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Open Printable Lesson Plan
 



 
  Courtesy of
American Memory Collection

 

Subject Areas
History and Social Studies
   U.S. History - Civics and U.S. Government
   U.S. History - Colonial America and the New Nation
 
Time Required
 Two or three 45-minute classes, if a review of the biographies of Franklin and Jefferson is not included.
 
Skills
 Online research
Debate
Oral presentation
Interpreting primary sources
Collaboration
 
Additional Data
 Date Created: 07/19/02
 
Date Posted
 7/19/2002
 
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Special Features
  Constitution Day
Constitution Day

Jefferson vs. Franklin: Revolutionary Philosophers

Q: What state papers should be considered in connecting the Constitution of the United States with the Magna Carta?

A: …Plans for colonial union were proposed from time to time, the most important of them being the Albany Plan of 1754, of which Benjamin Franklin was the author.
Questions and Answers Pertaining to the Constitution, by Sol Bloom

Dr. Franklin drew up and presented to Congress, on the 21st of July (1775), a plan of confederation… In some of its articles it differed essentially from the one that was finally adopted, and approached more nearly to the present constitution… Taken in all its parts, this plan was little else than a virtual declaration of independence.
Jared Sparks, The Life of Benjamin Franklin

Introduction

Have Benjamin Franklin's philosophical contributions to the early development of our government been overlooked? He was, of course, a member of the committee that worked on the Declaration of Independence, but did you know he had already penned his own "virtual declaration of independence" one year earlier? Franklin is widely known as the "Sage of the Constitutional Convention," but few know he had written a precursor to the Constitution in 1754, more than 30 years earlier! Thomas Jefferson is credited as the author the Declaration of Independence, a grand achievement. But, though Jefferson alone composed the draft of the Declaration, even he admitted in 1823, "…Before I reported it to the committee I communicated it separately to Dr. Franklin and Mr. Adams requesting their corrections."

Both Jefferson and Franklin were critical in injecting into the debates of the Founding Fathers vital philosophical and political ideas. Jefferson's contributions are more widely recognized. Has Franklin, the only one of the two who signed both the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, been unfairly disregarded as a significant philosopher of the American Revolution?

Help your students deepen their understanding of the documents crucial to the birth of our democracy as they scrutinize the contributions of two towering figures of the American Revolutionary period and beyond.

Note: For an introduction to the achievements of Franklin and Jefferson, and a set of activities that can serve as a prequel to this lesson, see the complementary EDSITEment lesson plan Jefferson vs. Franklin: Renaissance Men.

Guiding Question:

What ideas did Franklin contribute to the philosophical debate of the leaders of the movement for American independence? What ideas did Jefferson articulate?

Learning Objectives

After completing the lessons in this unit, students will be able to

  • State connections among Franklin's Albany Plan of 1754 and Plan of Confederation of 1775 and the U.S. Constitution and/or the Declaration of Independence
  • State connections among Jefferson's Summary View of the Rights of British America and Draft of the Virginia Constitution and/or the U.S. Constitution and the Declaration of Independence
  • State connections between George Mason's Virginia Declaration of Rights and Jefferson's Declaration of Independence
  • Give examples of the philosophical and political contributions of Franklin and Jefferson.

Preparing to Teach this Lesson

Suggested Activities

1. Before You Start (If Necessary)

2. Getting the Group Research Started

3. Sharing the Information

1. Before You Start (If Necessary)

If desired, share with the class some basic biographical details about Thomas Jefferson, available via a link from the EDSITEment resource The American President, and Benjamin Franklin, available via a link from the EDSITEment-reviewed website Digital Classroom.

2. Getting the Group Research Started

Tell the class it could be argued that Franklin has been given short shrift and that Jefferson has been given too much credit for the philosophical and political ideas of the Founding Fathers as expressed in the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution, including the Bill of Rights. Students will compare five earlier documents to these keystone documents of our democracy in an attempt to arrive at a conclusion to these questions—Should Franklin be given more credit as a political philosopher? Has Jefferson been given too much credit?

In preparation for this activity, students can view a similar comparison of documents online through the EDSITEment resource Avalon Project at the Yale Law School, which offers a split-screen interactive exercise to Compare Franklin's 1775 Articles of Confederation to the 1777 Articles of Confederation.

Divide the class into five groups and assign each group one of the following documents:

  • Franklin's Albany Plan (1754)—Franklin's Albany Plan will be most fruitfully compared with the U.S. Constitution, though there is also some basis of comparison with the Declaration of Independence. Though Franklin's solutions are often somewhat different than what we find in the Constitution, this comparison reveals that Franklin was already grappling with the same problems as the representatives to the Constitutional Convention 30 years later.

    As war with France loomed in 1754, Franklin represented Pennsylvania at the intercolonial congress that met at Albany. While in Albany, Franklin advocated a plan that called for a colonial union. Franklin's Albany Plan foreshadowed the union that would later be formed by the U.S. Constitution. However, his plan was too far in advance of public thinking, and it was not ratified.
    — From Franklin Court Pages on the National Park Service, of which the EDSITEment resource Links to the Past is an extension

  • Jefferson's Summary View of the Rights of British America (July 1774)The Summary View of the Rights of British America is the longest and most difficult of these documents. It can be most fruitfully compared with the list of complaints in the Declaration of Independence; the Summary View of the Rights of British America provides detail and background history for a number of the complaints.

    "A Summary View of the Rights of British America," written in 1774, articulated the colonial position for independence and foreshadowed many of the ideas in the Declaration for which he is most famous.
    — From the EDSITEment resource The American President

  • Franklin's Articles of Confederation (July 21, 1775)—In Franklin's Articles of Confederation, students will find many passages with ideas later adopted into the U.S. Constitution. Article XIII anticipates parts of the Declaration of Independence, though the language is quite different. As Franklin's Articles do not include a chief executive (due to the fear of any individual—in the manner of a king—having too much power), they often differ with the U.S. Constitution, but as with his Albany Plan, Franklin was looking for solutions to the same problems later dealt with by the members of the Constitutional Convention.

    Dr. Franklin drew up and presented to Congress, on the 21st of July, a plan of confederation. It was not acted upon at that time, but it served as a basis for a more extended plan, when Congress were better prepared to consider the subject. In some of its articles it differed essentially from the one that was finally adopted, and approached more nearly to the present constitution. Taxes for national purposes were to be levied, and members of Congress were to be chosen, in proportion to the number of male inhabitants between the ages of sixteen and sixty; and each member was to have one vote in Congress. Taken in all its parts, this plan was little else than a virtual declaration of independence. It was to be perpetual, unless the British government should agree to such terms of reconciliation, as had been claimed by the colonies.
    — From Sparks' "Life of Franklin," Chapter 9 on The Electric Franklin, a link from the EDSITEment-reviewed website Internet Public Library

  • George Mason's Virginia Declaration of Rights (adopted June 12, 1776)—Though the Virginia Declaration of Rights is often cited as one source for the Declaration of Independence, it also has a number of elements found in the U.S. Constitution and, especially, the Bill of Rights (the first ten amendments to the Constitution).

    It is one of the documents heavily relied on by Thomas Jefferson in drafting the Declaration of Independence. The Virginia Declaration of Rights can be seen as the fountain from which flowed the principles embodied in the Declaration of Independence, the Virginia Constitution, and the Bill of Rights. The document exhibited here is Mason's first draft to which Thomas Ludwell Lee added several clauses. Even a cursory examination of Mason's and Jefferson's declarations reveal the commonality of language and principle.
    — From Thomas Jefferson at the Library of Congress, available via a link from the EDSITEment resource American Memory

  • Jefferson's Draft Constitution for Virginia (June 1776)—This is probably the easiest of all the documents for comparison. Many passages bear a striking resemblance to the Declaration. Jefferson's Draft Constitution begins with a Declaration-like list of complaints, but the remainder of the document is a constitution; therefore, many passages address issues also dealt with in the U.S. Constitution.

    Immediately on learning that the Virginia Convention had called for independence on May 15, 1776, Jefferson, a Virginia delegate to the Continental Congress, wrote at least three drafts of a Virginia constitution. Jefferson's drafts are not only important for their influence on the Virginia government, they are direct predecessors of the Declaration of Independence. Shown here is Jefferson's litany of governmental abuses by King George III as it appeared in his first draft. — From Thomas Jefferson at the Library of Congress, available via a link from the EDSITEment resource American Memory

As an aid to the teacher, copies of each of the documents listed above—with passages that compare to at least one of the key documents highlighted—are available on pages 1-23 of the PDF file, Benjamin Franklin's Albany Plan of Union 1754 Compared to Two Keystone Documents. In some cases, comparable passages from the key documents have been inserted; you may want your students to try this, as well. Many examples are provided in these samples, but the selections are not comprehensive. Use these aids to provide examples for your class, or adapt them to your needs.

Each group is responsible for scrutinizing its document for text, ideas, and structures (the presence of a preamble, for example) that can also be found in one of the keystone documents. In many cases, words and phrases will be duplicated in companion documents. Texts of the Declaration of Independence, the U.S. Constitution, and the Bill of Rights are available on the EDSITEment resource Avalon Project at the Yale Law School and in most history textbooks. It is best if each group has access to hard copies of the documents.

If desired, groups can use the "Five Group Comparison Chart" on page 24 of the PDF file, Benjamin Franklin's Albany Plan of Union 1754 Compared to Two Keystone Documents, to help them chart the similarities they uncover. Groups do not need to understand every element of any particular document to locate comparisons, but they should be prepared to present and explain the similarities they do find to the class. Remember that some documents will bear more of a comparison to the Constitution and/or Bill of Rights, others to the Declaration, and some to more than one document.

3. Sharing the Information

As groups share the comparisons they found, class members can fill in a composite chart using the "Document Comparison Summary" on page 25 of the downloadable PDF file, Benjamin Franklin's Albany Plan of Union 1754 Compared to Two Keystone Documents.

If desired, before the class attempts to arrive at a conclusion about the contributions of Franklin and Jefferson, students can learn more about the drafting of the Declaration of Independence through the Library of Congress Exhibit: Declaring Independence: Drafting the Documents, available via a link from the EDSITEment resource American Memory. As part of the exhibit, students can view digitized versions (and transcriptions) of such documents as Jefferson's Original Rough Draft of the Declaration, with handwritten corrections by Franklin and John Adams.

If it has not already come up in discussion, share Article XI of Franklin's Articles of Confederation, available on the EDSITEment-reviewed website Avalon Project at the Yale Law School. Why is this called a "virtual declaration of independence?" (Only after all of the colonists' demands are met, states Franklin, shall "the Colonies return to their former Connection and Friendship with Britain." Franklin even invites other British colonies in the hemisphere to join the confederation, specifically naming "the West India Islands, Quebec, St. Johns, Nova Scotia, Bermudas, and the East and West Floridas.")

Taking into consideration the information on the composite chart, students can now discuss the influence Jefferson and Franklin had on the keystone documents. What contributions came from each? How much did Jefferson rely on Mason for the Declaration? Has Franklin been given short shrift? Has Jefferson been given too much credit? Though students do not have to agree on the conclusion, they should be able to take a stand on their opinion.

Extending the Lesson

Selected EDSITEment Websites



Standards Alignment

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