Waubonsee Community College

The Whiskey Rebellion, frontier epilogue to the American Revolution, Thomas P. Slaughter

Label
The Whiskey Rebellion, frontier epilogue to the American Revolution, Thomas P. Slaughter
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 233-278) and index
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The Whiskey Rebellion
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
19377723
Responsibility statement
Thomas P. Slaughter
Series statement
Oxford University Press paperback
Sub title
frontier epilogue to the American Revolution
Summary
In 1794, "the single largest example of armed resistance to a law of the United States between the ratification of the Constitution and the Civil War" occurred in four frontier counties of western Pennsylvania when angry farmers there refused to pay an excise tax on whiskey-- a tax recently enacted by the new Federal government in Philadelphia. Forming themselves into mobs and sometimes disguised as Indians in deliberate imitation of the Boston Tea Party, the farmers physically assaulted the excise collectors. The response of Washington's first administration to this "Whiskey Rebellion" was swift and dramatic- he ordered an army of 13,000 to march west and crush this rebellion, thereby establishing a range of precedents that continue to define federal authority over localities to this day. The author presents not only a major new scholarly interpretation of the event, but a bold bid to establish the rebellion as a paradigm for understanding the ongoing debate between the defenders of liberty and the advocates of order through the entire sweep of our nation's history. -- Howard Lamar, Book jacket
Classification
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