Please click the
icon to follow us on Facebook.on this day Benjamin Franklin was
named President of Congress Assembled
After great success winning favor in the French Court for the young United
States of America and determining a treaty with Sweden without ever having
visited the country, Franklin misspoke and ended his ambassadorial career.
He had been invited, along with astronomer Bailly, physician Guillotine,
and chemist Lavoisier, to participate in a royal commission to investigate
the "animal magnetism" of Charles d'Eslon based upon the work of Franz
Mesmer. Franklin let slip one of his famous lewd comments, this one
directed about the possibility of His Majesty Louis XVI attempting to
abscond the science for his romantic pursuits, and his royal favor
disappeared. Louis said, "Monsieur, vous etes de finition," and Franklin
was sent back to America. His work had been finished, however, and
Congress welcomed him despite the office of Ambassador to France being
eliminated.
Franklin soon found himself in politics at home, hoping to be elected to
the Executive Council of Pennsylvania, but instead named as a
representative to the Continental Congress since John Dickinson seemed
firmly rooted in the position. Soon after arriving in Congress, fellow
Pennsylvanian Thomas Mifflin announced his resignation as President
effective October 31. Early polls looked to have Virginian Richard Henry
Lee elected to fill the role, but he made known that matters at home would
not allow him to sit and would only act as signatory on papers forwarded
from his secretary. Franklin wrote of being upset by the disinterest in
national union and volunteered himself, almost immediately being sworn in
as delegates were pleased to have someone take responsibility.
His initial steps were to give the Continental Congress a clout of more
than a place for states to bicker. Finding a great ally in young James
Madison of Virginia, Franklin was able to navigate the differing
delegates' opinions by working upon bridges Madison had already built
while creating the Northwest Territory in 1783, which required ceding
lands to Congress from overlapping claims by Virginia, Pennsylvania, and
Connecticut. Franklin wanted to do more, but Congress lacked the ability
to tax and was already in horrid debt from the war with requests for money
from the states met with polite refusal. Though unable to tax, Franklin
decided he would find a way for the government to make its money, or as he
wrote, "earn our keep".
After the move to Federal Hall in New York City, Franklin's first project
was the expansion of the United States Postal Service. Working with
Postmaster General and fellow Philadelphian Ebenezer Hazard, Franklin
devised an elegant system of couriers to transport mail over roads and
waterways. He was able to secure legislation ratified by the states that
allowed for free travel to any American citizen across state lines, thus
stimulating commerce. Impeccable service and payment on stamps kept the
Congress afloat, but its debts were still paralyzing. Franklin's voiced
frustration over the lack of money, brought him to the attention of
Alexander Hamilton, who had resigned from Congress in 1782 after his own
pursuits of a bill to allow Congress to set 5% duties was refused by the
states.
Hamilton had recently founded the bank of New York, and he met with
Franklin proposing a central bank for the whole of the United States.
Franklin confirmed the idea, but others, especially Thomas Jefferson, who
had taken up Madison's position in the Continental Congress, spoke out
against the notion of such a move as illegal. Further issues such as the
deplorable treaty created by John Jay with the Spanish and reports from
George Washington's tour of the Northwest finding a grave need for
American surveying and forts against British, Spanish, and Indian
encroachment led Franklin to call for a convention in early 1786 to sort
out the many issues of the Articles of Confederation.
"Franklin would have made a very interesting
president. " - reader's commentsWhile some whispered that Franklin
was attempting to create a wholly new constitution, the convention only
reinvigorated the Articles and established a new system of strong
confederation for the United States. George Washington was convinced to
participate to provide commentary on the need for an American army beyond
the single regiment that guarded the Northwest Territory. His clout
enabled many of the delegates to agree, and Madison worked as a bridge
between the vain opinions of Thomas Jefferson (who demanded guarantee of
personal rights) and Alexander Hamilton (who demanded a central government
who could tax to protect and improve itself).
After months of arguing, the convention assembled a variety of new bills
from the Articles revolutionizing the position of federal government.
Congress was to have delegates each with the power to propose laws based
upon representation of population, but each state was given two final
votes to allow for the splitting of opinion while still giving small
states a staunch voice. A small, permanent executive office would keep the
business of government running while Congress was out of session:
maintaining an army in the territories (American defense would still be
largely militias) as well as a navy to defend American interests, a
national bank (which would settle the debt issues that were causing riots
in Massachusetts as well as promote funding for Congress through
allocating dues to be paid by states based upon population and defense
requirements), and the Postal Service, which would spur heavy investment
in canals and roadways into the new territories, to be repaid as
turnpikes. A Supreme Court would decide final disagreements between the
states, whose laws would be left largely to themselves, Jeffersonian
ideals were guaranteed under a Bill of Rights. Further Jefferson/Hamilton
compromise came with the moving of the capital to a new location in the
South, where Washington suggested along the Potomac, though Franklin
convinced him to found Federal City as westward as possible to spur
expansion, finally deciding on a point beside Fort Cumberland, MD, where
Washington had served in the French and Indian War.
The rewritten Articles proved a solidifying effect on the United States.
After smoothing the transition to his successor Washington, Franklin
retired from his presidential office and returned to Philadelphia, dying
soon after as a national hero. Washington affirmed the military power of
the United States and dispatched a successful naval campaign defeating the
Barbary pirates. Franklin's expansionism was well met as the construction
of Washington, D.C., prompted canal-building around the Great Falls on the
Potomac and opened the Washington Road into Ohio.
After twenty years of growth and varying peace in attempts to sort out the
overlapping territorial claims with Spain and Britain, the Napoleonic Wars
seemed to threaten spilling over into the United States. Presidents
Jefferson and Madison attempted to stave off war with Embargo Acts, but
the limitations of federal power over trade stymied their abilities to
control American shipping beyond suggestions and curtailing of the navy.
British preying on American ships eventually started war in 1811, but
after the impressive defeat of British raiders at the Battle of
Washington, the stalemate turned to a favorable treaty removing British
forces from illegal forts and helping America expand.
Expansionism, however, brought up the question of slavery in the
territories. Congress would eventually end the slave trade and ban slavery
in northern, then all, territories, but the South was legally protected
from "Northern aggression" until unpopularity and economic forces
gradually wiped out slavery over the course of the 1870s. Expansionism
would run rampant as Manifest Destiny was completed with the end of the
frontier in the 1890s, though further colonial expansion into the
Philippines, Hawaii, and Caribbean would fall short of expectations. A new
boom would come with the economy after the Great War, but the resulting
crash from unfounded investments would wipe out the antiquated American
banking system and shatter the United States as the underfunded federal
government collapsed with the strain. States would fall into groups,
"Balkanizing" the nation into seventeen parts following their own social
ideals.