


A few months after they landed, however, Denham died, and Keimer rehired Franklin as his manager.Įventually Franklin set up a printing shop with one of the men he had trained at Keimer's, Hugh Meredith. But he returned home when a merchant named Denham offered him a good job as clerk and manager of Denham's Philadelphia store. He therefore was forced to spend several months working in a London printing house. Assuming that Keith had placed letters of credit for him on board his ship, Franklin sailed for England to purchase his printing equipment, only to find that no such letters had been written.

Governor Keith of Pennsylvania was impressed with Franklin and offered to set him up in business. Looking for work, he went first to New York and then to Philadelphia, where he was hired by Samuel Keimer. He and James often disagreed, and finally Benjamin quit before his contract had expired. Because he disliked his father's trade but loved reading, he was apprenticed at the age of 12 to his brother James, a printer. Benjamin Franklin was the youngest son and 15th of 17 children of Josiah Franklin, a soap and candle maker who had immigrated to Boston from Northamptonshire, England.
