Media Room

For Immediate Release

Release Dated: Sept. 1, 2009

Media Contacts:

Jessica Kohen
Marketing and Communications
651-259-3148
jessica.kohen@mnhs.org

Marjorie Nugent
Marketing and Communications
651-259-3145
marjorie.nugent@mnhs.org

This news release is available online at: events.mnhs.org/media.

BENJAMIN FRANKLIN: ARTIFACT IMAGES

These images may be used for editorial purposes in magazines, newspapers and online to promote "Benjamin Franklin: In Search of a Better World." Credit information is provided. They may not be used for advertising or promotional efforts.

Poor Richards, 1733

"Poor Richard", 1733 (1739 edition is in exhibit)
Library Company of Philadelphia

Printed and sold by B. Franklin.

When "Poor Richard's Almanack" was first published in 1733, it was an instant best seller. Franklin, writing as the humble and henpecked Poor Richard, skillfully combined useful information--astronomical and meteorological predictions--with entertainment, in the form of proverbs, humor and poetry.

[Download] (350 kb)

Chess Set

Chess set (French), 1750-1780
Pearwood
American Philosophical Society Museum, Philadelphia, photo by Peter Harholdt

Owned by B. Franklin; descended in the family of Deborah Bache Duane.

Franklin enjoyed chess, played it all of his adult life, and made frequent references to it in his writings. This 18th-century set descended in his family with the history of having belonged to him.

[Download] (226 kb)

Armonica Bakken

Glass armonica, 1760-1780
Wood, glass, tinned basin, and cloth
Collections of The Bakken Library and Museum

According to family tradition, this armonica was owned by Mme. Brillon de Jouy, a friend and neighbor of B. Franklin in Passy, France.

[Download] (1.1 mb)

Leyden Jar Bells

Franklin bells with Leyden jar (English), 1800-1900
Mahogany, glass, brass, gold foil and paint
Collections of The Bakken Library and Museum

Bells would ring whenever this Leyden jar capacitor was charged with electricity. This is the same concept Franklin used in installing his lightning bells. He explained: "In September 1752, I erected an Iron Rod to draw the Lightning down into my House, in order to make some Experiments on it, with two Bells to give Notice when the Rod should be electrified."

[Download] (1.1 mb)

Ink Balls

 

Ink balls (American), ca. 1740
Wood, wool and sheepskin
Historical and Interpretive Collections of The Franklin Institute, Inc., Philadelphia

Owned by B. Franklin; descended in the Bache family.

Using the ink balls, pieces of solid ink were mixed with a small amount of water on the surface of the ink stone, until the ink was of a uniform consistency. Then, with an ink ball in each hand, the pressman picked up the ink and applied it to the metal type with a dabbing, rolling and beating motion before each pull of the press.

[Download] (123 kb)

 

Snuffbox

Snuffbox with portrait of Benjamin Franklin (French), Francois Dumont, 1779
Horn, satinwood, gilt, painting on paper, and glass
Library Company of Philadelphia

Franklin gave a snuffbox like this one to his young friend Georgiana Shipley as a token of his affection. The portrait on its cover was one of Franklin's favorites; he later lent it to be copied by other artists who wanted him to sit for portraits.

[Download] (268 kb)

Signature

Signature, B. Franklin

[Download] (61 kb)

 

The Minnesota History Center is located at 345 Kellogg Blvd. W. in St. Paul. Museum hours are 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday, and noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. Auxiliary aids and services are available with advance notice. For more information, call 651-259-3000, 1-800-657-3773 or TTY 651-282-6073.

The Minnesota Historical Society is a non-profit educational and cultural institution established in 1849 to preserve and share Minnesota history. The Society collects, preserves and tells the story of Minnesota’s past through museum exhibits, libraries and collections, historic sites, educational programs and book publishing.

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