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The Whiskey Rebellion


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The Whiskey Rebellion was a series of disturbances in

1794 aimed against the enforcement of a U.S. federal law

of 1791 imposing an excise tax on whiskey. The burden of

the tax, which had been sponsored by the Federalist leader

and secretary of the treasury Alexander Hamilton, fell

largely on western Pennsylvania, then one of the chief

whiskey-producing regions of the country. The grain

farmers, most of whom were also distillers, depended on

whiskey for almost all their income, and they considered

the law an attack on their liberty and economic well-being.

Organized resistance to the tax, even including the tarring

and feathering of federal revenue officials, rapidly assumed

grave proportions. Warrants for the arrest of a large

number of noncomplying distillers were issued by the

federal authorities in the spring of 1794; in the riots that

followed a federal officer was killed, and a mob burned the

home of the regional inspector of the excise. In a

proclamation......

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Approximate Word Count: 264
Approximate Pages: 2 (260 words per double-spaced page)

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