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  2. In June of 1760, he was elected a Provincial Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of England and was officially entered into the minutes at their November 1760 meeting in London. As he eventually was sent to France as an ambassador for the United States, his first actions were those affiliated with Masonic Lodges.

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  3. Nov 7, 2015 · Most Americans recognize Benjamin Franklin as one our Nation’s most influential Founding Fathers, but many do not realize that he was also a Freemason. In 1731, he joined the Masonic Lodge of St. John in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. In 1732, Franklin helped to create the bylaws of his Lodge.

    • Benjamin’s Franklin Youth
    • Freemasonry
    • Inventor and Polymath
    • Public Service
    • Death
    • Conclusion

    Franklin was born in Boston, Massachusetts on 17 January 1706 to Puritan parents. At age 12, he became an apprentice at a printing press. He later worked for his brother James, who started the New-England Courantin 1721. Readers were invited to contribute to this newspaper’s content. Ben submitted some content, but his brother would not publish it....

    In his Encyclopædia of Freemasonry, Dr. Albert Mackey records that Franklin was initiated in 1731 in the St John’s Lodge at Philadelphia. He writes on: “In 1734 he was elected Grand Master of the Provincial Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania; and in November of the same year, Franklin applied to Henry Price, who had received from England authority to esta...

    It is speculated that Franklin lost out on a fortune by never patenting any of his inventions, all of which were designed for practicality. Among his most well-known contributions is the lightning rod, which he devised in order to redirect lightning away from peoples’ homes. In the 1753 edition of his Poor Richard’s Almanac, he described it thus: H...

    Post-Master General

    Franklin served as Post Master General twice; once under English rule and again for the American republic. His then-modern adaptation of the odometer allowed him to figure out what routes were the most efficient for shipping; this was revolutionary for post offices at the time, and resulted in post offices increasing in profits and business significantly.

    President of Pennsylvania

    From 18 October 1785 until 5 November 1788, Franklin served as the sixth of seven Presidents of Pennsylvania; this office was abolished in 1790 and replaced with the office of governor.

    Ambassador

    Franklin served as Minister to Sweden and later as Minister to France. Towards the end of his life, he was far more respected in France than he was in the United States during his life. His fellow Americans often spoke badly about him because he was a Francophile.

    Franklin died of pleurisy on 17 April 1790 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. According to an account by Revolutionary War Captain John Jones, Franklin did not die comfortably.

    This article only accounts for a drop in the exceptionally large pond that was Benjamin Franklin’s life. He was an extraordinary man, and the world is better off because of his role in it.

  4. Most individuals recognize Benjamin Franklin as one the the United States’ most influential Founding Fathers, however, many do not realize that he was also a Freemason. In 1730, he joined the Masonic Lodge of St. John in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

  5. From 1785 to 1788, he served as President of Pennsylvania. At some points in his life, he owned slaves and ran "for sale" ads for slaves in his newspaper, but by the late 1750s, he began arguing against slavery, became an active abolitionist, and promoted the education and integration of African Americans into U.S. society. [7]

  6. Franklin was initiated in 1731, probably at the February meeting of the ‘St. John’s Lodge’ in Philadelphia. The respect in which he was held is evidenced by the fact that just a few years later, in 1735, he was elected Grand Master.

  7. Jan 31, 2022 · Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790) was a very active and prominent Freemason in colonial America. He was initiated in February 1731 at St John’s Lodge in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He became the Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania in 1734.