Sorry, Duke, it wasn't always that way..... |
Note—This look back on military responses to rebellions, insurrections,
and protests is growing like Topsy. It
is going to have to be a rare multi-entry series. This one looks back to the time between the
Revolution and the Civil War.
In our last post we took a look at some of the questions
and issues arising from the occupation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in eastern Oregon by armed self-proclaimed Patriots—or gun nut terrorists in the view of
many. In particular the issues of how to
respond to the seizure and whether the white
gunmen were being treated
differently than Black or other minority protesters whether armed
or not. The Feds have opted for a strategy of first standing off and now isolating
the protesters by degrees by cutting
off road, electrical, and phone service.
While
many view that policy a prudent,
others continue to demand immediate
armed action to end the occupation calling a seditious rebellion and act of terrorism.
As
noted yesterday, “Perhaps it would be useful
to do a quick review of the history of the use of military force against protestors armed
and otherwise in this country. For this
purpose we will ignore actions by local police, sheriff’s deputies, and state
police which have been too numerous
to list, especially against strikers
and minorities who have often
been labeled as rioters. We will limit our
review to major deployments and use of state
militia or National Guard or Federal Troops.
Capt. Daniel Shays and Job Shattuck, two of the leaders of the rebellion in western Massachusetts. |
We
will start at the beginning, just
three years after the end of the American
Revolution. The region west of and around
Springfield was dominated by small subsistence farmers and the local merchants who supplied their
needs in a generally barter economy. Following the War of Independence mercantile traders who imported almost all manufactured goods from England or Europe began
demanding payment in specie—hard currency almost exclusively in
English, French, Spanish, and Dutch coinage that was seldom seen in
the west. Lenders began to demand repayment
of debt in coin instead of crops
or livestock, and government began to demand the same for
tax payments. As a result small farmers and merchants
were defaulting on loans and losing
their land and property to tax sales. Public
officials were seen as corrupt and
Boston merchants as vultures. To make matters worse many were war veterans who found sometimes years
of back pay owed to them was
difficult or impossible to get from either the Massachusetts General Court (Legislature)
or Congress under the Articles of Confederation.
Under
the leadership of veterans Captains
Daniel Shays, John Shattuk, and
others years of tensions boiled over
in the fall of 1786 when armed men shut
down courts processing tax forfeitures and claims on property from lenders
in several towns. Governor James Bowdin and alarmed Boston merchants personally
funded raising militia companies into
a 3,000 man army to suppress the rebellion.
On January 25, 1787 Shays and others led about 1,500 lightly armed
rebels in an attempt to seize the Federal
Armory in Springfield. They were met
by a “loyal” militia force of about 1,400 who sent the rebels reeling with four rounds of grape shot which
killed four outright and wounded more than 20.
The rebels fled west and north and were pursued by the 3000 eastern
militia under Revolutionary War hero General
Benjamin Lincoln, the man who had accepted Cornwallis’s surrender at Yorktown. 150 rebels were surprised and captured
at Petersham on February 4. All of the officers escaped to New
Hampshire and Vermont. The rebellion was crushed. Several hundred
were indicted for rebellion but most
were covered by a general amnesty. 18
were sentenced to hang and all but
were pardoned and escaped the gallows.
Over 4000 men were banned
from holding elective or appointive office. Property seizures were resumed and many
families were ruined and impoverished.
News
of the Rebellion sent shockwaves throughout
the States where either merchant elites or Tidewater
aristocrats faced similar restiveness
and simmering resentment in their
own western portions and along the frontier. A Convention
called to revise Articles of
Confederation to improve trade and cooperation among the states instead exceeded its authority and drafted a new governing document.
Shay’s rebellion had convinced the delegates of the need for a far
stronger Federal Government. It is now viewed as that catalytic event leading to the Constitution.
Later
concern grew that the new government would be too powerful, especially among western settlers, caused the
agreement to add clarifying amendments delineating
rights in exchange for ratification by reluctant
states. The Second Amendment which famously
guaranteed the right to keep and
bear arms was explicitly linked to
the need for well regulated militia, by
which it meant the troops called out by Governor Bowdin and specifically not the irregular militia of the rebels. That “legislative
history” to the amendment should be kept in mind when the NRA and arms industry insist that it means unlimited access to virtually
all arms by individuals or even
that it was intended to put arms in
the hands of citizens to resist a tyrannical government.
President Washington, Virginia Governor and General Lighthorse Hairy Lee, and Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton review the Army raised to squash the Whiskey Rebellion. |
The
next great confrontation occurred just a few years later and involved the
infant Federal Government and the Father of Our Country, a not entirely disinterested party. The Whiskey
Rebellion in western Pennsylvania
was caused by many of the same issues and concerns as Shays’ Rebellion. Once again the issues were unfair taxation,
the perceived arrogance of the Eastern elite, and the general feeling that
needs of frontier farmers were being ignored by the new central government.
President
Washington’s Secretary of the Treasury and closest
advisor had a problem. His highest
priority was securing the nation’s financial
soundness and reputation by
re-paying all of the new nation’s war
debts, including the debts of the individual states which the Federal
government assumed. The problem was that Congress, like the
American people, was generally allergic
to taxation. He had only two sources of
revenue—land sales and tariffs. He set the price of western land too high for
most people on one hand and on the other had potential sales negated because
Revolutionary War back pay and bonuses was taken care of in the form of land warrants to veterans. Some veterans used
the warrants to stake western claims, others sold them at a discount for cash to land speculators many of whom then turned around and undersold
government land. As for import duties, he balanced setting them
high enough to protect and encourage emerging American industries but
not too high to enrage the import-dependent agrarian planter class in the middle
and southern states.
Hamilton needed to find a source of domestic tax revenue. An excise
tax was the obvious choice because it was easiest to assess and to
collect. The question was an excise tax on what. Back then the Dirksen rule was in full force in Congress, if unspoken—“Don’t tax
me, don’t tax thee. Tax the fellow
behind the tree.” Powerful forces in
Congress among eastern merchants and manufacturers staunchly opposed taxes on
anything they sold or bought. But
westerners were underrepresented in Congress.
They turned out to be the fellow behind the tree.
As in Massachusetts frontier farmers
were cash poor. Moreover the Allegany and Appalachian
Mountain ranges provided a nearly impenetrable
barrier to getting their crops to Eastern
markets where surpluses could be
sold for money. In much of the west the
principle crop was corn, which was bulky and had to be transported in heavy
barrels by ox cart over barely
passable mountain trails and then loaded on flat boats for Philadelphia. But the corn could be distilled into whiskey which could be
transported by mules in much more compact
jugs to a ready and thirsty eastern market.
That market was the eastern yeomen
farmers, mechanics, and common workmen. The elite drank imported wine and brandy, not raw
whiskey and did not care a whit
about the damage to the whiskey
trade of a steep new excise tax or the grubby poor would pay it would have to
pay it. America’s first Federal excise
tax was born.
A protest
convention of the southwestern
counties of Pennsylvania did result in Congress making a 1% reduction to
the tax, but that was not enough for many.
Petition and protest began to
give way to active resistance in September 1791 when a Federal tax collector was tarred and feathered in Washington
County. The agent sent to serve
arrest warrants on suspected
attackers suffered the same quite
painful humiliation. This and other acts of defiance and
resistance spread beyond Pennsylvania to other frontier regions and states as
far south as Georgia. In the brand new state of Kentucky
no taxes could be collected at all because no one dared take the job of collecting them.
A second convention in Pittsburgh was in control of the most
radical elements on the frontier. They
raised Liberty Polls, established committees of correspondence, and assumed control of local militia in
imitation of the Revolution. They
established their own courts banned
suits to collect debts or foreclose on property.
In the capital at Philadelphia Washington and Hamilton viewed the rising unrest as a
direct affront to and assault on the Federal government. Washington signed an official proclamation drafted by Hamilton denouncing the brewing
rebellion and demanding immediate compliance with the law. It had no effect. Resistance hardened and targets spread to include
those who assisted tax agents and even those who paid the tax. Barns and stills were burned. One high ranking agent was forced at gunpoint
to renounce his appointment during a nighttime raid on his home. Washington offered a reward for the arrest of the perpetrators. There were no takers.
In May of 1794 subpoenas were issued
for 50 known distillers who had not paid the tax. As Congress amended the law to allow such tax
delinquency charges to be held in state instead of Federal courts—a demand of
the protesters—a Federal Marshall was
dispatched to serve the papers
before the new law could take effect—widely seen as a deliberate provocation by
Hamilton.
Intentional or not, it did provoke. On July 15 rebels surrounded the home of General John Neville, the chief Federal
tax inspector for Western
Pennsylvania. They demanded the
surrender of Federal Marshal David
Lennox, who was not present. After
an exchange of gunfire in which Oliver
Miller, a farmer/distiller who had earlier turned Neville and Lennox away
from his home by shooting at them, was killed.
The rebels retreated and gathered reinforcements thought to number about
600 men. Neville secured the aid of ten Army soldiers from Pittsburgh under the
command of Major Abraham Kirkpatrick. The next day the rebels under Revolutionary
veteran Major James McFarlane
attacked the house. After an extended
exchange of gunfire the house showed a white
flag. When McFarlane emerged to parlay under the flag, he was killed by
a single shot from the house. The battle
resumed, the house was set afire, and
Kirkpatrick forced to surrender. The
troops were allowed to return unmolested to Pittsburg but McFarlane was
arrested. He later escaped.
After Rebels intercepted the U.S. Mail and discovered evidence of
support for the tax collectors and administration by several prominent Pittsburgh
citizens, they called for a rally meeting at Braddock’s Field, the site of the disastrous ambush and defeat of General Edward Braddock in 1755 by French and Indian forces in which young Virginia Col. George Washington had
played a prominent part. At the field 8
miles from Pittsburgh and estimated 7,000 men with blood in their eyes under
the leadership of David Bradford met. Most were landless laborers. The protest quickly got beyond control of the
relatively wealthy farmer/distillers who began it. Demands for an independent nation were raised and the radical French Revolutionaries praised.
The men were prepared to march on Pittsburg and burn it as a nest of wealthy
traitors.
A message of support from Pittsburgh and
the expulsion of some men who were
identified in the stolen letters somewhat mollified the assembly. They agreed to make only a peaceful march
though the city as a show of strength. By in
large that march was peaceful except for the burning of Major Fitzpatrick’s
barns.
A new convention at Whiskey Point was divided between Bradford’s radicals and those
like Albert Gallatin and Hugh
Henry Brakenridge who urged reconciliation with the government. The convention agreed to authorize a
delegation including Gallatin, Brakenridge, and some of the radicals to meet
with peace commissioners sent by Washington.
Those commissioners included Attorney
General William Bradford, no known
close relation to the rebel leader, Pennsylvania
Supreme Court Justice and Pennsylvania Senator
John Ross, an ardent Washington/Hamilton loyalist and long-time political
foe of Gallatin.
Meanwhile Washington and Hamilton
decided that an army needed to be raised
to crush the rebellion in case negotiations failed. Some have long maintained that the negotiations
were a ploy to delay things while the troops were raised, armed, and assembled
and that especially Hamilton always intended to use force to crush the
rebellion. After a U.S. Supreme Court
Justice ruled that western Pennsylvania was in a state of insurrection,
Washington was free to call state
militias to Federal Service.
Militias from New Jersey, Maryland, and
Virginia were called out. The ranks could not be filled with volunteers so drafts were instituted in some areas resulting in more protests and
even rioting. But a force of 12,950 men
was assembled—as big as the largest army in the field that Washington commanded
in the Revolution.
The peace commissioners offered the
rebel delegation stark terms—that the committee must unanimously agree to renounce violence and submit to U.S. laws, and that a popular referendum must be held to determine if the local people supported the decision.
Those who agreed to these terms
would be given amnesty from further
prosecution.
The committee narrowly split in favor of
accepting the terms. Referendums were
held in the western counties with some areas overwhelmingly supporting the
terms. But the poorest areas continued
to reject them. Despite the deescalating
tensions, Washington decided to move forward with his Army.
In early October Washington took to the
field as the only sitting President to command an army in the field. After inspecting troops in Pennsylvania and
Maryland and meeting with western representatives, Washington determined that
there would be no meaningful armed opposition to the huge force he had
assembled. He turned over field command
to General Henry “Lighthorse Harry” Lee,
the sitting Governor of Virginia. Hamilton, who always dreamed of military
glory, remained with the army a civilian
advisor with more than symbolic
authority.
The Army marched west and the rebels scattered and went into hiding.
That included David Bradford and most of the other prominent leaders. Twenty men were captured and brought in cages
by to Philadelphia. A Federal Grand Jury eventually indicted
25 men for the capital offence of Treason.
Only ten men stood trial on those charges and just two, Philip Wigle and John Mitchel were convicted
and sentenced to hang. Satisfied that Federal authority had been
upheld Washington commuted the sentences of both men, acting for once against
the advice of Hamilton. State courts
convicted several other men on charges ranging from assault to arson.
On one hand Federal authority was
upheld. On the other resentment of the
government festered on the Frontier for years and a permanent culture of defiance, including the moonshine tradition remains to this day.
Lurid illustrations like this of Nat Turner's slare rebellion helped spread panic throughout the slave holding states. |
Slavery was at the root
of much civil unrest. Slave rebellions were nothing new. During the Colonial era they had occurred and been crushed not only in the plantation
South but in urban New York
City. A large scale rebellion inspired
by the Black revolution in Hatti had taken place in the recently acquired
Orleans Territory along the Mississippi north of New Orleans. That had been violently put down, but the
relative isolation from the rest of the country meant that it was not well known on the eastern seaboard. Freeman Denmark Vesey was alleged to be
another revolt in 1822 in Charleston,
South Carolina but he and others were arrested and hung before any revolt
could take place
But in August 1831 Nat Turner, a slave in Southampton
County, Virginia led a surprise uprising in which up to 70 whites, including planters, their wives and
children, overseers, and travelers
they encountered were killed. Militia from Virginia and North Carolina was called out, but it
was in organizational disarray. The
so-called militia turned out to be a barely
organized and enraged white mob. They were eventually reinforced by three batteries of U.S. Army artillery and Navy
sailors and Marines from the USS
Natchez and USS Warren which were at moorage at Southampton.
As many as 200 Blacks were killed in the
two days it took to crush the rebellion.
Many, probably most, had nothing at all to do with the uprising. Eventually 56 were tried and hung. Violent rampages continued against blacks for
days, not only in Virginia, but across the plantation south as far as South
Carolina. Hundreds more were killed
before the violence finally died out. Virginia and other states payed compensation to the owners of
slaves murdered or executed for the loss of their property.
The rebellion struck terror across the
South. Virginia was the first to enact
new Slave codes which made it a crime to teach a black person to read and write—both Denmark Vessey and Nat Turner were literate and were said to have been corrupted by reading about the Rights
of Man and even The Bible. All slave gatherings were banned including religious
services unless a white minister was
present. Other states followed suit
enacting even harsher regulations.
Another effect was overhauling and reviving
the militia system across the South.
Since the end of the War of 1812 and virtual all Indian warfare in the east north of Florida, militias had been neglected. Annual
summer musters were little more than occasions for communal drinking. Now Governors took action to standardize
training and armament. Aroused young men
were encouraged to take an active part
with young gentlemen of fine families often elected as officers. Wealthy citizens
often stood the cost of fine uniforms and equipment. Regular drills and parades were
held. This tradition continued through rising secular tensions right up the Civil War when the South was able to
enter that conflict with surprising numbers of well trained and equipped units. By contrast Northern Federalized militia with
few exceptions were a rag-tag bunch.
Marines under the command of Army Major Robert E. Lee use a battering ram to break down the heavy doors of the railroad engine house where John Brown and his men were holed up. |
Which brings us to the most famous armed occupation of a Federal facility in history—John Brown’s Raid on the Federal Arsenal at Harper’s Ferry, Virginia in October of 1859, regarded by many as
the spark that lit the fuse to the
Civil War.
Brown, you will undoubtedly recall, was
the obsessed abolitionist who had
made a name for himself in Bloody Kansas
as a Free Soil guerilla in a ruthless war with pro-slavery border ruffians. On
May 24,
1856 in his most infamous act he and
his sons kidnapped five pro-slavery
settlers from their rural farm homes on Pottawatomie
Creek and hacked them to death
with artillery broadswords. That ignited the bloodiest month of the Kansas conflict
in which at least 28 more men on
both sides were killed in round
after round of revenge slayings.
Brown and his son’s became hunted men. Considered arch villains in the slave holding south, they were still regarded as heroes in the eastern abolitionist circles who had secretly
been funding his activities.
Brown had made his way east with a plan
to inspire as slave rebellion to lay
before his secret benefactors. He
succeeded in collecting some funds. Then
he convinced a group later called the Secret
Six to offer on-going support on a no-questions-asked basis on how they
were used. This group included Unitarian Minister Thomas Wentworth Higginson; Unitarian out-cast Theodore Parker; social reformer and husband of Julia Ward Howe, Samuel Gridley Howe; merchant
and industrialist George Luther
Stearns; and former Free Soil
Congressman and Presidential
Candidate Gerrit Smith. Among their
first contributions were funds to ship 200 Beecher's
Bibles—named for abolitionist minister Lyman
Beecher—actually modern Sharps
rifles and 300 pikes.
Meanwhile Brown’s plans for a slave insurrection
matured. He recruited, and lost, an ally
in Hugh Forbes, an English mercenary who had fought with Garibaldi in Italy and met with Fredrick
Douglas. Despite being one of the most wanted men in America, he was able
to travel freely under assumed names and somewhat disguised by the flowing beard he grew. He drafted a preliminary constitution for a proposed republic of freed slaves. He
tried, with limited success to recruit northern Black abolitionist to his
side.
In May 1858 he convened a secret convention of 12 men including his son Owen in Chatham, Ontario where nearly a third of the local population were
escaped slaves. The convention officially
elected Brown commander in chief of
a liberating army. Shortly after the
convention a security leak disrupted his contact with the Canadian supporters at the convention, he lost contact with them,
and few, if any went across the border to join Brown’s Amy.
Another security leek came when former
ally Forbes threatened to expose the
plans frightening some of the Secret Six. Plans
were delayed while Brown returned to Kansas for six months, largely to make
Forbes think he had abandoned his plans.
On December 20 he staged a raid into Missouri in which he freed 11 slaves who he took to Canada via Chicago with an assist from Alan Pinkerton.
He boldly lectured publicly under his
own name, including a stop in Concorde, Massachusetts
were his audience included Ralph
Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, and Bronson Alcott. He also
reconnected with and reassured his angels
in the Secret Six.
But it was finally time to move, even
though he had not gathered as many Black followers as he had hoped. He rented a farmhouse near Harpers Ferry on
the Maryland side and waited for Harriet
Tubman to send him volunteers from Canada.
They never materialized. Fredrick
Douglas was also asked, but he felt the plan was mad and doomed and had
quietly passed word among his contacts discouraging them from joining Brown. More
than 900 pikes arrived but the men to carry them did not materialize in the end
Brown had only 21 men—16 white and 5 Black: including 3 long time freemen, one freed slave, and one
fugitive slave. He also had more than 50
of the Sharp’s rifles.
He left three
men behind hoping that they would bring late arriving volunteers to join
him. Brown moved on Harpers Ferry to
capture the Arsenal there on October 16, 1859.
He hoped word of his action would encourage slave in the area to flock
to his side and take up the more than 1000 stands
of arms in the Arsenal. Initially
the raid came off as planned. Telegraph wires were cut and the arsenal easily seized from
a single unarmed watchman. Things started to unravel when a Free Black baggage master tried to warn an
incoming passenger train about the
armed men in town. The baggage manager
was shot and killed becoming the first casualty of the raid. For some reason Brown allowed the train to
proceed after the shooting. At the next
town the conductor wired the news to B&O Railroad headquarters Baltimore which alerted the War Department.
Meanwhile local
merchants, farmers, and militia men rallied to keep up a harassing fire at
Brown and his men who were forced to retreat to the railroad engine house which they did their best
to fortify. As word spread, more men joined the ad
hoc siege. In Washington a
company of Marines were ordered to
Harpers Ferry under the command of Army
Major Robert E. Lee, the most admired officer in the Army. He was accompanied by an aid, Lt. J.E.B. Stuart.
On the morning
of October 18 Stuart approached the Engine House under a flag of truce and asked those inside to surrender to prevent
further bloodshed. Brown replied he
would “rather die here.” Lee ordered the
Marines to attack. They breached the
heavy engine doors with a battering ram.
A chaotic struggle ensued. Marine
Lt. Israel Greene cornered Brown and
struck him several time wounding him
in the head. In the three minute battle Brown’s
men killed four attackers, and wounded nine. Ten of Brown’s men were killed including
his sons Watson and Oliver. Five of his men including his
son Owen escaped. Brown and seven others
were captured.
After a sensational
trial that divided the nation Brown was sentenced to hang. He rode to his execution on sitting on his own casket and died defiantly. He quickly passed into legend and martyrdom in
the north and became a bogyman in
the South. John Brown’s Body would
become the early marching song of Union troops
in the Civil War and Julia Ward Howe adapted the melody for The
Battle Hymn of the Republic.
Obviously there
was no tolerance for armed occupation or insurrection in 1859.
Ironically
Brown, long a hero to progressives, has lately been embraced as an example for rabidly violent anti-abortion groups and
has even been cited as a model by the Oregon occupiers. Perhaps they did not think that out very well
considering the fate of Brown and his men, including the several others who
were hanged.
Next: Labor
Wars, Black targets, and Bonus Marchers.
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