preview

Essay on The Whiskey Rebellion

Good Essays

The end of the American Revolution wasn’t the end of political turmoil in the United States. In the years after the Revolution, political parties formed and disbanded, rebellions started, and even celebrations became increasingly political. Each political faction had a different idea of what the Revolution meant and what the future of the country looked like. The conflicting views of American politics began to manifest in holiday celebrations, governmental affairs, and even rebellions.
The Whiskey Rebellion was created from many issues, not just the excise tax on whiskey. Farmers in western Pennsylvania blocked roads to prevent tax collectors from reaching them and to show their disdain for the taxes placed on the farmers that they …show more content…

The Whiskey Rebellion showed the government that the people would rise up against the government if they felt it was needed. While not really a bad thing, it did lead to fears of an incident like the French Revolution occurring in the United States.
Many American originally supported the French Revolution as an extension of the American Revolution. Men wore cockades as an outward demonstration of their support of the French Republic. French victories and holidays were celebrated, and toasts to the French were given at parties. Good feelings towards the French disappeared after the XYZ Affair. The French were angry over American’s creating Jay’s Treaty, which they correctly saw as favoring the British. When American ambassadors arrived in France, the French foreign minister sent three agents to bribe the ambassadors into making a treaty that favored France instead of England. Americans were angered over this slight because it showed how little they mattered in international politics; other countries didn’t take the United States seriously because of the extreme partisan division in American politics. After the XYZ Affair, Americans shifted towards a derogatory view of France and became determined to show the French that the United States was not a country divided by political parties. Federalists passed the Alien and Sedition Acts to soothe fears about the French and Irish who might push for another revolution and to ease the

Get Access