Latest Updates
-
Screen Time, Diet, and Alcohol: The Triple Threat To Your Liver And Eyes -
Paneer Sandwich Recipe: Your Go-To Quick Veg Meal -
Vicky Kaushal And Sidharth Malhotra Pamper Wives On First Mother's Day: Why All Husbands Should Take Notes -
Ten Years, 300+ Soldiers Saved: Tiranga Mountain Rescue Marks A Decade Of Silent Service -
Nick And Priyanka Show Us What It Looks Like When Partners Lift Each Other Up Publicly -
Suryakumar Yadav Reveals New Born Baby Girl’s Name, Wins Hearts With Sweet Airport Gesture Before IPL Clash -
National Technology Day 2026: How Pokhran-II Nuclear Tests Shaped India’s Identity In STEM -
Thalipeeth Recipe: Your Healthy Multigrain Dish -
Horoscope for Today May 11, 2026 - Small Choices, Big Progress -
Mor Kuzhambu Recipe: Your Guide to South Indian Yogurt Curry
Benjamin Franklin's Letters Are Discovered !

The letters are mainly of copies of correspondence. There are 47 letters that have been discovered and all of them are dating from the spring and summer of 1755. The letters by, to and about Franklin are in the hand of one Thomas Birch, a contemporary of Franklin's who was a prodigious - almost inveterate - compiler and transcriber of historical documents.
The letters concern Franklin's involvement in the first phase of the French and Indian War, specifically General Edward Braddock and what Franklin later called the "wagon affair."
The French and Indian War is the North American chapter of The Seven Years' War. The most important colonial war between Great Britain and France, it resulted, by 1763, in the French loss of most of its colonial possessions in the New World. But in 1755 that eventual outcome was not at all clear. Following George Washington's defeat at Fort Necessity the previous year, imperial authorities dispatched one of their top commanders, General Braddock, to regain control of the frontier.
Braddock landed in Virginia, tasked with capturing France's Fort Duquesne in what is today Pittsburgh. He had been promised, by Virginia and Maryland, 2,500 horses and 250 wagons for his 250-mile overland march. Instead, he received only 20 wagons and 200 horses and exploded in anger.
Benjamin arrived just in the nick of time, offering to arrange the help of Pennsylvania farmers. He was successful. Braddock, less so: The general died in a surprise attack just a few miles shy of the fort. About 1,000 of his 1,500 men in the field were killed or wounded.
Houston, was working on his latest book, "Benjamin Franklin and the Politics of Improvement" (Yale University Press, 2008), when he discovered the new letters. They are being published for the first time in the April issue of the William and Mary Quarterly.



Click it and Unblock the Notifications