The Whiskey Rebellion was a violent tax protest that began in 1791 and came to a climax in 1794 during the presidency of George Washington. The so-called "whiskey tax" was the first tax imposed on a domestic product by the newly formed federal government, enacted in 1791 to generate revenue and pay the war debt incurred during the American Revolutionary War. Farmers of the western frontier, particularly in Pennsylvania, were accustomed to distilling their surplus rye, barley, wheat, corn, or fermented grain mixtures into whiskey and strongly resisted this federal taxation.
Throughout western Pennsylvania counties, protesters employed violence and intimidation to prevent federal officials from collecting the tax. The resistance reached its peak in July 1794, when a US marshal arrived in western Pennsylvania to serve writs to distillers who had not paid the excise tax. The alarm was raised among the protesters, and more than 500 armed men attacked the fortified home of tax inspector John Neville in response to this federal enforcement action.
President George Washington responded by sending peace commissioners to western Pennsylvania to negotiate with the rebels while simultaneously calling on governors to send militia forces to the region. This two-pronged approach—combining negotiation with military preparation—represented the federal government's effort to suppress the rebellion and establish its authority to enforce tax collection on domestic products.
The early republic period saw the United States move from the weak Articles of Confederation to the federal Constitution ratified in 1788, with the Bill of Rights added in 1791. George Washington served two terms as president (1789–1797), establishing precedents for executive authority, and the federal capital moved permanently to Washington D.C. in 1800. The Louisiana Purchase (1803) doubled the nation's territory for roughly $15 million, opening vast trans-Mississippi lands to American expansion. The War of 1812 against Britain ended inconclusively but produced a surge of American national identity and eliminated most British support for Indigenous resistance east of the Mississippi. The Northwest Indian Wars (1785–1795) and the Creek War (1813–1814) broke Indigenous confederacies that had resisted US expansion. The Missouri Compromise of 1820 temporarily balanced slave and free states as the nation expanded westward, but embedded the contradiction of slavery in every subsequent territorial debate.
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