Sarah Franklin “Sally” Bache was the daughter of Benjamin Franklin and Deborah Read.
Background
She was a leader in relief work during the American Revolutionary War and frequently served as her father"s political hostess, as her mother had died in 1774. Also in their household was her older half-brother William Franklin, her father"s illegitimate son whom her parents raised from infancy. She was carefully educated by her father about political life.
Career
Their son Francis Franklin died of smallpox at age four. Sarah Bache was an ardent Patriot during the American Revolutionary War. She did extensive relief work.
After her father"s return in 1775 from a diplomatic mission to France, she frequently acted as his political hostess, as her mother had died in 1774.
She raised money for the Continental Army and is known for her involvement in the Ladies Association of Philadelphia. In 1780, under her leadership, the group made 2,200 shirts for the soldiers in the Continental Army at the army"s winter quarters at Valley Forge.
The women often met to work together at The Cliffs, a country estate owned by Samuel R. Fisher on the Schuylkill River, two miles north of Philadelphia. Bache loved music and reading, and was considered a skilled harpsichordist.
When her father died in 1790, he left most of his estate to her.
Among the items bequeathed to her was a small portrait of Louis XVI surrounded by diamonds, which she sold to finance a trip to London. In 1794, she and her family moved to a farm outside Philadelphia, to the north along the Delaware River. Sarah Franklin Bache died in 1808 and is buried in Christ Church Burial Ground, Philadelphia.
Views
Assigned by Pennsylvania Government. Snyder to defend the City of Philadelphia against the British.