Ben Franklin Night 250: Multiverse of Variants at the Liberty Bell

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Forget the multi-million-dollar city festivals, synchronized drone shows and big-budget spectacles that were supposed to dominate Independence Weekend.

The record heatwave caused, among others, Citywide alert, Code Redraising the actual temperature to a staggering 35 degrees and forcing the cancellation of Queen Latifah’s concert the night before due to the scorching 117-degree slope of the stage surface. Just hours before the huge event was scheduled to start in Philadelphia on Friday The “Salute to Independence” parade has been officially canceled. Official floats were forced to turn back at 5th Street.

However, just before the Liberty Bell, a much more colorful, tumultuous and completely uncontrollable rift in historical space-time broke wide open anyway. On Friday, July 3, 2026, at 5:30 p.m., a crowd gathered and then grew in front of the historic monument.

Driven by a grassroots phenomenon that began with a modest batch of leaflets posted in Philadelphia, and later r/philly the subreddit was buzzing, with hundreds of undeterred tourists and locals congregating at Independence Mall.

What they discovered was not a customary, clichéd historical reconstruction. This was a living, breathing multiverse of Philadelphia, where Benjamin Franklin was no longer a single icon frozen in bronze, but a fractured, attractive reflection of the diverse community that makes Philadelphia what it is today.

“They can’t cancel the Bens.”

Organizer Elena Jackendoff, a West Philadelphia resident who moved to the city from Pittsburgh in 2015, used a megaphone to excite the delighted crowd. Despite the heat, the audience was excited and ready.

“They can’t cancel the Bens,” Jackendoff roared to the crowd. “Bring in Bens!”

Gabriel, Olivia and Meghan show off the “Franklin verse” variety on the eve of America’s 250th anniversary in front of the Liberty Bell Center. Olivia (center), who made both her costume and Gabriel’s, dressed as Betsy Ross. (Hanbit Kwon / for Billy Penn)

Originally dreaming of a “sea of ​​1,000 Ben Franklins” on the eve of America’s 250th anniversary, Jackendoff brought the event to life with a elementary plan: a single entry fee on a dollar bill, a strict “BYO-bald” policy and low-stakes financial disruption. For Jackendoff, Franklin is the real father of Philadelphia, the city where her parents first met. In fact, if she had her way, Franklin, not William Penn, would be on top of City Hall.

“It’s a democratic competition, just the way Ben would have wanted it,” Jackendoff thought as he looked at the 30 or so Ben Franklins of various ages, genders and races who competed. “Philadelphia is truly special and we deserve to celebrate, despite all the terrible things that are happening.” The audience then cooperated to determine the winner: “Clap for your favorite Ben.”

Veterans advocate for Albert El (left), Kiya Burgess (center) and Phambassador Ben Franklin. (Hanbit Kwon / for Billy Penn)

Whether the fault was Mercury turning tumultuous retrograde or triple-digit weather warping the local continuum, one thing was certain: the city’s official program was forced to collapse under the sun, but a determined Ben Franklins pressed on. Below is the definitive visual documentation of Franklin’s verse, commemorating the attractive madness of America’s anniversary.

In the spirit of sisterhood, a group of friends wear colonial-style white wigs to brave a triple-digit heat wave. (Hanbit Kwon / for Billy Penn)
The spirited competitor draws cheers from the energetic crowd at Independence Mall. (Hanbit Kwon / for Billy Penn)
Celebrating the triumphant moment, Ben Franklin proudly raises his arms and ticket to the delight of onlookers. (Hanbit Kwon / for Billy Penn)
The player dons a radiant blue continental uniform and expresses his civic pride with passion and without a script. (Hanbit Kwon / for Billy Penn)
A bespectacled adolescent Benjamin Franklin commands a megaphone to share his love of the written word and history. (Hanbit Kwon / for Billy Penn)
The oppressive conditions of the Red Code catch up with the youngest Founding Father present, who hands over a giant, stylized $100 bill during a break. (Hanbit Kwon / for Billy Penn)
Joy will outlast the heat in a dynamic grassroots competition. (Hanbit Kwon / for Billy Penn)
A line of attendees lines up with historical props, including copies of the Pennsylvania Gazette, ranging from content to anxious. (Hanbit Kwon / for Billy Penn)
Wholeheartedly endorsed by professional actor and historian Benjamin Franklin Mitchell Kramer (center right), winner Kiya Burgess (center left) raises her hand in victory. (Hanbit Kwon / for Billy Penn)

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