Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Whiskey Rebellion
Episode Date: February 8, 2024In the late 18th century, the newly independent United States of America faced its first major domestic crisis. Settlers in its westernmost regions rose up in open armed rebellion against the govern...ment. The cause of the rebellion had to do with the unique circumstances of the period as well as some laws that were not very well thought out. The rebellion and its subsequent response were seen as a threat to the very existence of the new country. Learn more about the Whiskey Rebellion, its causes, and its ramifications on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors BetterHelp Visit BetterHelp.com/everywhere today to get 10% off your first month ButcherBox Sign up today at butcherbox.com/daily and use code daily to choose your free steak for a year and get $20 off." Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
In the late 18th century, the newly independent United States of America faced its first
major domestic crisis. Settlers in the westernmost regions rose up in armed rebellion against the
government. The cause of the rebellion had to do with taxes, which was the very thing that the
American Revolution was about in the first place. The rebellion was seen by some as a threat
to the very existence of the new country. Learn more about the Whiskey Rebellion, its causes,
and its ramifications on this episode of Everything Everywhere.
daily. What if your perceptions about the past were wrong? ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time
to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed. It effectively turned day and tonight.
And how it shaped the world now. Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
One of the things that might be hard to understand in the 21st century is that in the late 18th century,
nobody was really sure if the American experiment was going to be successful.
This was a country that was far from the old world.
It was surrounded by the colonies of European powers, and it was a republic in a world that was
mostly ruled by monarchies.
And there were many people in Britain who were sure that the United States would soon
fall apart, and they'd come crawling back to Mother England.
So when the events that took place in the early 1790s occurred, they were taken very seriously
at the time, even though they've been largely forgotten today.
And the story starts with debt.
The United States came out of the Revolutionary War with an enormous amount of debt.
The first Congress and the first president were inaugurated in March of 1789.
One of the big things that this new government did took place in 1790 when the federal
government assumed all of the debts incurred by the individual states.
This was a compromise between the federalists and the anti-federalists, where
in exchange for assuming the state debt, the nation's capital would be established on the Potomac
River between Virginia and Maryland. This was the idea of the first secretary of the treasury,
Alexander Hamilton. He wanted to assume all of the state debt to strengthen the power of the
federal government. The reason why it would strengthen the federal government, according to Hamilton,
is because it would require a system of tariffs and taxes that would be a source of revenue for
the government to pay off the debt. One of Hamilton's proposed taxes was a tax. One of Hamilton's proposed taxes was a
tax on distilling alcohol. Hamilton thought that a tax on alcohol, which was in effect a tax on
whiskey, would be a rather benign tax, even though Americans drank an enormous amount of liquor,
and here I'll reference my previous episode on the astonishing drinking habits of early Americans,
it was still not considered to be virtuous. Taxes on such items as alcohol and tobacco are
still known as sin taxes today. Moreover, Hamilton thought that his tax wouldn't be noticed because
it was paid by whiskey producers, not by consumers.
Nonetheless, many people were uneasy about this tax, including President George Washington.
He was against the tax, but in 1791 he toured Virginia and Pennsylvania to get the opinions
of citizens. While on his tour, he found enthusiastic support for the whiskey tax from local
elected officials. Having heard the widespread support for the plan, he returned to Philadelphia
and supported the passage of the legislation. However, there was a
problem. At this time, about 96% of the population of the United States lived on the east of the
Appalachian Mountains. When the tax was proposed, that was the population that was considered,
and the commercial whiskey producers in this area were the intended target of the tax.
The 4% of the population who lived west of the Appalachian Mountains lived in what was called
at the time, the West. They lived in western Pennsylvania and the Ohio River Valley.
The people who lived in this region mostly lived a subsistence lifestyle. They were farmers who grew crops and the biggest crop was corn.
In addition to living a subsistence lifestyle, most of the people in this region got whatever goods they couldn't produce from barter, usually bartering their surplus crops.
However, corn and all grains were incredibly inefficient crops to transport.
Grain is heavy. The major population centers were hundreds of miles away over.
mountains, and corn like all grains could spoil. However, what did work was converting the grain
to alcohol, aka whiskey. Whiskey was over 10 times easier to transport by weight, even though
it was a liquid, and moreover, the economic value was even greater. Whiskey was used as the primary
form of exchange in the backwoods. In addition to being widely consumed, it was used to purchase
whatever someone who live far from civilization might need.
This was vital because most of these people didn't have money.
And when I say they didn't have money, I mean that the people literally didn't have money.
Almost all commerce was conducted via barter, in particular, with whiskey.
The whiskey tax did not exempt personal stills that these people used on the frontier.
These people didn't take it well that the government came in and taxed the one thing they had of
value, especially considering that they had just fought and won a war about taxation.
However, that wasn't even the biggest problem.
The tax had to be paid in cash, and the people on the frontier didn't have cash.
If they could have paid the tax in kind, then maybe it might have been unpopular, but it could
have been tolerable.
But the government needed cash to pay off its debt, and cash was something that these people
simply didn't have.
And the cherry on top of everything is that the cherry on top of everything is that the government is that,
that the tax was regressive. Large producers only paid six cents a gallon, and it got cheaper
the more they made. The small distillers had to pay nine cents per gallon. The tax went into
effect in 1791, and the reaction to it was swift. Protests against the tax began immediately.
Most whiskey producers simply refused to pay it. When officials came to collect the tax,
they were often threatened with violence. Tensions between the whiskey producers and the federal
government continued to rise throughout 1791, and things came to a head on September 11th in
Washington County, Pennsylvania. A tax collector by the name of Robert Johnson came to the county
seat of Washington to collect the whiskey taxes when a group of women confronted him. Except they
weren't women. They were men dressed as women. They stripped Johnson naked, took his horse,
and tarred and feathered him. I don't think I've actually ever mentioned taring and feathering
on this podcast before, but it's worth a brief explanation. Tarring and feathering was a form of
publishing and public humiliation that went back centuries. It was often done in a highly public manner,
often by a crowd or a mob. The tar was often a type of tree sap that would be heated to temperatures
of about 60 degrees Celsius or 140 degrees Fahrenheit. This would be poured on the person, and then a sack
of feathers would be dumped on their head. This was seldom fatal, but the hot tar or sun
sap would be extremely painful and would often cause serious burns. So this wasn't a type of
punishment that was cartoonish. It was more a form of torture. So they did this to Robert Johnson
and then left him alone and naked to walk back to the next town. Johnson had recognized two of the
men who did this to him, so he reported them and a warrant was issued for their arrest.
Another man, John Connor, was sent to arrest the men. And the same thing happened to him.
For most of 1791 and 1792, the whiskey tax simply wasn't collected in Western Pennsylvania
and the new state of Kentucky because it was simply too difficult to enforce collection.
While Western Pennsylvania was the site of the most notable resistance to the tax,
there were protests in every state in Appalachia from Maryland down to Georgia.
In 1792, Alexander Hamilton was advocating the use of the military to enforce the tax,
but the Attorney General at the time Edmund Randolph resisted such an action.
But then things began to go beyond local resistance.
A convention was held in Pittsburgh in August of 1792
in response to what they thought was a lack of representation in Congress.
The delegates, five from each county in Pennsylvania,
began to become more radicalized, issuing demands
and replicating much of what was done during the American Revolution.
They raised liberty polls and towns and formed local militia.
In September 1792, Hamilton drafted a presidential proclamation against the tax resistors
that was eventually signed by President Washington and published widely.
However, things kept escalating.
In 1793, a mob attacked the home of one Benjamin Wells, a tax collector, and threatened
his wife and family.
And this was just one of many such attacks against federal tax officials.
It was in 1794 where things really boiled over.
Federal District Attorney William Rawle issued
subpoenas on 60 distiller's who had avoided the tax. These men would have to travel over 300 miles
to Philadelphia, the location of the court, at their own expense. A federal marshal by the name of
David Lennox was tasked with issuing the subpoenas, which he managed to actually do. On July 15th,
he visited the home of General John Neville, the head of federal tax collection for Western Pennsylvania.
600 armed men surrounded Neville's home south of Pittsburgh. Ten army soldiers showed up
to defend and soon shooting began. The leader of the rebellious forces, Major James McFarland,
was killed. The death of McFarland spurred in escalation. On August 1st, 7,000 people assembled
outside of Pittsburgh, and there was talk of declaring independence from the United States,
and they even deployed their own flag. The tax revolt had now entered open, armed rebellion.
Most of the members of President Washington's cabinet advocated the use of force to put down the
rebellion, but Secretary of State Edmund Randolph wanted to negotiate.
Washington did send a team to negotiate, but while they were doing that, he also assembled a military
force. He created an army of almost 13,000 men, which was an enormous number for the country
at that time. It was an army almost as large as the Continental Army during the American Revolution.
On September 30th, Washington left Philadelphia to review the troops and the status of the expedition
to Western Pennsylvania.
it is believed to have been the first and only time that a sitting commander-in-chief
has actually led military units in the field.
The troops entered Western Pennsylvania in October,
and the rebellion almost instantly disappeared in the face of a superior force.
Many of the leaders of the rebellion fled,
and the government arrested some who they thought took part in the rebellion,
but in the end, only two people were found guilty of treason,
and both of those were given a pardon by Washington.
The whiskey tax was eventually repealed in 1802 when Thomas Jefferson was in office.
On the one hand, the Whiskey Rebellion was historically a rather small uprising with very few casualties.
Yet on the other hand, the Whiskey Rebellion was a critical moment in American history.
It tested the new federal government's ability to enforce its laws and establish a precedent for federal authority.
The successful resolution of the rebellion demonstrated that the government had the will and the means to suppress violent
resistance to its laws. It also highlighted the tensions between rural frontier areas and the federal
government, a theme that would reoccur in American history. And it was also a rather poorly written
law. It would have been easy to have exempted the small whiskey producers, which didn't produce
much revenue anyhow, and from whom it was difficult to collect. In the end, the Whiskey Rebellion
was America's first major test as a country, and one that it managed to pass. The executive
producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel. The associate producers are Peter Bennett and
Cameron Kiefer. I wanted to give a big thanks to everyone who supports the show on Patreon. Your
support helps me put out a new show every day. And if you're interested in Everything Everywhere
Daily merchandise, Patreon is currently the only place where it's available. And if you'd like to talk
to other listeners of the show and get notified to future episodes and projects, please join my
Facebook group or Discord server. Links to everything are in the show notes.
