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THE WHISKY REBELLION

311

the more it taxed, the safer their own private fortunes. The commercial forces of the country were consolidated behind the new government. Jefferson soon regretted bitterly his aid to this centralizing force, and complained that (just back from France) he had been tricked by Hamilton. "Hamilton's system," said he, "flowed from principles adverse to liberty, and was calculated to undermine the Republic."

The victory of "assumption" made a larger revenue necessary. Another part of Hamilton's plan dealt with this need. In accord with his recommendations, New duties were increased slightly on goods imported taxes from abroad; and, in 1791, Congress imposed a heavy excise on spirits distilled at home. In that time, whisky, a universal drink, was manufactured in countless petty stills scattered over the country, especially in the poorer western countries, where the farmer could not market his grain in any other way. A pack horse could carry not more than four bushels of grain; but, reduced to the form of whisky, he could carry twenty-four bushels. Western Pennsylvania is said to have had 3000 stills.

These small producers in the western districts rarely saw much currency; and they felt it a cruel hardship to have to pay the tax, particularly in advance of The Whisky marketing the whisky. The legislatures of North Rebellion Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania passed vehement resolutions condemning the law; and in four western counties of Pennsylvania the United States officials were driven out or set at naught for three years, - by methods that make a curious parody upon those used toward English officials in the years before the Battle of Lexington. This was the Whisky Rebellion, the first rebellion against the Federal government. Finally, under Hamilton's advice, Washington marched 15,000 militia from neighboring States into the insurgent counties, and obedience was restored. Two leaders were tried for treason and condemned to death, but they were pardoned by Washington.

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The first
National

Bank

The most important result of the whisky tax was not the increased revenue, but the demonstration that the new government was able and determined to enforce its laws. Hamilton also persuaded Congress to incorporate a National Bank. The government held part of the stock, and named some of the managing Board. In return, the Bank acted as the agent of the government in securing loans, and took care of the national funds. There was a central bank at Philadelphia, with branches in other leading cities. Critics soon pointed out a danger that a bank connected with the government might exert tremendous political influence for the party in power by granting or refusing loans. But banking facilities had been meager; and the convenience of this institution bound the commercial classes still more closely to the new government.

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powers

The creation of the Bank led to the doctrine of “implied powers" in the Constitution (page 285). To create a corporation is not among the powers "enumerated" 'implied for Congress. Indeed, efforts to include that particular power had been defeated in the Philadelphia Convention. Hamilton, however, insisted that the authority was given by the "necessary and proper" clause. "Necessary," he urged, meant only "suitable"; and a national bank would be a suitable and convenient means to carry out the enumerated powers of borrowing money and caring for national finances. After serious hesitation, Washington signed the bill. He had invited opinions from Jefferson as well as from Hamilton (page 305); and the debate between the two great Secretaries began the dispute as to "strict construction" and "loose" or "broad" construction of the Constitution.

III. NORTH AND SOUTH

From the first, the serious contests under the new government were sectional. The conflicts upon assumption, the tariff, the Sectional Bank, had all been conflicts between North and South, commercial section and agricultural section. This sectionalism was intensified by the slavery ques

disputes

NORTH AND SOUTH

313

tion. In the North, and as far south as through Virginia, antislavery sentiment was gradually growing. Some States had abolished slavery; some were making arrangements for gradual emancipation; others had at least forbidden importation of slaves. In the first session of the First Congress, a Virginia representative moved a national tax of ten dollars a head upon all slaves imported into any State. After a bitter debate the matter was dropped. At the next session, two petitions were presented from Pennsylvania (cf. page 130) praying Congress to use its "constitutional powers" to limit slavery and protect the Negro. The resulting debate was as fierce as any in our history, bristling with vituperation and with threats of secession; and the House finally adopted resolutions declaring that it had no "constitutional power" to interfere with the treatment of slaves, or to abolish slavery, within any State. The unquestionable fact that it had power to regulate the treatment of slaves on the high seas and in the Territories it chose not to allude to.

Slave law

The next move came from the South in a demand for a Fugitive Slave Law, and in 1793 there was passed a disgraceful statute. The Constitution sanctioned The first slavery and made it the legal duty of Congress Fugitive to provide the necessary machinery for the capture and return of fugitive slaves; but the law should at least have given to any Negro, claimed as a slave, the benefit of the doubt, until proof of the claim was complete. The presumption should have been in his favor. Such, indeed, was the maxim of the Roman Imperial law. But this American law followed rather the medieval maxim that a masterless man must belong to some master. It was a base surrender of human rights to property rights. It assumed that the claim of a pretended master was good unless disproved by evidence. No jury trial was provided, and a free Negro, seized in a strange locality, might easily find it impossible to prove his freedom, especially as the law failed to provide for summoning witnesses. A crushing fine was provided for any citizen aiding a Negro who might

prove to be an escaped slave. In every detail the presumption of the law was against the Negro.1

Expansion

of the Union

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The reunion of the old thirteen States was completed by the ratification of the Constitution in North Carolina (November, 1789) and in Rhode Island (1790). Almost at the same time began the expansion of the Union through the admission of new States, Vermont in 1791, and Kentucky in 1792. Toward the close of the Federalist period, Tennessee was admitted (1796); and in 1802, early in the following period, Ohio came in. The admission of these new States brought into high relief the dangerous sectional division in the Union, but it also helped to set in motion two wholesome forces.

Of the original thirteen States, seven were north of Mason and Dixon's line; but some of these were still slave holding States, so that the Slave and Free sections were not unequal. The bills for the admission of Kentucky and Vermont were passed within a few days of each other, in order to maintain the balance, especially in the Senate, — between the forces for and against slavery.

Both Kentucky and Vermont gave the franchise to all White males twenty-one years of age. These were the first And frontier States with "manhood franchise." Tennessee and democracy Ohio did not go quite so far; but they also were much more democratic than the older States. The admission of Western States began at once to introduce greater democracy into the Union.

1 In a more enlightened age the courts would have held the law unconstitutional. It neither provided securities for the accused in criminal cases (if the claim that a Negro was an escaped slave constituted a criminal case), nor insured the jury trial guaranteed by the seventh amendment in civil cases. But law, after all, is merely what the courts, sustained by public opinion, declare it to be. This abominable statute was sustained by American courts; and, under its sanction, gangs of kidnapers could, and sometimes did, carry off free men to a horrible slavery. After some fifty years (in the famous Prigg v. Pennsylvania case) the Supreme Court of the nation definitely upheld the constitutionality of the law, except as to the provision requiring State officials to act as Federal officers in carrying it out (1842). The more active public opinion of the forties took advantage of this leak to undermine the operation of the law. Then the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850 merely reenacted the old abuses with more efficient machinery; i. e. with special Federal commissioners to enforce them.

THE FIRST NEW STATES

315

The new commonwealths had never known political existence as sovereign bodies. They were the children of the Union, created by it and fostered by it; and the tendency to nationality was stronger within their borders than within the original States. The most powerful single force in our history on the side of union has been this addition of the many new States carved out of the national domain.

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