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Background & Causes
After 8 years of war, the American Revolution was over, and General George Washington retired to a hero’s welcome at his home in Mt. Vernon, Virginia.
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Soldiers of the Colonial Army had been promised back pay and pensions.
However, there was no money to pay them for their service.
Upon release from the army, soldiers were --•allowed to keep uniforms and their musket,•issued one month’s pay,•awarded worthless government certificates.
4
There was resentment & distrust brewing in
Massachusetts:
•Representatives from western parts of the state
could not attend their convention
because of bad weather.
•The State Convention
raised the property
requirements for voting,
, excluding many
former soldiers who
had fought for the
country’s freedom.5
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Massachusetts wanted to pay back war debt in three years by raising property taxes while trade merchants saw little or no change in their taxes.
Unpaid taxes led to debtors’ court and seized property.
Meanwhile, judges, lawyers, and merchants made money from the auctioned property.
Merchants in the eastern cities made money by re-establishing
overseas trade and bustling businesses.
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The farmers of western
Massachusetts were
disenfranchised and
desperate, as many were
tried in court and put in debtors’ prison. The political
leaders of eastern
Massachusetts considered the farmers “knaves and thieves” who threatened
the freedoms won in the
war.8
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“ ----That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed –--That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or abolish it, and to institute new Government…”
Groups of farmers and former soldiers met in Conkey’s Tavern and shared their frustrations …
Did they remember the words of the Declaration of Independence that they had fought for?
Calling themselves “Regulators,” the farmers and former soldiers issued demands:
•That paper money be printed and backed by gold
•That no arrests be made for closing down courts
•That no courts convene until the judicial system was reformed
•That the state constitution be amended to be more fair to all constituents (taxes, voting rights) 10
Daniel shays steps in as leader
As a Regulator, Shays rallied and organized rebels into these actions in
the fall of 1786:
• They mobbed courthouses in Northampton, Great Barrington, & Worcester to prevent judicial actions;
• They stormed the courthouse in Northampton to prevent trials & imprisonment of debtors;
• They attempted to storm the courthouse at Springfield, but a militia sent by the governor stopped them.
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CONFRONTATION – JANUARY 25, 1787
• Capt. Shays led 1400 men toward Springfield, with the object of obtaining weapons and heading for Boston to overthrow the government.
• General Lincoln with a militia of 4400 men, paid for by the wealthy merchants of Boston, was approaching from the east.
• General Shepard commanded 1200 men at the Springfield Armory.
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Shays and his men took a stand in front of the armory.
General Shepard had his men fire warning shots above the Regulators’ heads. The rebels did not budge.
Then the General ordered cannons fired at “waistband height” and grapeshot sprayed from a howitzer.
Four of the Regulators died and twenty were wounded.
14
Retreat & aftermath
Shays’ army & two other factions retreated in disarray to small towns where they were knownand collapsed in exhaustion.
Meanwhile, General Lincoln decided to pursue them at night through a bitter snowstorm. Frost-bitten & exhausted, his men nevertheless routed the Regulators.
Many, including Daniel Shays, slipped away, to New Hampshire and Vermont, where they were sheltered from the death sentences awaiting them.
15
IMPACT OF SHAYS’ REBELLION
George Washington thought it “not probable that the mischiefs will terminate.”
He thought “… when this spirit first dawned, probably it might easily have been checked; but it is scarcely within the reach of human ken, at this moment, to say when, or where, or how it will end.”
16
George Washington came out of retirement to attend the Second Continental Congress in
Philadelphia17