29 pages • 58 minutes read
Born in England in 1737, Thomas Paine tried several lines of work—privateer, corset maker, customs officer, teacher, tobacconist—before meeting Benjamin Franklin, who sponsored him to America in 1774. His first work there was as editor of Pennsylvania Magazine; under his guidance, it grew rapidly and became more political. Paine also began his career as a political pamphleteer: In 1775 he edited for the magazine—and presumably wrote—the anonymous essay “African Slavery in America,” which excoriated the practice as an outrage. His 1776 work Common Sense electrified his fellow colonists and helped produce a groundswell of support for the Declaration of Independence later that year.
Paine continued his pro-independence writings with a series of pamphlets called The American Crisis. He worked as a liaison to France and later moved there to support the French Revolution, especially with his book The Rights of Man. While the French revolutionaries at first admired him, their leadership turned on him—he argued against beheading the king, among other political errors—and he barely escaped the guillotine.
Along the way, Paine often got into squabbles with prominent figures, including George Washington and Napoleon.
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By Thomas Paine