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5 Founding Fathers Whose Finances Shaped the American Revolution

How five of the nation’s Founders made their livings, how they invested in the revolutionary cause—and what they gained and lost.
 

In July 1776, when America’s Founding Fathers voted to sign their names to the Declaration of Independence, they pledged to risk “our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor.” Their lives and honor did indeed hang in the balance, but just what were their fortunes? And how much did the Founders stand to gain or lose through America’s war for independence?

Below, a look at how five of the nation’s Founders made their livings, how they invested in the revolutionary cause—and what they gained and lost.

Benjamin Franklin

Publisher. Statesman. Entrepreneur. Inventor. Land speculator. Benjamin Franklin, the 10th son of a soap maker, grew his wealth—and reputation—in myriad ways. Along with a thriving business printing everything from books to sermons to currency, he published his newspaper, The Pennsylvania Gazette, and his best-selling Poor Richard’s Almanack. He invested his profits in 89 rental properties in his home city of Philadelphia—and in land speculation further west. In two colonial-era wars, he organized the defense of the pacifist Quaker city, designing and building forts, contributing money for weapons and selling them from his bookshop. By his early 40s, he was one of the wealthiest Americans, with an aggregate income of £2,000 a year, or $300,000 today.