they arrested the protesters
The Whiskey Rebellion was a tax rebellion that happened in the colonial United States. It changed the way the government handled protesters as they started to use military suppression.
I believe that the answer is The Whiskey Rebellion
The Whiskey Rebellion was a protest in the United States against a tax that was levied against whiskey. The purpose of the tax was to pay for debt that had accumulated during the American War of Independence.
The leaders wanted to create a strong central government. The way that the Whiskey Rebellion was handled showed an ability to suppress violent resistance to the law, thus contributing to the ratification of the constitution.
Facts about the Whiskey Rebellion include that is started in 1791. This rebellion was a tax protest and was started by farmers who were being taxed for their crops to help pay for the Revolutionary War.
the Whiskey Rebellion
Whiskey's Rebellion... which accrued in 1794 and it was a protest against the governments taxes on whiskey by Back country farmers!!Treaty of Greenville which accrued in 1795 and it was a treaty in which 12 Native American tribes ceded control of much of Ohio and Indiana to the U.S government!
Paying an excise tax on distilled liquor they produced and sold.
The Whiskey Rebellion, which occurred mostly in Western Pennsylvania, began in 1791 and lasted until 1794. It was also known as the Whiskey Insurrection.
He stopped it by sending federal troops into western pennsylvania to end the protest once and for all. The significance o this action was that it showed the strength of the federal gov't (government) under the Constitution because they no longer used the Articles of Confederation. It was a fitting response to an immediate threat to the federal government.
The Whiskey rebellion was caused by the unfair tax that was placed on whiskey., Farmers then got together with each other to from a armed protest, where Washington and his troops crushed their rebellion.
The Whiskey Rebellion was a tax protest in the USA from 1791-1794. Farmers had been using left over corn and grain to make whiskey and then use it as a medium of exchange. They were forced to pay a new tax on this and many resisted.