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  1. Mar 20, 2024 · Benjamin Franklin was the reason why France opened its coffers so wide to the unproven Americans. To put it simply, the French liked him and trusted him.

    • Dave Roos
  2. Why did Benjamin Franklin go to France in 1776, exactly? Let’s back up slightly: Franklin had already earned quite a few accolades by October 1776, when he set sail for France.

  3. When he was twelve, Beauclerk was sent to France for his education. Here he would be taught French and receive training in military administration, amongst other formal lessons, to prepare him for his future career in the military and the court.

  4. Nov 13, 2009 · On October 26, 1776, exactly one month to the day after being named an agent of a diplomatic commission by the Continental Congress, Benjamin Franklin sets sail from Philadelphia for France, with...

  5. Though sometimes undervalued in wider cultural memory, almost every historian of the American Revolution acknowledges that without aid and intervention from the Kingdom of France in the conflict, independence from Great Britain was a pipe dream. The question of why France chose to ally with the colonial uprising, however, is not always so obvious.

  6. Dec 17, 2015 · Instead, Franklin stayed in France until 1785 in a critical role as one of America’s first significant diplomats. The French opened Franklin with open arms, and he became a pop culture icon. Images of Franklin, wearing a fur cap instead of a wig, were commonplace.

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  8. When Jefferson sailed for France on July 5, 1784, aboard the merchant ship Ceres, his task was to promote American interests, not only in France but throughout Europe. When he returned to America aboard the merchant ship Clermont on November 23, 1789, Jefferson’s service as Minister Plenipotentiary had been largely disappointing in its ...

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