Poor Richard's Almanack
At age 16, Franklin began to secretly send letters to his brother's newspaper, under the pseudonym "Silence Dogood." These letters soon had people throughout Boston wondering who was writing these intelligent letters.
The Sclience Dogood Letters
he wrote a totsll of 478 letters
letters that Benjamin Franklin wrote for his brother's newspaper, the New England Courant.
The Silence Dogood letters were written by a young Benjamin Franklin. The letters were written under the name Ms. Silence Dogood because prior to this time, 16 year old Benjamin Franklin was unable to get his work published.
At age 16, Franklin began to secretly send letters to his brother's newspaper, under the pseudonym "Silence Dogood." These letters soon had people throughout Boston wondering who was writing these intelligent letters.
The Sclience Dogood Letters
he wrote a totsll of 478 letters
letters that Benjamin Franklin wrote for his brother's newspaper, the New England Courant.
The Silence Dogood letters were written by a young Benjamin Franklin. The letters were written under the name Ms. Silence Dogood because prior to this time, 16 year old Benjamin Franklin was unable to get his work published.
Silence Dogood was a pseudonym of Benjamin Franklin's.
Benjamin Franklin lived centuries ago, in an earlier age when there were different expectations concerning when it was, or was not appropriate to capitalize letters.
No, they were not. It was a pseudonym used by Benjamin Franklin so that his brother would publish his letters tot he editor.
Silence Dogood was a fictional persona created by Benjamin Franklin. Under this pseudonym, Franklin wrote a series of letters that were published in his brother's newspaper, the New England Courant. The letters covered a wide range of topics, including social issues and political commentary.
Benjamin Franklin helped write the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.
When Benjamin Franklin was 16 and apprenticed to his brother the printer, he used the pseudonym of Silence Dogood to send letters to his brother's paper, "The Courant." His brother published 15 of "Mrs. Dogood's" letters.
Silence Dogood, Caelia Shortface & Martha Careful, Busy Body, Anthony Afterwit, Alice Addertongue, Robert Saunders, Polly Baker, and Benevolus were all pseudonyms used by Franklin in his writings for various papers as well as his almanack.