3620 Daniel Shays Hero or Traitor After the fall of the British in the American Revolution, near 1786, America had been dropped to the “Critical Period”. “This young american nation was in economic and political chaos”(Brainard). Soldiers who had come home to continue their lives as farmers, not wealthy individuals just as the government had promised them before the Revolution. Had not been paid for their service, veterans had caused an uprising of riot which had caused the change of America forever. Daniel Shays had lead his rebellion of ex veterans, which was called Shay’s Rebellion.…
His revolt also showed Americans that the United States of America under the Articles of Confederation had many flaws. This resulted in the new constitution that greatly changed the U.S. Shay’s Rebellion can be compared to the Pennsylvania Whiskey Rebellion in 1794. Alexander Hamilton proposed a heavy tax on whiskey and the people strongly disputed; the Whiskey Boys formed mobs and attacked federal tax collectors. The Whiskey Rebellion, on the other hand, was successful in challenging the rights of the federal government to pass and enforce laws, and the right to collect taxes from citizens. Shay’s Rebellion and the Whiskey Rebellion are very similar because two groups of rebels formed and violently fought people working for the government, in order to reduce unfair taxes.…
The colonists desire for farmland caused many of them to rebel against the…
However, these letters are ignored and the mob has a mass revolt with weapons and declare the states are no different from the British tyrants. The mob gets the idea to revolt from Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence where it says that the people have a right to rebel against the government if problems arise. Shay and his followers used their mob power to stop court houses and stop declaring for money and demand that they be protected from these…
On March 3rd, 1791, the federal government, with George Washington as acting President, had passed an excise tax on whiskey. The farmers mostly grew the grains, however giving their location in the western counties of Pennsylvania, made grain shipments near impossible to the east. Traveling with shipments were difficult and very time consuming because the Allegheny Mountains separated the west from the east. Almost all farmers, from small to lager, kept their whiskey stills and continued to make whiskey with their extra grain. Whiskey was often used as money to pay for salaries and for troops to fright in the war.…
Shays' Rebellion was brought about by a financial debt crisis at the end of the American Revolutionary War. Specifically, Continental Army and state militia veterans struggled, this is because many of them received little pay or reimbursement for their military service. Among these displeased prior soldiers was the Continental Army Captain Daniel Shays, who led a violent rebellion against debt collection in Massachusetts. The rebellion in turn caused George Washington's return to political life and emphasized weaknesses apparent within the Articles of Confederation. The United States came out after Shays' Rebellion as a stronger nation, with a new Constitution and George Washington as its first…
Out of many rebellions and riots in the short history of the United States, Shays’s Rebellion made the biggest splash. Shays’s Rebellion was a riot led by former Revolutionary War veteran and farmer, Daniel Shays. Farmers had been pushed to the limit from their unfair treatment by the government and started a riot that changed the course of US history. This rebellion led to the replacement of the Articles of Confederation and marked the way to the formation of the present-day Constitution. Though some may say that this rebellion was disruptive and made no real impact, Shays’s Rebellion shaped the infrastructure of modern America.…
The farmers rebelled against the state because they were being dispossessed of their property due to local enforcement of tax collections. These farmers were hard working men mainly living in the state of Massachusetts, but were in debt due the state raising taxes and increasing the costs in the courts. The main leader of the rebellion was a Revolutionary War Veteran from Pelham named Daniel Shays (the rebellion was named after him). The protests started as non-violent, but quickly escalated after the state failed to address any of the petitions it had to help solve the farmers’ debts. By December 1786, James Bowdoin, the Massachusetts Governor, mobilized a force of 1,200 militiamen to fight against Shay and the rebels which was led by General Benjamin Lincoln, a former Continental Army General, and was funded by local merchants.…
The Whiskey Rebellion was a tax protest in the United States about a tax put on whiskey that was initiated by Hamilton. The “whiskey tax” was the first tax forced upon a domestic product by the federal government. The whiskey tax is what caused the Whiskey Rebellion. At first, Hamilton recommended using military force to stop the protesters, but Washington did not agree with Hamilton. Washington did not want any violence, but when peacefully talking did not work, he reverted to Hamilton’s methods.…
So when Shays’s rebellion took place, a rebellion that ended in doubters believing that reform was necessary, the founding Fathers decided that they wanted to create a senate that would make decisions for the people because the people were too indecisive and inconsistent to make their own decisions. This rebellion was when the Western Farmers decided that they wouldn’t pay taxes. They armed themselves and rallied outside the courthouses. Though they stopped many from entering the court houses, numerous were arrested and some were hung. George Washington is relieved when this rebellion is over but says “Surely Shays must be either a weak man, the dupe of some characters who are yet behind the curtain, or has been deceived by his followers” (George Washington on Shay’s Rebellion).…
Alarmed by the uprising of Shay’s Rebellion by farmers and former veterans protesting to lighten taxes, issue paper money, and suspend property takeovers, Massachusetts authorities slowed gathered up a small army to put out the rebellion. This event came as a shock but affirmed to the Congress and state authorities that the citizens were unhappy with the government at hand. Document B touched on the subject of the limited commerce income for America would not be able to support the growing population. The Articles would eventually lead to bankruptcy. Good thing a…
The Whiskey Rebellion was a battle about taxes in the United States beginning in 1791. The so-called "whiskey tax" was the first tax forced on a domestic product by the government. It became law in 1791, and was intended to generate money to help reduce the national debt. Although the tax applied to all distilled spirits, whiskey. Because of this, the removal became known as a "whiskey tax".…
Before one talks about the effects of the Jacobite Rebellion of 1745, it is important to know the reasons why the Rebellion place and what happened during the Rebellion. The Rebellion happened because of religion differences and a power struggle between distant relatives, and essentially the Rebellion was between the Catholic Stuarts and the Protestant Hanoverians. The seeds of the Rebellion began in 1688 when the Catholic, English King, James the Second was forced to flee to France due to the Glorious Revolution, which deposed him from the English Crown. (Riding,1). The male line of the Stuart king became established in France but wanted to try to reclaim the united crown of England and Scotland.…
1791 1. The Whiskey Rebellion After the Revolutionary War, government tried to procure a steady source of revenue through taxing whiskey. In response, the government faced a small-scale revolution by some of its own citizens. Most of the country felt negatively toward taxing in general, much less taxing on whiskey.…
The rebellion was based in the Massachusetts countryside at the end of the Revolutionary War. The government started to inforce increasingly large taxes that primarily affected Continental Army veterans, state militia veterans, and farmers (mountvernon.org). They enforced these larger taxes in order to pay for foreign debt that was being demanded to be paid. They were affected because they received little pay and reimbursement for their military services. Farmers also started to lose land and property due to the large debts.…