Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. By 1794, the Whiskey Rebellion threatened the stability of the nascent United States and forced President Washington to personally lead the United States militia westward to stop the rebels. By 1791 the United States suffered from significant debt incurred during the Revolutionary War.

    • Thomas Jefferson

      Martha Washington often recalled the two saddest days of her...

  3. The Whiskey Rebellion (also known as the Whiskey Insurrection) was a violent tax protest in the United States beginning in 1791 and ending 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.

    • 1791-1794
    • Government victory
    • primarily Western Pennsylvania
  4. Oct 30, 2017 · The Whiskey Rebellion was a 1794 uprising of farmers and distillers in western Pennsylvania in protest of a whiskey tax enacted by the federal government.

  5. In 1794, farmers from Western Pennsylvania rose up in protest of what they saw as unfair taxation and provided the new nation, and George Washington, with a looming crisis.

    • George Washington Whiskey Rebellion1
    • George Washington Whiskey Rebellion2
    • George Washington Whiskey Rebellion3
    • George Washington Whiskey Rebellion4
    • George Washington Whiskey Rebellion5
  6. The Whiskey Rebellion was an armed insurrection that took place in western Pennsylvania in 1794. Famers rebelled in protest of a federal excise tax on whiskey enacted by Congress in 1791. George Washington was President during the Whiskey Rebellion.

  7. George Washington's Proclamation on the Whiskey Rebellion. In 1791, Congress, at the urging of Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton, passed its first excise tax on domestic spirits in order to pay for the debts accumulated during the Revolutionary War.

  8. May 6, 2020 · President George Washington, in accordance with the Militia Act of 1792, received permission from Supreme Court Justice James Wilson to raise an army to combat the rebellion in western Pennsylvania. With the help of Henry “Light Horse Harry” Lee and Daniel Morgan, President Washington now was in command of 12,950 federal soldiers to crush ...

  1. People also search for