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  1. On the occasion of George Washington’s retirement from the presidency in 1796, the editor Benjamin Franklin Bache published a commentary in the Philadelphia Aurora. “If ever a nation was debauched by a man, the American nation has been debauched by washington,” declared its author:

  2. 1 Benjamin Franklin Bache is a well-known figure in the pantheon of revolutionary and early America. A biography covers his life, while a number of books focus on his activities as the editor of a radical newspaper in Philadelphia in the 1790s before he fell a prey to the yellow fever in 1798, aged 28 (Faÿ, The Two Franklins; Stagg).

  3. 17 de jun. de 2022 · Bache, Benjamin Franklin, 1769-1798, Washington, George, 1732-1799 -- Relations with journalists, Bache's Philadelphia aurora, Journalists -- United States -- Biography, Press and politics -- United States -- History -- 18th century, United States -- Politics and government -- 1789-1797 Publisher Philadelphia : University of Pennsylvania Press

  4. Bache is viewed as an eighteenth-century libertarian ideologue in Jeffery A. Smith, "The Enlightenment Education of Benjamin Franklin Bache," PMHB 112 (1988), 483-501, and James Tagg, "The Limits of Republicanism: The Reverend Charles Nisbet, Benjamin Franklin Bache, and the French Revolution," ibid, 503-43. For the Aurora's earlier views on ...

  5. To Sarah Bache. Franklin had been aware of the Society of the Cincinnati since at least mid-December, when Pierre-Charles L’Enfant arrived in Paris to deliver George Washington’s letters and begin the work of establishing a French branch. 8 A week after L’Enfant’s arrival, however, Franklin still knew nothing specific about the ...

  6. Dr. Franklin at first showed some coolness towards him. The coming of Benjamin Franklin Bache into the family brought the family together again. ^ Benjamin Franklin Bache was a charming baby. Old Mrs. Franklin called him "her kingbird."^ He was a healthy, gay and intelligent child. When Dr. Franklin came back from England in 1775, he took an

  7. Identity and Youth, 1769–1785. ON OCTOBER 27, 1776, a less than reliable ship, the Reprisal, quietly left Philadelphia for France with a cargo of indigo, one of America’s new commissioners to France—Benjamin Franklin—and two boys, William Temple Franklin and the undoubtedly bewildered seven-year-old, Benjamin Franklin Bache.