Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:12):
This is Lee Habib and this is our American Stories,
the show where America is the star and the American people.
And this next story is how the signing of the
Declaration of Independence divided the country and families, including one
founder's family. You know, it's been said that there's never
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been more partisan division than right now in the country. Well,
we're going to take you through a story that questions
that narrative. Historians who study the matter differ as to
the number of Americans who sided with the Patriots and
the British Crown. But one thing is certain. Americans were
deeply divided. One third were for the war, one third
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were against it, and one third were hiding under their
tables hoping it would pass. But the consequences for choosing
one side or another was not an ugly Facebook post
or a tweet story. Here's one of the signers describing
what it was like putting name and pen to paper,
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signing the Declaration of Independence an independence hall. This is
what Benjamin Rush said. A pensive and awful silence pervaded
the house as we were called up, one after another
to the table of the President of Congress to sign
what was believed by many at the time to be
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our own deathborn. Russia was there at our founding and
signed our birth certificate. Was right, you see, the British
government considered the Declaration of Independence a treason his document,
and treason was a capital crime. How divided was America?
One look at Benjamin Franklin's life tells the story. The printer, inventor, humorist, writer, newspaperman,
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and diplomat was one of the driving forces of the
American Enlightenment, but his own home was torn apart by
America's First Civil War. Franklin's son, William, was illegitimate, but
that never stopped Benjamin from being the father his son deserved. Indeed,
William wasn't told about his bastard child status until he
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was nineteen old enough to absorb such a thing. William
had all the advantages that any son of ben Franklin
could imagine. He had classes for everything from Latin to dance,
horsemanship to the art of conversation. William even moved to
London to train for a life in the law. His
father ultimately used his influence to secure his son William,
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the Royal governorship of New Jersey. Throughout the nineteen seventies.
The two men worked closely together. Neither could have imagined
they'd one day be forced to choose between king and country,
family and country. Ben Franklin had waited a long time
to decide, and he'd been distrusted by many on the
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side of the revolution. He ultimately joined the cause of
the Patriots and urged his son to join too, But
William he had other ideas. He chose to stay on
the side of the Loyalists. That choice would lead to
William's arrest and land him in his new home, the
Litchfield Gowl, a prison that stood on the foothills of
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the Bantam River in western Connecticut. Here's how Daniel Epstein
described that prison in his book The Loyal Son The War.
In Ben Franklin's house, it was infamous, a destination of
last resort for outlaws condemned to be hanged, convicted murderers
and sodomites, reprobates, and traders who dishonoured their parole. It
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smelled awfal The room was empty except for stonewall chamber pot.
The plank wooden floor was strewn with straw. In the
twilight from the high little window, the prisoner searched the
four corners in vain for a chair to sit or
a pallet to lie upon. It was a noisy, filthy room,
the very worst gal in America. The son of Ben Franklin,
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governor of New Jersey, was now living in a place
that made Alcatraz look like the Ritz Carlton. He would
spend two years there. After being released from jail in
a prisoner exchange, William worked on behalf of the Loyalists
for a few years before joining thousands of Americans who
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emigrated to England. He never returned home. A few years
before his death, Ben Franklin received a letter from his son.
William was hoping for a face to face meeting and
a chance at reconciliation. The father did not wait long
to respond. Here's what Ben Franklin wrote. Nothing has ever
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hurt me so much and affected me with such keen
sensation as to find myself deserted in my old age
by my only son, and not only deserted, but to
find him taking up arms against me. A bit later,
in that same letter, Ben Franklin, who was in London
at the time, concluded with these harsh words, I shall
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be glad to see you when convenient, but would not
have you come here at the present. The two would
never reconcile. Ben Franklin, who died a wealthy man, left
his son virtually nothing in his will. The political divide
today is still about power in a distant city. But
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the city isn't London. It's Washington, d C. Some Americans
think our federal government has grown too vast and unaccountable
to the people. They want power dispersed to the state
and closer to the American people. Others want more power
granted to Washington, d C. They want the federal government
to do more for more people in areas ranging from
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healthcare to education. It's a fight we've been having since
our founding. Just a few years ago, my family went
to visit Independence Hall on a sunny day in Philadelphia,
and all we could see around us were Americans of
every conceivable race, class, age, color, and ethnicity, eating together
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peacefully in restaurants of all kinds. Burmese, Chinese, Indian, Italian, Jamaican, Lebanese.
It was what our founders hoped for that scene. We
may be a divided nation, but the story of the
war in Ben Franklin's family is a stark reminder of
what kind of divisions we've endured, but America always pulls through,
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somehow stronger, somehow better. The story of the War in
Ben Franklin's House, a celebration of the Declaration of Independence
and the founders and the price they paid for founding
this country. Here on Our American Stories, liehbb here, the
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host of Our American Stories. Every day on this show,
we're bringing inspiring stories from across this great country, stories
from our big cities and small towns. But we truly
can't do the show without you. Our stories are free
to listen to, but they're not free to make. If
you love what you hear, go to Ouramerican Stories dot
com and click the donate button. Give a little, give
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a lot. Go to auramericanstories dot com and give