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  1. The Academy and College of Philadelphia (1749–1791) was a boys' school and men's college in Philadelphia in the colonial-era Province of Pennsylvania. Founded in 1749 by a group of local notables that included Benjamin Franklin , the Academy of Philadelphia began as a private secondary school, occupying a former religious school building at the southwest corner of 4th and Arch Streets.

  2. The Academy of Philadelphia. Franklin ’ s plans for an academy were realized in 1753, when the Academy and Charitable School of Philadelphia was chartered and opened with about 145 boys. The new academy introduced a dual school system: one school was a traditional Latin grammar school offering a classically based curriculum, and the other was ...

  3. The University of Pennsylvania. Founded by Franklin in 1749. "It has long been regretted as a misfortune to the youth of this province that we have no academy in which they might receive the accomplishment of a regular education," observed Benjamin Franklin in 1749. By way of comparison Harvard had been established in 1636 and Virginia's ...

  4. The Academy of Philadelphia was founded to provide a classical education with a modern twist. An advertisement at the time of its opening in January of 1751 offered teaching in the following areas: Writing, arithmetic, and mathematics (merchants’ accounts, geometry, algebra, surveying, gauging, navigation, astronomy, drawing in perspective, and other mathematical sciences)

  5. Source: Library Company of Philadelphia. The University of Pennsylvania traces its roots back to 1749 when the Publik Academy of Philadelphia was opened. Benjamin Franklin saw a lack of comprehensive education for youth in Philadelphia and saw the need for an affordable, non sectarian and inclusive academy. New York and Boston had academies and ...

  6. Penn’s History. Penn’s History. Penn dates its founding to 1740, when a plan emerged to build a Philadelphia charity school that would double as a house of worship. After construction was underway, however, the cost was seen to be much greater than the available resources, and the project went unfinished for a decade.

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  8. From 1749 to 1755 Benjamin Franklin was president of the Board of Trustees of the College, Academy, and Charitable School of Philadelphia, and he continued as a trustee of the College and then of the University of the State of Pennsylvania until his death in 1790. For most of this period he served as an elected trustee; but from 1785-1788 while ...