Daniel Shaye was a poor farmhand from Massachusetts when the Revolution broke out. He joined the Continental Army where he fought at Lexington, Bunker Hill, and Saratoga, and was eventually wounded in action. In 1780, he resigned from the army unpaid and went home to find himself in court for the nonpayment of debts. He soon found that he was not alone in being unable to pay his debts, and once even saw a sick woman who had her bed taken out from under her because she was also unable to pay. He started to get very angry about the country's actions. The rebellion started on August 29, 1786, and by January 1787, over one thousand Shaysites had been arrested. A militia that had been raised as a private army defeated an attack on the federal Springfield…
The Red King's Rebellion fought more than three hundred years ago between the Algonquian peoples and New England settlers was in per-capita terms the bloodiest war in our nation's history. Before the conflict ended, over 9,000 people were dead (two-thirds of them Native Americans), and homelessness, starvation, and economic hardship plagued the descendants of both races for generations to come. In this fascinating book, Russell Bourne examines the epic struggle from both sides, seeking to explain how the biracial harmony that once reigned--when the Plymouth Colony's neighboring Wampanoag’s, under the stately Massasoit (King…
In Eric Foner, “Founding a Nation, 1783-1791,” Foner depicts the chain of events that occur that led to the formation of a stronger central government and the creation of the US Constitution in 1787. Shay’s Rebellion brought out the weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation, the predecessor to the US Constitution, which gave the federal government very limited powers when I came to raising funds to provide for the general defense of the states. Under the Articles of Confederation, the federal government did not have the ability to raise funds through taxation to fund a national army, instead, it relied upon voluntary contributions from the states. Shay’s Rebellion came about when the state of Massachusetts in 1786 decided to raise taxes in order to pay its state debts, this caused many farmers,…
This reflected in the 1776 Pennsylvania State Constitution with an expansion of male franchise and civil liberties. Bouton posits that old and new thinking melded into an evolved perception of citizenship as “revolutionaries still considered the propertyless a possible threat.” However, the elite began to think that “giving the vote to ordinary folk was the only way to keep the wealthy in check.” By 1779, Bouton states that a growing number of Pennsylvanian elites began to shift position again, and question the level of democracy and “power” in the hands of the common Pennsylvanian.…
People in the rebellions all stood for what they believed in and acted upon and making change, were against the new government's policy and made others realize that there should be a lot of changes to the newly formed government, and the colonist all worked together as a society to make those changes. The government of the 18th century knew they had to make changes to become strong, since they were very new during this time period, but these protest and rebels helped guided them along. The rebellions had long term effects, because the rebels shaped the government to what it is today and it will also still be remembered in the…
“Yet where does this anarchy exist? Where did it ever exist except in the single instance of Shays’ rebellion?” Shays Rebellion was a period of time where farmers stole arms from the government and forcefully took over large areas of land. They rebelled because they were being put in jail for being unable to pay off their taxes. Although many will argue that Shays and his followers were freedom fighters, nevertheless they were irresponsible rebels because they were led under false ideas, many saw them as violent criminals, and they were put in this situation by fault of their own.…
Continued Rebellion: The Conflicting Legislation of National and State Governments Following the end of the Civil War, the newly reformed nation began efforts to mend wounds opened during wartime. In the wake of these reconstructive efforts new laws were created by the national and state governments. Two examples of laws made at this time are the Black Codes of Mississippi written in 1865 and the Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction written by Andrew Johnson in 1865.…
I think that Shays was wrong. I think that the people were wanting to take over themselves and to me, that is wrong. The rebellion was started because it was about the people wanting to live, say and do what they wanted to. Under the national government, they did not have these choices at the time. The rebellion was intended to give them these things that they wanted.…
“If they give you ruled paper, write the other way,” (Juan Ramon Jimenez). In Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury, Captain Beatty and Faber both contribute to the theme. They both influence Guy Montag to rebel in different ways throughout the book. Faber encourages Guy to rebel, Beatty encourages Montag to be against the rebellion, and both help contribute to the theme (rebellion).…
The labor industry was also in a chaotic situation. Few jobs were available for grab. What`s more, wages attached to such were not enough to get by on. Technology was not advanced and manufacturing did not take…
I do believe in the actions of the members of Shay’s Rebellion. For example, the eastern establishment went ahead with their program of taxation which made them pay extra to the government, according to the video. This was unfair and Daniel Shays should be upset about this. He was already struggling with money, and now this. In addition Daniel Shays had no way to pay his debts, was going to be forced to imprisonment, and was going to lose his farm unless he did something about this, according to the video. He originally tried to make a change legally but the government wouldn’t cooperate so now he was forced to battle. Daniel Shays and his followers had been speaking out against the state government’s policies but their entreaties had fallen on depth ears.…
This paper will compare and contrast the different experiences of two separate authors during the nineteenth and twentieth century in America. The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass relates events that happened to him in the 19th century and how he overcame them. Douglass went from a life of slavery, to freedom and became a speaker and writer on the evils men commit against each other. James Baldwin the author of The Fire Next Time, shows changes and struggles that occurred over one hundred years after the Emancipation Proclamation declared Negroes free American Citizens. Baldwin cannot understand why in a country characterized worldwide with freedom are white and black only color signs displayed? (54-55). However, there are two sides for the reasons of the social breakdown of unity among people in United States.…
Many people think rebellions are a bad thing. Those people probably do not know that there were three rebellions that would change America for the better. The three rebellions happened in three key states/colonies. Shays’ Rebellion was in Massachusetts, the Whiskey Rebellion was in Pennsylvania and Bacon’ Rebellion was in the colony of Virginia. The most important rebellion was Shays’ Rebellion because it gave this country the need for a stronger central government.…
The Whiskey Rebellion was caused by a tax on whiskey that was imposed by Congress, which was set in place by Alexander Hamilton. The tax was set in place to assist the government in paying back the national debt that accumulated from the Revolution. The rebellion started March 3, 1791 and the reaction against the levy was incredibly overwhelming to the government. Whiskey is a byproduct of corn and had a better market than the original grain, which profited the farmers greatly until the tax was in place. The liquor was the main source of revenue in the west and the product was used as the people’s currency for government officials. The people were already conflicted with the government concerning the disputes in the Northwest Territory and the leadership of Tecumseh. The whiskey farmers formed a resistance to the tax in a meeting during July of 1791, and the collectors of the tax were often humiliated, tarred and feathered, or ambushed. Over the course of a few years, the resistance gained strength and momentum. George Washington commanded an army that consisted of over 13,000 militiamen who would march into western Pennsylvania to put an end to the rebellion. Along with the army, the President issues an act instructing the rebels to disperse and return home. The rebellion soon ended as word arrived of the army and the tax remained through the Federalist Era. The rebellion was the first resistance to federal authority in the country concerning government and the abilities that allow taxation on the nation. The effects of the rebellion were that the government now had the ability to exert its power. The government’s power was not something greatly observed until the Whiskey Rebellion and was an effect because of the tax on whiskey, which was another topic of debate at the time. A later alliance with France would become problematic because of the issues going on…
"Slave owners had the right to beat, whip, brand, or imprison slaves for petty offenses or for attempted escape. Owners vied with each other in creating imaginative punishments, as historian Kenneth M. Stampp relates: A Maryland tobacco grower forced a hand [slave] to eat the worms he failed to pick off tobacco leaves. A Mississippian gave a runaway a wretched time by requiring him to sit at the table and eat his evening meal with the white family. A Louisiana planter humiliated disobedient male field-hands by giving them "women's work" such as washing clothes, by dressing them in women's clothing, and by exhibiting them on a scaffold wearing a red flannel cap" (Streissguth 13). How did slaves react to the cruel treatment of slave owners? The severe actions of slave owners towards their slaves led to several revolts and rebellions. Of all the slave revolts, one of the most notorious and successful was the Nat Turner Slave Rebellion of 1831.…