Could not sell their goods
No Daniel Shays did not died in the Shays's Rebellion. After his rebellion fail, he was condamened to a death penalty. Even tho others of his rebellion were granted forgiveness, Daniel Shays was not one of them because the govenment was very scared of him and what he was capable of doing. Then he was killed.
state governments refused to provide relief to stuggling farmers
Shays led a group of farmers in an aborted revolt known as Shays' Rebellion. Angry over foreclosures caused largely by the government's failure under the Articles of Confederation to pay wages owed to Revolutionary War soldiers, farmers attempted to raid a federal arsenal but were turned back by a private army (hired because Congress hadn't paid the current national army at the time either and was terrified of the risk that they too would revolt). Though Shays didn't immediately succeed, his rebellion did create the catalyst needed to bring delegates to Philadelphia for what would become known as the Constitutional Convention.
state governments refused to provide relief to stuggling farmers
One event was Shays Rebellion in 1786, which threatened the state government of Massachusetts until put down by a private militia force.
Could not sell their goods
No Daniel Shays did not died in the Shays's Rebellion. After his rebellion fail, he was condamened to a death penalty. Even tho others of his rebellion were granted forgiveness, Daniel Shays was not one of them because the govenment was very scared of him and what he was capable of doing. Then he was killed.
state governments refused to provide relief to stuggling farmers
hmm a lot of things for instance shays's Rebellion was one in U.S.A. history but i don't know what you want here re post more specifically please.
Shays led a group of farmers in an aborted revolt known as Shays' Rebellion. Angry over foreclosures caused largely by the government's failure under the Articles of Confederation to pay wages owed to Revolutionary War soldiers, farmers attempted to raid a federal arsenal but were turned back by a private army (hired because Congress hadn't paid the current national army at the time either and was terrified of the risk that they too would revolt). Though Shays didn't immediately succeed, his rebellion did create the catalyst needed to bring delegates to Philadelphia for what would become known as the Constitutional Convention.
state governments refused to provide relief to stuggling farmers
One event was Shays Rebellion in 1786, which threatened the state government of Massachusetts until put down by a private militia force.
People realized the Articles of Confederation were too weak.
One was the preference for the "Virginia Plan" seeking a strong central government. The Constitution of the US was finally ratified and Massachusetts under the new governorship of John Hancock and the reprive of the Rebels was finally able to achieve a more peaceful and stable form of government.
Before Shay's Rebellion, only congress could call the army into action. When Shay's Rebellion began, congress was not in session. No one had the authority to do anything. A movement arose to change the constitution so someone had the authority to act when congress was not in session. The new constitution made the President the Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces. He would be on duty when Congress was not in session. If a rebellion happened, he would be able to act.
Shayâ??s Rebellion began as a series of protests by farmers against their state and local government then turned bloody. Objecting to state enforcements of tax and credit debt collections, protests arose in states from New Hampshire to South Carolina with the rebellion in Massachusetts being the most intense.
Daniel Shays was a farmer, who led the rebellion along with other poor farmers. The United States was still under the Articles of Confederation, and in debt from the American Revolution. In order to help pay off the debt, they raised taxes, which hurt the farmers. Daniel Shays and the farmers in turn attacked an armory in Massachusetts, and it took the local militia to bring it down. This highlighted the weakness of the federal government under the Articles of Confederation, and was just one step towards the drafting of the US Constitution.