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The Papers of Benjamin Franklin: Volume 41
Edited by Ellen R. Cohn, senior research scholar in the Department of History
(Yale University Press)
This volume covers the period Sept. 16, 1783 through Feb. 29, 1784.
After the signing of the definitive peace treaty on Sept. 3, 1783, Benjamin Franklin’s official duties as minister plenipotentiary diminished. Great Britain refused to negotiate a commercial agreement, and Congress failed to act on the draft treaties of commerce with Denmark and Portugal that Franklin had sent them the previous summer. In the six months after the peace was settled, Franklin’s sole diplomatic achievement was a draft consular convention with France. With his leisure time, however, Franklin followed scientific developments (witnessing the first balloon ascensions in Paris), advised the French government on schemes for civic improvement, and wrote three of his most remarkable pieces about what it meant to be American.