Benjamin Franklin, one of history’s most famous scientists, was first to
apply the now familiar meanings to words like battery, positive and negative. He
was also the First American, a larger-than-life figure enmeshed in scandal and
intrigue. Franklin braved arrows and built forts. Yet in an age when the British
would deliberately infect native Americans with smallpox, he spoke out against
racism. On one page in Benjamin Franklin, Politician: The Mask and the Man
(Norton, £19.95, ISBN 0 393 03983 8) Francis Jennings portrays Franklin
the army colonel leading a march against the college he had founded; on the
next, he is picking up an honorary degree. On another he is in London, trying to
pay for the tea thrown overboard in the Boston Tea Party. Franklin’s progress
from British royalist to draughtsman of the American Declaration of Independence
makes fascinating historical reading.
More from New ÒÁÈ˾þÃ
Explore the latest news, articles and features
Popular articles
Trending New ÒÁÈ˾þà articles
1
Autism may have two distinct subtypes that vary by brain activity
2
A quantum state that lasts forever may finally be within our grasp
3
The secrets to keeping your brain sharp in old age
4
Sperm have been made magnetic to allow IVF inside the body
5
Fully autonomous drones have killed human soldiers for the first time
6
Has the answer to life's origins been hiding in our cells all along?
7
We may have finally solved cosmology's chicken-or-the-egg problem
8
Walking shark found in Papua New Guinea is new to science
9
What if the idea of the autism spectrum is completely wrong?
10
Toy universe shows that time could be a quantum illusion



