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Football_Bat

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Deep in the hearta (enemy territory)
This illustrates just how young a few of the major figures involved in the Declaration of Independence were at the time.

http://generationopportunity.org/happy-4th-july/?utm_source=twitter_re&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=july4foundingfathers

Thomas Jefferson was 33.
John Jay was 30.
James Madison was 25.
Alexander Hamilton was 21.
Marquis de Lafayette was 18.
 
Jefferson would have had the gazettes in an uproar when he tweeted out pics of him out in public with one of is employees.
 
Actually, the life expectancy of those who made it to 21 was about 70 or so. The infant mortality rate really skewered things.
 
Smallpotatoes said:
The average life expectancy was a lot shorter in those days, too.

That's not exactly true.
If you survived infancy, you had a good chance of a relatively long life ...

Football_Bat said:
This illustrates just how young a few of the major figures involved in the Declaration of Independence were at the time.

http://generationopportunity.org/happy-4th-july/?utm_source=twitter_re&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=july4foundingfathers

Thomas Jefferson was 33. Died at age 83
John Jay was 30. Died at age 83.
James Madison was 25. Died at age 85
Alexander Hamilton was 21. Died (in a duel) age 49 or 47
Marquis de Lafayette was 18. Died at age 76
Franklin (84), Adams (90), Monroe (73), and Washington (67) also lived relatively long lives.

Still, pretty strong achievements for a young age. And a credit to the of "young people" at the time ...The fact these youngsters did what they did ... it's pretty much been downhill since then.
 
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It does seem strange that people so young would have such a HUGE impact in the formation of a country, muchless a system of government.
Can you think of a set of political leaders that young who have done as much for this country since then?
It seems like since then the country has been controlled primarily by older white males.
Was that case with then, but there guys stood out as whiz kids?

George Mason and Robert Morris - who both instrumental as well - were older 50s and 60s when this was happening.
 
Funny thing is - I doubt the ages of those involved, or even the names, was that well known then. People knew Ben Franklin and Washington, but it wasn't like there was a CNN back in the day. The most current news was what you heard probably from a passing traveler, maybe a weekly sojourn into a nearby town. The publications were weeks behind what was going on in the colonies, months behind what was going on in Europe. People were focused on the ideas being discussed rather than the personalities involved. (what a concept).
 
Evil ... Thy name is Orville Redenbacher!! said:
It does seem strange that people so young would have such a HUGE impact in the formation of a country, muchless a system of government.

I think you're drastically underestimating the 70-year-old Ben Franklin's tutelage and guiding hand.
 
I'm sure the whole Continental Congress was a cross-section of all ages. But it being a revolution and all that, the young ones were the most gung-ho over it. And since it succeeded, they would run the country for the next 30-40 years. They were into middle age by the time the Constitution was ratified.
 
MisterCreosote said:
Evil ... Thy name is Orville Redenbacher!! said:
It does seem strange that people so young would have such a HUGE impact in the formation of a country, muchless a system of government.

I think you're drastically underestimating the 70-year-old Ben Franklin's tutelage and guiding hand.

I think you overestimate Franklin's role.
Important? Yes, absolutely.
Guiding hand and tutelage? No.
Franklin and Adams, basically served as editor's of Jefferson's draft.

Jefferson's draft was largely his .. Borrowed from his own, previous work; The Virginia Declaration of Rights, and other sources. It's why he was selected to write it in the first place.

Franklin was hardly alone ... The committee was a few older guys: Adams, Sherman, Franklin and Livingston, who was in mid-40s.
 

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