Thomas Paine was born Thomas Pain in Thetford, England, on January
29, 1737, the son of a poor corset-maker. At age sixteen, Paine ran
away from home and became a sailor during the Seven Years War.
After the war he held several odd jobs for the British government
and worked hard to supplement the little education he received as a
child. While living in England in 1772, Paine wrote his first
political pamphlet, The Case of the Officers of Excise. Paine came
to America in 1774, was appointed editor of Pennsylvania Magazine
and became active in the call for American independence from
England. His revolutionary pamphlet, Common Sense, was published in
1776, sparking some of the first public calls for America to rid
itself of British rule. He spent the next fifteen years of his life
in England and France and wrote several more political pamphlets,
including Rights of Man (1790), The Age of Reason(1794), and
Agrarian Justice (1796). In 1802 Paine returned to the United
States, where he died in June of 1809 in the Greenwich Village
neighborhood of New York City.
Richard Beeman, the John Welsh Centennial Professor of History
Emeritus at the University of Pennsylvania, has previously served
as the Chair of the Department of History, Associate Dean in Penn's
School of Arts and Sciences, and Dean of the College of Arts of
Sciences. He serves as a trustee of the National Constitution
Center and on the center's executive committee. Author of seven
previous books, among themThe Penguin Guide to the United States
ConstitutionandPlain Honest Men- The Making of the American
Constitution, Professor Beeman has received numerous grants and
awards including fellowships from the National Endowment for the
Humanities, the Rockefeller Foundation, the Institute for Advanced
Study at Princeton, and the Huntington Library. His biography of
Patrick Henry was a finalist for the National Book Award.
“No writer has exceeded Paine in ease and familiarity of style; in perspicuity of expression, happiness of elucidation, and in simple unassuming language.” —Thomas Jefferson
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