becuz they both was presedents
g
Yes on Long Island with John Adams and one other gentleman whose name escapes me.
YES: Benjamin Franklin, a "Founding Father" knew and met many famous people of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. (he didn't live in the 19th century, but knew some of those who became more famous than when he knew them. He knew and met all of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, including future American Presidents George Washington, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson. He was also a diplomat to France, and likely met King Louis XVI and his wife Marie Antoinette. Finally, he was instrumental in the creation of the American Constitution where he worked with future American President James Madison, and likely knew Alexander Hamilton.
Born and raised in Boston, Franklin worked as an apprentice in his brother's printing business to learn the trade. After working for him for five years, he became fed up with his strict brother, and in 1723, at the age of 17, he moved to Philadelphia where he again worked in the printing trade.
Yes
Madison and Hamilton called for a constitutional convention because they wanted the Americans to get there rights.
Timbuckto
nope
He met Benjamin Franklin.
I'd imagine he approached it more times than many others.
in fact she was a widow, she had two kids of her own, and at age twenty-six she meet James Madison, and James and Dolley adopted a child
Thomas Jefferson introduced her to him.
Yes on Long Island with John Adams and one other gentleman whose name escapes me.
It is one of the 39 clues: it says he did, witch is correct! This is one of the persons mentioned in Mozart's world: Benjamin Franklin (1706 - 1790) Actually Mozart did meet Ben Franklin in Paris, and was quite impressed by the Glass Harmonica which Dr. Franklin had invented. Mozart composed several pieces of music for it, including the Adagio for Glass Harmonica in C Major, K356.
In 1794, James Madison was a US Congressman and the capital was in Philadelphia when Dolley lived. He became in interested in her and asked her friend Aaron Burr, who was a frequent guest at the boarding house managed by Mary Payne, to introduce her.
YES: Benjamin Franklin, a "Founding Father" knew and met many famous people of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. (he didn't live in the 19th century, but knew some of those who became more famous than when he knew them. He knew and met all of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, including future American Presidents George Washington, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson. He was also a diplomat to France, and likely met King Louis XVI and his wife Marie Antoinette. Finally, he was instrumental in the creation of the American Constitution where he worked with future American President James Madison, and likely knew Alexander Hamilton.
No- both Jefferson and Madison supported Monroe. In fact, Jefferson rode 50 miles to meet Andrew Jackson and convince him not to run against Monroe in 1816.
Can you meet wrestlers at Madison square garden