Considering all the history connected to this building, it is no wonder that it attracts entities who were involved in its history. Many signers of the Declaration of Independence faced hardships because of their courage to do so. Other incidents which happened here have also resulted in a variety of hauntings.
Ben Franklin - Ben was a very talented man, an enlightenment intellectual, who earned his fame as a statesman, "through his subsequent diplomatic services in connection with the relations of the colonies with Great Britain, and later with France."
In 1775, he was chosen by Pennsylvania to be their delegate to the Second Continental Congress. In 1776, he was a member of the Committee of Five that drafted the Declaration of Independence, and made several small changes to Thomas Jefferson's draft. He was busy in life, involved with a lot of activities, societies and organizations.
Benedict Arnold - It was 1780 and Benedict Arnold wasn't a happy camper. He had married a lady who was a loyalist sympathizer, and was putting pressure on him to find a way to end the war with the colonies still being under England. He had serious issues with the Continental Congress and the military, was suffering from mounting personal debt, and was facing untrue corruption charges filed by the Pennsylvania civil authorities, due to personal quarrels with the council president of the state, Jerry Reed, who was determined to ruin Arnold. At his court martial, Benedict Arnold was ultimately cleared of all civil charges but was found guilty of two trivial charges and it was recommended that he receive a reprimand from Washington, himself. "Washington, who considered Arnold the victim of persecution, couched the reprimand in such terms as to convert it into eulogy, and soon afterward offered Arnold the highest command under himself in the northern army for the next campaign."
In 1780, the war wasn't going well for Washington's troops; conditions for the patriots was pretty dire, and men had been deserting to the British lines averaging more than 100 a month. Benedict Arnold was still angry about his treatment and acted on a plan he had been thinking about. First step was to be assured through a loyalist contact that Lord North, would introduce the liberal terms already offered by the British in 1778, which conceded everything that the Americans had demanded in 1775, would be re-offered in negotiations if the colonies would only come back to the British empire. Second step was to switch to the dark side of the force and put into action his plot to give the British control of the Hudson River, which was foiled. He escaped and became a Brigadier General in the British force and was rewarded with a paltry sum of $6,000 sterling. He wound up in England, where he got a mixed reception. He started a business with two of his sons in New Brunswick, forever banished from America as a black hearted traitor. His last years were embittered by remorse. His name in American culture has since been linked to the word, treason, and his reputation was ruined by his own actions. It is a shame that such a brave, courageous military leader met such a sad end.