Celebrating Benjamin Franklin’s Life and National Legacy - Speech Brief
17 January 2026 00:00 UTC · The White House · White House Statement · Source · Email X Link

Celebrating Benjamin Franklin’s Life and National Legacy

Key points

  • Contributions to science, public institutions, and national infrastructure
  • Key role in independence, diplomacy, and Constitution ratification

TL;DR

  • Text states Franklin was born January 17, 1706, in Boston and was the 15th of 17 children.
  • Text states he was largely self-taught and became a successful publisher by age 23.
  • Text states he invented the lightning rod and bifocals, performed the key-and-kite electricity experiment, and served as the first Postmaster General.
  • Text states he established the first public library and the first volunteer fire department.
  • Text states he was a delegate to the Second Continental Congress, helped draft the Declaration of Independence, and suggested the phrase about equality to Jefferson.
  • Text states he secured French support, negotiated the 1783 Treaty of Paris, supported ratification of the Constitution, and signed both the Declaration and the Constitution.
Original text

Today, we celebrate the towering life and legacy of Benjamin Franklin—printer and philosopher, inventor and diplomat, public servant and patriot, and one of the most consequential Americans to ever live. On what would have been his 320th birthday, we honor his restless genius, his steadfast devotion to liberty, and his legendary contributions to our national story. Born on January 17, 1706, in Boston, Massachusetts, ...

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