The following was written by Michael W. Smith:
https://michaelwsmith.com/the-sacrifices-made-by-the-declaration-signers/
"What happened to the signers of the Declaration of Independence?
This is the Price They Paid
Have you ever wondered what happened to the 56 men who signed the Declaration of Independence?
Five signers were captured by the British as traitors, and tortured before they died. Twelve had their homes ransacked and burned. Two lost their sons in the revolutionary army, another had two sons captured. Nine of the 56 fought and died from wounds or hardships of the revolutionary war.
They signed and they pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor.
What kind of men were they? Twenty-four were lawyers and jurists. Eleven were merchants, nine were farmers and large plantation owners, men of means, well educated. But they signed the Declaration of Independence knowing full well that the penalty would be death if they were captured.
Carter Braxton of Virginia, a wealthy planter and trader, saw his ships swept from the seas by the British Navy. He sold his home and properties to pay his debts, and died in rags.
Thomas McKeam was so hounded by the British that he was forced to move his family almost constantly. He served in the Congress without pay, and his family was kept in hiding. His possessions were taken from him, and poverty was his reward.
Vandals or soldiers or both, looted the properties of Ellery, Clymer, Hall, Walton, Gwinnett, Heyward, Ruttledge, and Middleton.
At the battle of Yorktown, Thomas Nelson Jr., noted that the British General Cornwallis had taken over the Nelson home for his headquarters. The owner quietly urged General George Washington to open fire. The home was destroyed, and Nelson died bankrupt.
Francis Lewis had his home and properties destroyed. The enemy jailed his wife, and she died within a few months.
John Hart was driven from his wife’s bedside as she was dying. Their 13 children fled for their lives. His fields and his gristmill were laid to waste. For more than a year he lived in forests and caves, returning home to find his wife dead and his children vanished. A few weeks later he died from exhaustion and a broken heart. Norris and Livingston suffered similar fates.
Such were the stories and sacrifices of the American Revolution. These were not wild eyed, rabble-rousing ruffians. They were soft-spoken men of means and education. They had security, but they valued liberty more. Standing tall, straight, and unwavering, they pledged: “For the support of this declaration, with firm reliance on the protection of the divine providence, we mutually pledge to each other, our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor.”
There are quite a large number of home educated and self educated men that have quite the documentation to back it up. Ben Franklin is arguably the most well known. Most of the men on the list did go to and graduate a university, it least all the lawyers did, except for Abraham Clark who was self taught and apparently not accepted into the Bar Assoc. However some did not and made their fortunes on their own without having family money. Most northern farmers had relatively small farms. There are a few large plantation owners, but predominately the large plantations were in the South East.
Let's take a look at Franklin as an example of a "false history" whereby the vast majority of the population is left out of the comparison, and we measure things in terms of todays metrics.
His maternal Grandfather was Peter Folger. Mr. Folger was:
What does this mean? He was the direct personal assistant of Thomas Mayhew, who was the first Governor of the colony. Mr. Mayhew couldn't have been a colonizer without a charter. You can't get a charter without lots of money, thus Mr. Folger was at least directly associated with Money before even setting foot in America. While it doesn't itself point directly to lots of money for Mr. Folger, it points to direct connections to money, which means opportunities not afforded to 99% of the population.
In addition, You can't be a missionary without formal education in the Church. You can't be a school teacher without a formal education. What does that point to? Money.
BF’s father, Josiah Franklin was:
A “businessman” meant owner of a business. Not many people owned businesses in New England, rather it was a position of at least some privilege. I can’t find any specifics on his holdings in the five minutes I spent investigating, but this is far from “humble.”
Even better he was a tithingman. A tithingman was:
A tithing is a “civil parish.” So a township basically. He was the head of the legal and administrative system of the town. This again is a position of privilege and power not many had (presumably one per town).
BF himself did go to school, more than the vast majority of people anyways. Britannica says:
He had a year of formal education. Another year with a private teacher (which is generally very expensive, and something almost no one on the planet had access to except the aristocracy) and became an apprentice to his brother, a printer, which is itself a position requiring substantial education (printer, not necessarily apprentice), and which gives access to books most people would never dream of having access to.
All of these things add up to more than the average person, much more. He had both a lineage of at least reasonable wealth, and opportunities afforded to almost no one. Most people don’t appreciate that the vast majority of people other than those who became the leaders, came over here as indentured servants, or were born here as 10th sons of 10th sons of 10th sons whose parents may have had opportunities, but never made anything of themselves, thus their children had no opportunities available to them. They were too far removed from the lineage and inheritance. Benjamin was similar in that he was from a large family, but he was only one generation removed (his father had sufficient wealth and power), thus he still had plenty of opportunities that most didn’t have. Yes, he was a member of the “working class,” but he started near the top of that heap, and took advantage of opportunities that most never had a chance at.
As for him being Cabal, in 2016 the basement in his home was excavated:
I’m not sure if you are completely aware of the actions of the Cabal, and their tendency to sacrifice children in magic ritual, but this is a telltale sign of that activity.
This by itself is not sufficient, but there is SO MUCH MORE of Franklin’s actions that strongly support his being a member of the Cabal, through his actions. That requires a great deal of dsicussion however, but his actions in France, in America, and Britain all point to “Cabal agent” when measuring the result of those actions, if not the “stated intent” of them. As an example, BF was the inspiration for Thomas Malthus’ work on Population Control, the Cabal agenda that currently rules the world.
That’s just the tip of the iceberg.
I read the article about Craven street. Did you read the rest of the article? They pretty much said it wasn't him, but the husband of the land lady that was an early anatomist (that was a murky undertaking during that time).
"Benjamin Franklin was a lot of things: author, politician, scientist, diplomat, freemason and statesman. But it turns out, he definitely wasn't a murderer.
"Further investigation showed some of the bones had been sawn through; others bore scalpel scars; a skull showed drill holes probably made by a trepanning device.
This evidence pointed Franklin's close friend, William Hewson, an early anatomist, who had been working in secret at the Franklin's home at that time".
"Hewson had been studying anatomy under Scottish scientists and surgeons, the Hunter brothers. Hewson famously showed how blood passed through the lymphatic system, by using mercury and a turtle. The discovery attracted the attention of scientist Ben Franklin, and the pair became friends.
Anatomy was still a murky subject at the time: poking around in dead bodies had been outlawed throughout the Middle Ages into the 1600s.
The bones from the basement; William Hewson, born 1739. By the 1700s, it was growing as a subject for study, but it was still only legal to dissect the cadavers of convicted and executed murderers: and the problem was, there weren't enough bodies to go round.
Body snatchers and 'resurrectionists' thrived, stealing dead bodies and selling them to the scientists.
Location, location, location It seems 36 Craven Street was the perfect place for an anatomy school: Hewson was married to the landlady's daughter; the tenant, Ben Franklin, was a trusted friend; and the house lay between two sources of material.
Resurrectionists could smuggle bodies from graveyards via the Thames-side wharf at the end of the street, or snaffle unfortunate cadavers from the gallows at the other.
The Friends of Benjamin Franklin House suggest that Hewson probably used bodies from 'resurrectionists – bodysnatchers who shipped their wares along the Thames under cover of night.'
Not only were uncertified dissections illegal, the means by which Hewson gained his materials were also against the law; disposing of these bones somewhere other than the basement would have risked being prosecuted for illegal dissection and possible grave robbing. Was Benjamin Franklin aware of all the dodgy dealings going on in his basement? Was the Founding Father involved?
There's evidence Franklin stayed elsewhere in the same area of London for a period, possibly while Hewson was living at the property in his place."
As far as Josiah Franklin goes:
Josiah Franklin Sr. (December 23, 1657 – January 16, 1745) was an English businessman and the father of Benjamin Franklin. Born in the village of Ecton, Northamptonshire, England, Josiah was the ninth child of blacksmith Thomas Franklin (b. 1598), and his first wife, Jane White. Thomas was the son of Henry Franckline (b. 1573) and Agnes Joanes. Thomas Franklin remarried and had more children. Josiah Franklin worked as a fabric dyer in Ecton. Franklin immigrated to the American colonies in 1682. He married twice and had 17 children: ten boys and seven girls. In Boston, he was a member of the Congregational Old South Church where he served as a tithingman.
His business was a tallow chandler/soap boiler. He basically was a candle maker. As far as a tithingman. Goes, that was in England and it was similar to a constable, however by the 1600's in America it has a different meaning:
"In early New England, many churches appointed a “tithing man” who carried around a long rod with a knob at the end (the other end had a fox or hare’s tail for gentler use on the women-folk) and whose job was to prevent disorderly conduct during service or to awaken the sleeping."
According to 1913 Webster's dictionary:
tithingman (plural tithingmen)
*(law, historical) The chief of a tithing. quotations ▼ *(obsolete) A ruler or leader of ten men; a decurion. *(UK, law) A peace officer; an underconstable. *(US, Maryland and New England dialect, historical) A parish officer elected annually to preserve good order in the church during divine service, to make complaint of any disorderly conduct, and to enforce the observance of the Sabbath. *A tithe proctor: a collector of tithes.
Maybe it was, maybe it wasn't. There is ALWAYS such a "plausible story" to cover the implications when something like this pops up. For Pizzagate, for example, they "debunked" it by saying "there was no basement" at Comet Pizza, completely ignoring the fact that James Alifantis actually posted about the basement at Comet Pizza on Twitter. But of course no one checks those things, so the plausible story becomes the "official truth". It helps that the plausible story always aligns with what people want to believe.
As I said, the evidence of this particular event wasn't sufficient, but that was not what I base my assessment of Franklin on, rather it is a ton of other stuff that he did that advanced the agenda of the Cabal. If you think the "matter is solved" however, you have much to learn about the complicity of the media.
Unless you understand the monopoly of the media, you can't appreciate the fuckery that lay therein. The Londonist, where the article was published, is very much a main stream site, which means 100% owned by the Cabal. The author, Zoe Craig has been an editor for many other main stream sites, including the BBC. This makes her a very possible MI6 agent. Not necessarily of course, and I'm certainly not trying to make an argument for that with such little evidence, but once you understand the complicity of the media, and how many "editors" especially are in fact agents of Intelligence, you can appreciate that everything is suspect. I am only trying to suggest your conclusion is far from certain, I am not saying "FB was a child murderer." But he most certainly might have been, and this is evidence that supports that conclusion.
As for the rest of your thing, I have no idea what you are trying to say. Everything I said stands. His father held a position of power and authority. He came from wealth, his schooling, such as it was, cost money most did not have. Did he come from "great wealth?" No, I never said he did. But the average person in America made a few cents an hour in the 1700s (in the early 1800s it was ~0.05c per hour, I'm not sure about the century before). Secondary or Tertiary school cost $600 per year according to the previous source (secondary school was actually more expensive, but easier to get into if you had the money). Assuming a 60 hour work week, and that it was the same in the 1700s as the early 1800s, the average yearly wage was $150 per year. You would have needed to make about 10 times the average to have such “disposable” money to send your child to high school or college, and that’s just for one kid. Josiah Franklin had a plethora of rugrats, and he still had the money to pay for a private teacher for BF.
This discrepancy between average income and the cost of paying a college (or at least high school) educated person to teach your child, teachers who were themselves used to a reasonable level of wealth, is why only a couple percent of children in the 1700s had ANY formal schooling at all, and less than 1% had "private teachers."
Again, the problem people have is that they associate these things with TODAYs standards. For example, they see “minister” and think of someone “doing God’s work.” Yet being a minister at that time was ALWAYS a position of power. The ministers were ALWAYS wealthy. Even just being a leading member of the Church (such as Josiah Franklin) was ALWAYS a position of power in the community. In this case being a tithesman was more than just a "ruler of ten men" since that is a completely different context. It was a leader of the legal and administrative system. I'm not sure exactly what that means, perhaps a judge and/or accountant? Treasurer and Secretary?
As an example of important context of the times, both of those positions (treasurer and secretary) were positions of great power in the community. Indeed, “secretary” was sometimes more powerful of a position than “president” in some corporations and/or organizations. Things like “superintendent” meant the highest position one can have in some settings, and yet, such words such as secretary, superintendent, or treasurer mean very little today. Context is everything. You have to understand the times to understand the power associated with the positions being named.
As for "his business was a "tallow chandler/soap boiler" that is meaningless. Rockefeller dug sludge out of the ground and was the richest man on the planet (not really, but people thought he was). Elias Dodge made shoes, but had hundreds of employees and made more women's shoes than anyone else in the world. Success is not about the business, but about the scale of the business. Without knowing say, how many employees he had, or how many shops he had, how much he exported, etc., there is no way to even begin to judge the measure of his wealth.
At the least he was a community leader, which is NOT an "average" father, which puts a direct lie to the idea that "Franklin was a self-made man." By all accounts Franklin did take advantage of the opportunities that were available to him. In that sense he was "self-made" as in, he could have failed in his endeavors, and he did not. The point I am making is, he had FAR MORE opportunities than the vast majority of the people on the planet, or in America, or in New England. The idea that BF came from "humble beginnings" is complete and total bullshit by all available evidence if you understand the context of the time period.
All these things are possible, but Josiah Franklin was not a community leader. He was a Tithingman of New England where the title meant something very different from the old english meaning. It specifically states that he was a guy that was elected to walk around church with a rod with a knob on the end which he would use to wake people up during sermons. He was not a constable.
As for apprenticeships, I had understood that there was some difficulty with the concept, but had not studied it in depth. Here is a good article.
https://www3.nd.edu/~rbarger/www7/apprenti.html
Apprenticeships were not typically of the wealthy elite. They were more for people with some means, but not the rich. Universities and colleges were primarily for religious studies.
By your assessment of the time period, every single business owner and every owner with land was the 1%. I don't think that is accurate. The system in the Americas was not Peasant and Feudal ruler. We didn't have that setup here. Many people were not wealthy, but the reasons people came here was to make opportunities that were not available in the old world. Overall the colonies were considered to be a backwater colony by Britain, however there was substantial opportunity to be had for those with intelligence, talent, hard work or opportunity. The super wealthy elite did not come to the colonies to live, it was unfashionable. People lived here to make a new life and hopefully find their fortunes. Most of the people that moved here did so for the opportunity. Some were from old wealthy families that were no longer wealthy, but mostly were regular people that had a skill or created their own opportunities when they got here. In summation, the colonies were not some grandiose resort for the wealthy elite. The place was dirty, unrefined, filled with illness and danger. Indian attacks were still occurring and people that lived in the border villages and towns still had raids. The French Indian war was in the 1750's and lasted over a decade.