Thomas Craughwell : #10: The Whiskey Rebellion (The 10 Worst Decisions by U.S. Presidents)
[Thomas Craughwell is the author of, with M. William Phelps, Failures of the Presidents: from the Whiskey Rebellion and War of 1812 to the Bay of Pigs and War in Iraq.]
In 1790 the federal government was saddled with an $80 million debt, the cost of America’s war for independence from Great Britain. It was a staggering sum; President George Washington’s secretary of the Treasury, Alexander Hamilton, insisted that the only way to pay off the liability was to raise taxes. Thomas Jefferson opposed virtually every idea Hamilton ever had, but this time he sided with his greatest political rival — the debt was crippling the government, introducing a new tax was the only solution.
Hamilton recommended a ten-cent tax on every gallon of domestically produced spirits. At a time when the majority of Americans were farmers and some if not all of these farmers distilled their own whisky or bourbon, this seemed to Hamilton a fair tax, one that would be spread out evenly across the spectrum of American citizens.
Initially President Washington was not so sure; he worried how the settlers in the backwoods would react to the tax. These were among the poorest families in the nation, most of them scraping by on farms of one hundred acres or less. The backwoodsmen distilled most of the grain from their crops into whiskey which they used in barter to get tools, clothes, and other necessities. Barter was the basis of the backwoods economy — few settlers saw much cash money. To demand that somehow they must come up with a dime to pay the tax collector for every gallon of whiskey was likely to infuriate them.
So in 1791 Washington made a tour of western Virginia and western Pennsylvania, where there were many frontier communities. Unfortunately, he didn’t travel very far into the woods. Instead he was met along the way by local government officials who, eager to please the great war hero, assured him that once the necessity of the tax was explained to the people of their states, they would pay it without complaint. Washington believed the local officials and returned to Philadelphia where he gave his support to Hamilton’s tax plan.
Of course, the people of the back woods were not all happy. They could not exist without the whiskey they distilled, and they did not have the dimes the tax collector demanded. When confronted by the writs and warrants and threats of federal officials, the frontiersmen reacted violently. They ambushed tax collectors in the forests, stripping them naked then tar-and-feathering them. When a wealthy Pennsylvania landowner, General John Neville, guided a federal marshal to the homes of poor farmers who were delinquent in paying the whiskey tax, between 500 and 700 angry, well-armed men attacked his manor house and burned it to the ground. Neville escaped by fleeing out the back door and hiding in a ravine.
Then a mob of 7,000 settlers, men and women, marched on Pittsburgh, swearing to loot and destroy the town that supported the government’s policy of harassing poor frontier families. Uncertain what to do, afraid that they could not hold the town, Pittsburgh’s town fathers sent kegs of whiskey out to the rag-tag army. That did the trick. The 7,000 drank until they passed out, then got up the next morning and staggered back to their farms.
In late summer of 1794, determined to end the violence and disorder, Washington led 13,000 militia men into western Pennsylvania. As they marched along men and women came out of their homes to rail at the troops, but no one attacked them, no sharpshooters fired upon them. The militia’s officers began to ask themselves, “Where were the rebels?”
With no one in the district willing to say who were the ringleaders of the uprising, the militia began rounding up farmers at random. Twenty of these “suspects” were dragged back to Philadelphia where they arrived on Christmas Day, bedraggled and half-starved, looking pitiable rather than dangerous. As the parade passed the president’s house, the door opened and Washington stepped out into the yard. Without saying a word he watched the miserable prisoners go by, then went back inside.
Only two of the twenty prisoners were convicted, and Washington pardoned them both. But he did not repeal the whiskey tax — it remained on the books, and it remained just as difficult to collect along the frontier. Finally, in 1802, under the Jefferson administration, the tax was abolished.
During the 1830s the renowned French traveler and political observer, Alexis de Tocqueville, toured the backcountry of the United States. He reported that time and again the inhabitants assured him the federal government would never again tax whiskey because everyone knew that such a tax would lead to armed insurrection.
Read entire article at Britannica Blog
In 1790 the federal government was saddled with an $80 million debt, the cost of America’s war for independence from Great Britain. It was a staggering sum; President George Washington’s secretary of the Treasury, Alexander Hamilton, insisted that the only way to pay off the liability was to raise taxes. Thomas Jefferson opposed virtually every idea Hamilton ever had, but this time he sided with his greatest political rival — the debt was crippling the government, introducing a new tax was the only solution.
Hamilton recommended a ten-cent tax on every gallon of domestically produced spirits. At a time when the majority of Americans were farmers and some if not all of these farmers distilled their own whisky or bourbon, this seemed to Hamilton a fair tax, one that would be spread out evenly across the spectrum of American citizens.
Initially President Washington was not so sure; he worried how the settlers in the backwoods would react to the tax. These were among the poorest families in the nation, most of them scraping by on farms of one hundred acres or less. The backwoodsmen distilled most of the grain from their crops into whiskey which they used in barter to get tools, clothes, and other necessities. Barter was the basis of the backwoods economy — few settlers saw much cash money. To demand that somehow they must come up with a dime to pay the tax collector for every gallon of whiskey was likely to infuriate them.
So in 1791 Washington made a tour of western Virginia and western Pennsylvania, where there were many frontier communities. Unfortunately, he didn’t travel very far into the woods. Instead he was met along the way by local government officials who, eager to please the great war hero, assured him that once the necessity of the tax was explained to the people of their states, they would pay it without complaint. Washington believed the local officials and returned to Philadelphia where he gave his support to Hamilton’s tax plan.
Of course, the people of the back woods were not all happy. They could not exist without the whiskey they distilled, and they did not have the dimes the tax collector demanded. When confronted by the writs and warrants and threats of federal officials, the frontiersmen reacted violently. They ambushed tax collectors in the forests, stripping them naked then tar-and-feathering them. When a wealthy Pennsylvania landowner, General John Neville, guided a federal marshal to the homes of poor farmers who were delinquent in paying the whiskey tax, between 500 and 700 angry, well-armed men attacked his manor house and burned it to the ground. Neville escaped by fleeing out the back door and hiding in a ravine.
Then a mob of 7,000 settlers, men and women, marched on Pittsburgh, swearing to loot and destroy the town that supported the government’s policy of harassing poor frontier families. Uncertain what to do, afraid that they could not hold the town, Pittsburgh’s town fathers sent kegs of whiskey out to the rag-tag army. That did the trick. The 7,000 drank until they passed out, then got up the next morning and staggered back to their farms.
In late summer of 1794, determined to end the violence and disorder, Washington led 13,000 militia men into western Pennsylvania. As they marched along men and women came out of their homes to rail at the troops, but no one attacked them, no sharpshooters fired upon them. The militia’s officers began to ask themselves, “Where were the rebels?”
With no one in the district willing to say who were the ringleaders of the uprising, the militia began rounding up farmers at random. Twenty of these “suspects” were dragged back to Philadelphia where they arrived on Christmas Day, bedraggled and half-starved, looking pitiable rather than dangerous. As the parade passed the president’s house, the door opened and Washington stepped out into the yard. Without saying a word he watched the miserable prisoners go by, then went back inside.
Only two of the twenty prisoners were convicted, and Washington pardoned them both. But he did not repeal the whiskey tax — it remained on the books, and it remained just as difficult to collect along the frontier. Finally, in 1802, under the Jefferson administration, the tax was abolished.
During the 1830s the renowned French traveler and political observer, Alexis de Tocqueville, toured the backcountry of the United States. He reported that time and again the inhabitants assured him the federal government would never again tax whiskey because everyone knew that such a tax would lead to armed insurrection.