The reason for this is that is that the government was trying to send a message. they were trying to say (and Washington may or may not have actually said this) that just because there was a law that you don't like, you can't rebel, and this was especially important because it was soon after the Revolutionary War, and we just defeated England, and though morales were high, the army/navy were very weak. Washington personally led the 2,000 some troops to dissuade the rebels from the notion of, well, rebelling.
well, i know that the whisky rebellion was when farmers in the 13 colonies distilled their wheat into whisky to make it cheaper because the government was raising the taxes on products. i don't think that Washington liked the idea of the rebellion, so he led 13,000 troops to go and stop it.
George Washington saw the rebellion as a threat to the newly made governments authority.
they kept on taxing the locals
The whiskey rebellion was a victory for the federal government because it was one of the first test of federal authority in the United States history. It was also a commitment to the constitutional rule of law.
yes
Whiskey Rebellion, (1794), in American history, uprising that afforded the new U.S. government its first opportunity to establish federal authority by military means within state boundaries,
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.
This was an example of the federal government's new power, under George Washington. Previously the Articles of Confederation left the federal government useless due to the states' rights supporters. Though the Whiskey Rebellion was not an extremely large rebellion, Washington sent a large military force to put it down, showing its new power.
The whiskey rebellion was a victory for the federal government because it was one of the first test of federal authority in the United States history. It was also a commitment to the constitutional rule of law.
The federal government stopped protecting the settlers.
Whiskey Rebellion
He used the authority of the federal government to put down the rebellion
yes
yes
Whiskey Rebellion
Whiskey Rebellion
The federal whiskey tax produced the whiskey rebellion.
The quashing of the whiskey rebellion showed that the US federal government was able and had the resolve to enforce its laws.
Whiskey Rebellion, (1794), in American history, uprising that afforded the new U.S. government its first opportunity to establish federal authority by military means within state boundaries,
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.