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Independence National Historical Park
Franklin Court
Franklin Court

Franklin Court

Try our new Independence National Historical Park Cell Phone Audio Tour! Call 267-519-4295, press Prompt #22 for Franklin Court & Underground Museum information, Prompt #221 for Glass Armonica Music, Prompt #23 for Franklin's Market Street Houses (Printing Office, Archeology, Post Office and store) information. Read the press release and flyer with stops and other park sites.

Franklin Court was the site of the handsome brick home of Benjamin Franklin, who lived here while serving in the Continental Congress and the Constitutional Convention. Franklin died here in 1790; the house was torn down about 20 years later. Today the site contains a steel "ghost structure" outlining the spot where Franklin's house stood and features an underground museum with a film and displays, an 18th century printing office, an architectural/archeological exhibit, an operating post office and a postal museum.

Listen to Franklin's Glass Armonica

Chester

Mozart

Misty

 

Franklin Court

 
Drawing of Independence Hall  

Did You Know?
From 1790 to 1800 Philadelphia was the Capital of the United States. During that time, city, county, and state government offices were all on the same block of Chestnut Street, between 5th and 6th.

Last Updated: June 27, 2009 at 02:49 EST