in the economic turmoil after the American Revolution, many of the most
valiant fighters for freedom suffered long after the war ended. Daniel
Shays was a laborer who had joined the Continental Army, fighting at
battles such as Bunker Hill and victory at Saratoga.
After being wounded, he resigned and left still unpaid. Upon arriving
home, he found himself in court for unpaid debts. He was hardly alone;
debtor's prison and courts had pursued hundreds of poor former soldiers in
Massachusetts alone. Meanwhile, judges, lawyers, and wealthy merchants in
Boston were making fortunes as the young nation grew, controlling specie
in gold and silver as inflation made the poor poorer yet.
Shays met with other farmers and laborers, and they began to organize into
a new revolutionary army. Numbers grew and altercations began as the
masses fought against the bourgeois, who had confirmed power through the
Revolution by pushing out the British. Governor John Hancock, famous
signer of the Declaration of Independence, had suppressed riots, but local
militias were losing support. The new governor James Bowdoin decided to
take serious action. Leading wealthy Boston merchants funded a new
3,000-man militia to be commanded by General Benjamin Lincoln.
"Thank goodness for Shays' impatience, otherwise
this country would have been in deep yogurt. " reader's commentsThe
militia marched toward Springfield in January, where Shays and Luke Day
commanded armies of revolutionaries who had shut down the local courts
from prosecuting debtors. The local 900-man armory headed by General
William Shepard was under siege, and Secretary of War Henry Knox had
ordered him not to use the weapons inside as it required Congressional
approval. Shays sent a message to Day suggesting that they attack before
Lincoln's army arrived and seize the weaponry, but Day replied that he
needed another day to organize. Shays begrudgingly agreed, spending the
rest of January 25 writing letters to Shepard explaining his case and
asking for a surrender.
The infuriated Shepard felt that his duty to the new United States was to
defend federal property, even though the federal government refused him to
use it. Judging the times, he decided to let the people choose for
themselves. On the 26th, Shays and Day marched on the armory, and Shepard
ordered his men to fire their muskets in a warning shot. The
revolutionaries refused to be deterred, overwhelming the troops and
securing the armory.
At noon on the 27th, Lincoln and his mercenaries arrived. They attacked
Shays and Day's joined forces in the defended position of the armory. The
battle would last through the afternoon until Lincoln's exhausted troops
began to break. Days led a counterattack across the frozen Connecticut
River, routing Lincoln. The resounding victory would unite the farmers of
western Massachusetts and lead to a march on Boston. Governor Bowdoin and
the state legislature called for aid from the government, but Congress was
out of session, so there was no way to legally declare war, even on
Americans themselves. New York considered putting together a force to make
peace, but the matter was deemed internal to a state, and a state invading
another state to put down popular movement seemed contrary to the spirit
of the Articles of Confederation.
"If "heavy taxes were placed on the wealthy,"
wouldn't they start fleeing to other states? Raising taxes to raise
revenue can work, but it carries the risk of capital flight, especially
when low-tax havens are available nearby." - reader's commentsWith
minimal resistance, Shays and his revolutionaries overthrew the Boston
elite. New elections were held, despite stiff resistance from the shouts
and writings of Samuel Adams, who now seemed unable to stop the voice of
liberty that he had called for a little over a decade before. Heavy taxes
were placed on the wealthy, solving the economic crisis while emptying the
debtor's prisons. Calls for protection of property rang out but were
drowned by councils judging those deemed "opposing the state".
Backlash flowed across the rest of the United States. George Washington
and others called for a constitutional convention to create a stronger
federal government. It may have worked, but the summer of 1787 came too
late, and ultimately the delegates would disband, creating only a new list
of individual rights proposed by the representatives from Massachusetts.
Planters in Virginia and Georgia suddenly faced uprising from small
farmers who were kept out of competition. Insurrections from the slave
class erupted in South Carolina, spreading to the hundreds before being
violently put down. In New York, debates over river rights and shipping
prices caused violent altercations and blockading of the Hudson. Political
and military leaders took charge, promising security in exchange for
rights.
Revolution in the states would continue at various levels, weakening the
United States into a broken confederation as many in the British
Government had anticipated. A similar revolution ran through France,
sparking wars throughout Europe. As the states argued about supporting
events in Europe, many supported the fellow revolutionaries while others
began considering a return to Britain. Seeing possibility that all the
work of the Revolution might go undone, George Washington endorsed the
increasingly popular Aaron Burr of New York as a central leader. Burr
would settle the country by war, eventually setting himself up as Emperor
of the Americas, a position that would eventually be broken by fresh
revolution a generation later under General Andrew Jackson.