is not in the manuscript of theAutobiography.[9]Secret gatherings of dissenters from the
established Church.[10]Franklin was born on Sunday, January 6, old
style, 1706, in a house on Milk Street, opposite the Old South
Meeting House, where he was baptized on the day of his birth,
during a snowstorm. The house where he was born was burned in
1810.—Griffin.[11]Cotton Mather (1663-1728), clergyman, author,
and scholar. Pastor of the North Church, Boston. He took an active
part in the persecution of witchcraft.[12]Nantucket.[13]Tenth.[14]System of
short-hand.[15]This
marble having decayed, the citizens of Boston in 1827 erected in
its place a granite obelisk, twenty-one feet high, bearing the
original inscription quoted in the text and another explaining the
erection of the monument.<
[...]