politics
Remember Ben Franklin's other legacy
Key takeaways
- A shovel of coals carried upstairs, an unclean chimney, or a poorly watched hearth could turn a private mistake into a public disaster.
- In February 1735, an anonymous letter in The Pennsylvania Gazette urged residents to keep chimneys clean, handle fire carefully, and prepare before the flames came.
- The writer was Benjamin Franklin, working under a pseudonym in the newspaper he owned.
Why this matters: political developments that affect policy direction and public trust.
A shovel of coals carried upstairs, an unclean chimney, or a poorly watched hearth could turn a private mistake into a public disaster.
In February 1735, an anonymous letter in The Pennsylvania Gazette urged residents to keep chimneys clean, handle fire carefully, and prepare before the flames came. It opened with a line that has lasted almost three centuries: An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
The writer was Benjamin Franklin, working under a pseudonym in the newspaper he owned. And he was not writing about medicine, but about fire.
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