Ben Franklin's London House Opens As a Landmark
By Justin Mullins
First Published March 2006
The house in London where Benjamin Franklin
lived just before the American Revolution opened as a
public museum on 17 January, exactly 300 years after the
birth of the scientist and statesman [see photo,
"Landmark"].
Just a stone's throw from today's Trafalgar Square, the
house is an IEEE Milestone—a historically significant
location selected by the IEEE History Center in
collaboration with local sections. It also is the first
site outside the United States to be designed by Save
America's Treasures, a public-private partnership of the
U.S. National Park Service and the National Trust for
Historic Preservation. The house has "many original
features which we've worked hard to restore," says
Michael De Guzman, who as artist in residence has been
much involved with the effort.
From 1757 to 1775, Franklin worked in London for the
Pennsylvania Assembly and then for other colonies,
lobbying the British government on their behalf. He also
continued his famous scientific investigations while
living at 36 Craven Street from 1757 to 1762 and from
1764 to 1772 (and down the street at number 7 from 1772
to 1775). Franklin's work in his London laboratories
ranged from the study of canal systems to the
development of an improved alphabet, with six new
letters.
His interests even extended to music. While in London
he invented a "glass armonica," a musical instrument
that reproduces the sound that wine glasses make when
rubbed with a moistened finger. Franklin's design uses a
horizontal spindle to hold and rotate nested glasses,
which a musician plays with moistened fingers. A working
replica is on display in the house [see photo,
"Armonica"].
Franklin returned home in 1775 to become the only
person to sign all three documents key to the founding
of the United States: the Declaration of Independence;
the Treaty of Paris, which ended the revolution; and the
U.S. Constitution. His famous experiment with the kite
(memorialized in the diamond of IEEE's logo) won him
almost unparalleled international celebrity and prompted
a leading French intellectual of the day to call him the
man who "snatched lightning from the sky and the scepter
from tyrants."
The four-story townhouse was built in the 1730s and
has been carefully restored over the past few years. In
1998, the house hit the headlines when the restoration
team discovered human remains including skulls and bones
buried in the back garden. The remnants date from
Franklin's time but were probably discarded by a
physiologist called William Hewson, who ran an anatomy
school on the premises.