[On September
17th, 2011 the Occupy Wall
Street protests began in lower Manhattan. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy
that event and four other mass protests, leading up to a special weekend post
on mass protest in the age of Trump.]
On two entirely
distinct ways to AmericanStudy one of our first domestic crises.
First, at the
risk of self-plagiarism, I’m going to copy a paragraph from my
prior post on George Washington’s second term; my apologies, but the ideas
are relevant to this post as well: “George Washington was reeelected unanimously (and
unopposed) in 1792, the last
time a president ran uncontested, but much of his second term was dominated by
unexpected crises and scandals. That included the unfolding effects of the
French Revolution and the related European wars, about which I’ll write more
below; but no event was more striking and significant than the 1794 Whiskey Rebellion. Tensions had been boiling over since
Washington and his Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton instituted a new
whiskey excise in 1791, and came to a head three years later when a group of
Pennsylvania farmers destroyed a tax inspector’s home and began armed
resistance against the federal government. When diplomatic resolutions failed
and Hamilton led a military force (of 13,000
militia men) against American citizens, it became clear that Washington’s honeymoon period was
over; the presidency and government had become the controversial and debated
entities that they have remained ever since.”
One way to
analyze the Whiskey Rebellion would be to do so through the lens of Hamilton,
and more exactly his complicated relationship with President Washington’s other
most prominent Cabinet member, Secretary
of State (during Washington’s first term) Thomas Jefferson. Hamilton
and Jefferson represented the clear and striking distinction
between the Federalists, with their emphasis on a strong central
government, and the emergent Democrat-Republicans (known at the time of the
Constitutional debates as the Anti-Federalists), with
their resistance to that concept. And the Whiskey Rebellion certainly
illustrated some of the tensions that such distinct perspectives could and did
produce in the new American polity. But it’s also worth noting that just as Hamilton
became closely connected in our national narratives and consciousness to banks,
so too did Jefferson come to be associated with what he called “yeomen
farmers”—and the two men thus embodied, at least in those dominant images,
the opposed groups at the heart of the Whiskey Rebellion’s conflict.
There’s an
entirely different, and far less civically minded, way to analyze the
Rebellion, however. Perhaps because of our temporal distance from its events,
perhaps because it was fought over something as seemingly silly as alcohol, or
perhaps because farmers occupy such a generally positive place in our national
narratives (see the recent
Super Bowl ad, for example), it’s tough to see the rebels as the 18th
century equivalents to contemporary armed domestic terrorists such as the
Hutaree Militia. But it’s also tough to come up with convincing reasons why these
Early Republic violent insurrectionists, shooting federal agents rather than
paying taxes, were different from such 21st century extremist
groups. The fact is, as long as we’ve had a federal government, we’ve had
Americans who position themselves in armed opposition to it—and that’s a dark
and troubling but unavoidable American history.
Next protest
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think?
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