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== ''The Age of Reason'' and Later Years ==
== ''The Age of Reason'' and Later Years ==
While imprisoned he drafted the first part of '''''The Age of Reason''''', advocating deism and criticizing institutional religion. Released in 1794, he finished the work and later returned to the United States in 1802. Despite earlier fame, Paine spent his final years in relative obscurity in New York, dying in 1809.
While imprisoned he drafted the first part of '''''The Age of Reason''''', advocating deism and criticizing institutional religion. Released in 1794, he finished the work and later returned to the United States in 1802. Despite earlier fame, Paine spent his final years in relative obscurity in [[New York]], dying in 1809.


== Legacy ==
== Legacy ==

Latest revision as of 01:28, 17 August 2025

Thomas Paine
Portrait of Thomas Paine
Born February 9, 1737; Thetford, Norfolk, England
Died June 8, 1809 (aged 72); New York City, United States
Nationality English-born American
Political affiliation Patriot; supporter of the French Revolution (Girondin sympathies)
Spouse Mary Lambert (m. 1759–1760); Elizabeth Ollive (m. 1771–1774; separated)
Occupation(s) Pamphleteer, political philosopher, revolutionary
Major offices Deputy to the French National Convention (1792–1793)
Known for Common Sense; The American Crisis; Rights of Man; The Age of Reason

Thomas Paine (February 9, 1737 – June 8, 1809) was a transatlantic writer and political thinker whose pamphlets fueled democratic revolutions. His 1776 bestseller Common Sense made the case for immediate American independence, while his series The American Crisis rallied morale during the war. Later works, including Rights of Man and The Age of Reason, defended popular sovereignty and religious free inquiry.

Early Life

Born in Thetford, England, to a Quaker father and Anglican mother, Paine worked as a stays-maker, teacher, and excise officer. After professional setbacks, he met Benjamin Franklin, who encouraged him to emigrate. Paine arrived in Philadelphia in late 1774 and soon found a voice as a radical journalist.

Common Sense and Revolution

Published in January 1776, Common Sense argued that hereditary monarchy was illegitimate and that the colonies should form an independent republic with broad representation. Accessible style and moral urgency made it a sensation, accelerating momentum toward the Declaration. During the war, Paine accompanied the army as a volunteer and penned The American Crisis essays — beginning, “These are the times that try men’s souls” — to stiffen resolve.

Europe and Rights of Man

Paine returned to Europe in 1787. As the French Revolution unfolded, he wrote Rights of Man (1791–1792) defending the Revolution and challenging Edmund Burke’s conservatism. Indicted for seditious libel in Britain, he fled to France, where he was elected to the National Convention. He argued against executing Louis XVI and was imprisoned during the Terror.

The Age of Reason and Later Years

While imprisoned he drafted the first part of The Age of Reason, advocating deism and criticizing institutional religion. Released in 1794, he finished the work and later returned to the United States in 1802. Despite earlier fame, Paine spent his final years in relative obscurity in New York, dying in 1809.

Legacy

Paine’s pen helped transform colonial grievance into republican revolution and later linked American and European movements for rights. His insistence on reason, natural rights, and popular sovereignty has remained influential—if often controversial—across political and religious debates.

See also