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Benjamin Thompson - Early life in America |  | Benjamin Thompson - Early life in America: Encyclopedia II - Benjamin Thompson - Early life in America |  | Thompson was born in rural Woburn, Massachusetts, in America; his birthplace is preserved to this day as a museum. He was educated mainly at the village school, although he sometimes walked to Cambridge with the older Loammi Baldwin to attend lectures by Professor John Winthrop at Harvard College. At the age of 13 was apprenticed to John Appleton, a merchant of nearby Salem. Thompson excelled at his trade and, coming in contact with refined and well educated people for the first time, adopted many of their characteristics, including an inter ...
See also:Benjamin Thompson, Benjamin Thompson - Early life in America, Benjamin Thompson - Bavarian maturity, Benjamin Thompson - Experiments on heat, Benjamin Thompson - Inventions, Benjamin Thompson - Later life, Benjamin Thompson - Honours, Benjamin Thompson - Notes, Benjamin Thompson - Bibliography |  | | Benjamin Thompson, Benjamin Thompson - Bavarian maturity, Benjamin Thompson - Bibliography, Benjamin Thompson - Early life in America, Benjamin Thompson - Experiments on heat, Benjamin Thompson - Honours, Benjamin Thompson - Inventions, Benjamin Thompson - Later life, Benjamin Thompson - Notes, Benjamin Thompson House, his birthplace (now a museum) |  | |
|  |  | Benjamin Thompson: Encyclopedia II - Benjamin Thompson - Early life in America
Benjamin Thompson - Early life in America
Thompson was born in rural Woburn, Massachusetts, in America; his birthplace is preserved to this day as a museum. He was educated mainly at the village school, although he sometimes walked to Cambridge with the older Loammi Baldwin to attend lectures by Professor John Winthrop at Harvard College. At the age of 13 was apprenticed to John Appleton, a merchant of nearby Salem. Thompson excelled at his trade and, coming in contact with refined and well educated people for the first time, adopted many of their characteristics, including an interest in science. While recuperating in Woburn in 1769 from an injury, Thompson conducted experiments concerning the nature of heat and began to correspond about them with Loammi Baldwin and others. Later that year, he worked for a few months for a Boston shopkeeper and then apprenticed himself briefly, and unsuccessfully, to a doctor in Woburn.
Thompson's prospects were dim in 1772 but in that year they changed abruptly. He met, charmed and married a rich and well-connected heiress named Sarah Rolfe, moved to Portsmouth, New Hampshire, and through his wife's influence with the governor, was appointed a major in a New Hampshire Militia.
When the American Revolution began, Thompson was a man of property and standing in New England, who had important connections to the British government. He threw in his lot with the British, and was active in recruiting loyalists to fight the patriots. This naturally earned him the enmity of the popular party, and a mob attacked Thompson's house. He fled to the British lines, abandoning his wife, as it turned out, forever. Thompson was welcomed by the British, to whom he gave valuable information about the American forces, and became an advisor to both General Gage and Lord Germain.
While working with the British armies in America, he conducted experiments concerning the force of gunpowder, the results of which were widely acclaimed when eventually published, in 1781, in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. Thus, when he moved to London at the conclusion of the war, he already had a reputation as a scientist.
Other related archives16 December, 1753, 1769, 1772, 1781, 1784, 1785, 1789, 1791, 1797, 1798, 1799, 1804, 1814, 19th century, 2005, 21 August, 26 March, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, American Revolution, An Experimental Enquiry Concerning the Source of the Heat which is Excited by Friction, Anglo-American, Antoine Lavoisier, BBC1, Baked Alaska, Bavaria, Benjamin Thompson House, British, Elector, Englischer Garten, France, French, General Gage, Great Britain, Harvard College, Harvard University, Have I Got News For You, Holy Roman Empire, John Dalton, John Leslie, John Winthrop, Karl Theodor, Knighted, Loammi Baldwin, London, Lord Germain, Moon, Munich, New Hampshire Militia, Nicholson's Journal, Paris, Philosophical Transactions, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, Royal Institution, Royal Society, Rumford Soup, Rumford crater, Rumford fireplace, Rumford medals, Salem, Sir Humphry Davy, Sir Joseph Banks, Woburn, Massachusetts, accuracy and precision, aide-de-camp, air, argument from design, birthplace, caloric, chemist, conductors, conservation of energy, convection, divine providence, explosives, feathers, fur, gases, gunnery, heat, inference, insulating, inventor, leitmotif, liquids, loyalists, merchant, motion, nutritious, patriots, physical theory, physicist, potato, revolution, science, solids, soup, specific heats, theological, thermal underwear, thermodynamics, water, wool, workhouses
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Early life in America", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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