Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 13
Eric Weiner Traces Franklin’s 42,000-Mile Journey in Paris for America’s 250th Anniversary
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 13

Eric Weiner Traces Franklin’s 42,000-Mile Journey in Paris for America’s 250th Anniversary

1 articles · Updated · The New York Times · May 13
  • Eric Weiner’s new travel essay follows Benjamin Franklin through Paris, the second installment in a New York Times series tied to the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence.
  • Paris anchors the piece because Franklin’s diplomacy there helped win French guns and money for the American rebels, support that aided George Washington’s eventual victory over Britain.
  • Franklin achieved that breakthrough in his 70s while battling several ailments, a late-life feat Weiner presents as central to his enduring appeal among the founders.
  • Some 42,000 miles of travel and eight Atlantic crossings frame the broader portrait of Franklin as the most peripatetic and, in Weiner’s telling, the "least-dead" of America’s founders.
Beyond statues, what tangible legacy of Franklin's time in Paris can a modern visitor still discover today?
Was Franklin's success true 'diplomatic magic,' or was he simply the right man for France's calculated revenge on Britain?
Could Benjamin Franklin’s 18th-century diplomatic playbook offer any real solutions for today's global challenges?