The US President Once Personally Led Army Putting Down Tax Revolt
August 7, 2010

President George Washington Took Personal Command of the Troops to Put Down Insurrection of Liquor Producers

Whiskey Tax Receipt

On This Date in History:  In the late 18th century, about 1/70th of the population of the fledgling United States lived along the Monongahela River in Southwestern Pennsylvania.  However, this fraction of the American population owned and operated about 1/4th of the stills.  Now, these guys weren’t a bunch of drunks but instead were just saavy businessmen.  With travel conditions extremely difficult in early America, they found that it was much more cost efficient to transport a jug of liquor and more profitable to sell than the grain used to produce spirits. 

Historical Marker Not Entirely Accurate

Like all good Americans, they weren’t too keen on the government taxing their business.  So, when Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton urged Congress to adopt an excise tax on liquor, the farmers were pretty mad.  After all, the uprising of the colonists against the British had been partly over governmental taxation.  But, Hamilton said that the farmers had nothing to fear as they could simply pass on the higher costs to their customers.  I suppose his line of thinking was that consumers would pay any price in order to get their booze.   However, the opponents were not too far off the mark.  The reason that the British had  imposed taxes on the colonies was to relieve the crown of the debt incurred in the French and Indian War.  Hamilton’s motive for proposing the tax was to prevent the federal government from going deeper into debt which it had incurred to finance the Revolution.

Tax Collectors in Pennsylvania were Tarred and Feathered

That argument fell on deaf ears because, in the tradition of the Sons of Liberty,  farmers along the Monongahela River responded by the tar and feathering of many tax collectors.  Other protests also took place along the frontier of every state south of New York.  Most folks simply refused to pay the tax which had to be made in cash, a commodity that was in short supply in the West.  One moonshiner was a little more clever than a direct approach.  When the tax collectors arrived, he offered them a tray of ginger cakes that were secretly laced with whiskey.  After the hungry taxmen had their fill of ginger cakes, they promptly passed out.  While the revenue collectors were snoozing, the seemingly generous host scurried from his home and hid his still.  When the collectors awoke, there was no evidence of a liquor operation and the farmer was deemed to simply be a man who called the earth his toil.  While forms of a subtle revolt were common, direct confrontation and the violence began to crescendo.  By the middle of 1794, the protests became known as the Whiskey Rebellion.  The home of district excise inspector, John Neville,  was surrounded by about 500 angry farmers who stormed the building and burned it to the ground.  Pittsburgh became filled with over 5,000 protesters and talk of secession filled the air.

Neville's House Was Burned Down

Leading up to the American Revolution, Boston was the hotbed and center of colonial protest.  Back in the day, colonists began electing their own legislative bodies.  Similarly, in the early 1790′s, the protesting farmers in Pennsylvania began electing their own assembly as they felt that they were not represented in Congress.  They even created a Whiskey Rebellion flag.   Perhaps President Washington had all of that in mind when on this date in 1794, he declared that Southwestern Pennsylvania was in a state of insurrection.  Aware that moonshiners opposed the whiskey tax, Congress passed the Militia Act of 1792 in May of that year.  However, the law officially was passed to better provide for an organized national defense.  Either way,  with the rule of law in his pocket, Washington called for a force of 13,000 militiamen to march on Pennsylvania to put down the rebellion.   Not only had they burned down Neville’s house, they had also prevented the construction of other tax collector offices.  Protesters also stole the mail of some tax officials in an effort to determine whom in the region opposed their efforts.  Remember, even today, messing with the mail is a federal offense. 

I Guess Your Movement is Legitimized When You Have Your Own Flag

The moonshine assembly did have its radical elements that wanted to convince others on the frontier to join them in an organized insurrection.  But, more moderate voices from the likes of Hugh Henry Brackenridge and Albert Gallatin prevented the radicals from gaining full control of the makeshift legislative body.   As secretary of the assembly,  Gallatin spoke to the protesters, many with weapons in hand, and told them what a mistake it was to advocate open rebellion against the government.  Too bad for Gallatin that the government didn’t make a distinction between radical and moderate; to Uncle Sam, everyone in the assembly was guilty.  It took some time for the government to raise an army so, the force of 13,000 made up of militiamen from 4 states didn’t begin their march until September 1794.  George Washington became the only sitting American president to personally lead troops in the field.  Washington’s decision to take personal leadership may have been as much of a political move than one of military necessity.  Insurrectionists might think twice about opposing General Washington and his imposing stature.  Beyond his reputation and experience in the American Revolution, he was also considered by many to be the father of the country.  The notion that his command was one of psychological and political expedience is supported by the fact that, after a month, he left for Philadelphia and placed General Henry “Light Horse Harry” Lee (father of Robert E. Lee) in overall command.   One of the commanders of the force was also none other than Secretary of Treasury Alexander Hamilton, who was also wearing the temporary hat of Secretary of War.  He carried with him a list of 20 men that members of Washington’s staff wanted arrested.  Two names on the list were those of Gallatin and Brackenridge. 

Initially, twenty rebels were arrested but on November 17, 1794, Alexander Hamilton wrote to the president that “the list of prisoners has been very considerably increased, probably to the amount of 150. . . . Subsequent intelligence shews that there is no regular assemblage of the fugitives . . . only small vagrant parties . . . affording no point of Attack. Every thing is urging for the return of the troops.”   However, Albert Gallatin was not among those arrested.  Two days after the letter was written, Hamilton notified Washington that most of the army was returning home with only a regiment left behind to maintain order.  Most of those taken into custody were eventually acquitted due to lack of evidence.  I suppose Washington was tired of the whole episode a year later because on July 10, 1795 he issued a pardon for any insurgent who was not sentenced or indicted.  While the Whiskey Rebellion is but a footnote to most high school history texts, most historians call it one of the greatest threats to the stability of the United States prior to the Civil War.  As for Albert Gallatin, he went on to a long and distinguished career in Congress that lasted until 1849.

Weather Bottom Line:  Yes, that was me on Fox 41 on Friday.  I want to thank Chief Meteorologist Marc Weinberg, News Director Barry Fulmer and GM Bill Lamb for the opportunity.  If you watched, then you know that today will be a carbon copy of Friday with temperatures edging toward 90 but the humidty being so low that it will be really pretty comfortable.  Sunday, high pressure moves off to the east and we get a return southerly flow which means increasing temperatures and humidity.  Sunday won’t be too bad with highs in the low 90′s but, by Monday the heat and moisture return in force as we will once again be talking about upper 90′s and triple digit temperatures with a heat index well over 100.  Next chance for rain doesn’t come about until late in the week.

A New Phone, Big Election Win and New York Terrorist
March 29, 2009

Accused Seems to Enjoy Being a Celebrity

Accused Seems to Enjoy Being a Celebrity

Hold the Phone!

Hold the Phone!

Hello? Son, is that You?

Hello? Son, is that You?

On This Date in History:
The telephone was invented by Alexander Graham Bell in 1876 when he spilled acid on his trousers and shouted, “Watson, Come Here! I want you.”  Good thing for Al that Watson was able to hear him over the telephone.  Bell may never have known that his phone worked and he may have had even greater problems with acid in his pants.  President Rutherford B. Hayes had the first telephone installed in the White House in 1878 complete with a telephone switchboard.  For some reason, no one ever thought that it might be a good idea to have a phone put in the president’s office.  President Herbert Hoover apparently grew weary of having to go to the foyer outside of the Oval Office to use the phone.  So, on this date in 1929, he had one installed in his office.  Naturally, it didn’t work as Hoover grew incensed that his son was not able to get through to the Oval Office on an outside line.  See, the stock market had not crashed yet and so Herb had plenty of time on his hands.  I bet when the economy went south a year later he wished that he never had that phone put in. 

 

 

Another world leader was pleased on this date, and he should not have been surprised.  Eight

Goebbels Family...Not Exactly Ozzie and Harriet

Goebbels Family...Not Exactly Ozzie and Harriet

months after the Treaty of Versailles was signed and World War I was officially brought to an end.  In pragmatic terms, the war was pretty much a stalemate.  But, with the Germans and Turks pretty much spent militarily and economically and America having joined up with the Allies, it was impossible for Germany and its allies to continue.  Not through military defeat, but instead due to a position of weakness,  the Germans were forced to sign an agreement that was grossly tilted against them.  This peace treaty ultimately sowed the seeds for World War II.  Part of the deal was for Germany to leave it’s extreme western portion bordering France, the Rhineland, to be absent of military presence.  On March 7, 1936 German Chancellor Adolph Hitler unilaterally cancelled the Treaty of Versailles and remilitarized the Rhineland.  The world was outraged…but did nothing.  To show the world that he had legitimate support from all of Germany, Hitler called for an election for a referendum on the remilitarization of the region.  On March 17, Hitler made a speech in which he said that he wished for peace to continue with France.   On this date in 1936, it was a fine spring day in Germany and an excellent time for an election.  Joseph Goebbels announced that the Nazis received 99% of the vote!  What a surprise!  Hey, maybe it was legit.  

Jesse Owens PO'd Hitler in 1936 a few months after the Nazi election "victory"

Jesse Owens PO'd Hitler in 1936 a few months after the Nazi election "victory"

 I recall once in Louisville there was an election between political rivals, Charles D. Jacob and John G. Baxter.  That in itself was not unusual because the two squared off for the Louisville Mayor’s office several times.  Baxter was Mayor on two different occasions and I think Jacob got elected 5 times.  Anyway, Baxter was known for his political hijinx and had made a lot of enemies.  Once there was an assassination attempt made against him.  Perhaps the would-be assassin was reflecting public sentiment because Baxter went and lost an election to Jacob by getting only 100 out of 15,000 votes cast.  So, a near unanimous route is possible.  In this case, the Germans were very angry with the Treaty of Versailles and according to the Berlin Diary of correspondent William Shirer, the people of the Rhineland were overjoyed at the return of German troops to their region.   Shirer said that some correspondents reported some irregularlities but Shirer himself had no doubt that the overwhelming majority of Germans did, in fact, support the move into the Rhineland, whether they were a part of the Nazi Party or not.  If the vote indeed was a 99% win for the Nazis, it’s probably the only time that Joseph Goebbels had an honest press release.

The Mad Bomber?

The Mad Bomber?

And finally, we often think of terrorism as being something relatively new.  It’s not really.  It’s a tactic that is used by a group of people who do not have the means to face their opponent in a traditional military style.  The object of war is the conclusion of political aims and so is the same for most terrorists.  Some may consider some of the actions of the Sons of Liberty in colonial America to be terrorism.  And, in the first part of the 20th century through World War II, it was Jewish extremist groups that led numerous terror attacks against the ruling British in an effort to establish an independent Israel.  Now, while the Sons of Liberty may or may not have been terrorists, the legacy of domestic terrorism has continued from time to time.  Usually brought by nut cases.  Sometimes they get some infamous notoriety as the media likes to put name tags on them.  In the late 20th century there was the “Unibomber” but before that it was the “Mad Bomber” that terrorized New York. 

Ted Kaczynski "Unabomber"

Ted Kaczynski "Unabomber"

In 1940, a pipe bomb was found at New York’s electric company, Con Edison.  The note attached said, “Con Edison Crooks, this is for you.”  More bombs were found in 1941, each more powerful than the previous one.  That is until the end of 1941.  Perhaps he was taking a page from the Sons of Liberty or maybe he was just patriotic but the bomber left a note that said he would not plant any more bombs until after the war was over.  I guess he wanted to wait until things settled down after the war because it was not until this date in 1950 that the Mad

Sons of Liberty Was a Rough Crowd

Sons of Liberty Was a Rough Crowd

Bomber returned and set a bomb at Grand Central Station.  That one was disarmed but some of his other work went off in places like Radio City Music Hall, the Staten Island Ferry, Macy’s, the RCA building and again at Grand Central Station. 

The cops couldn’t track the guy down but an investigation by Con Edison found…you guessed it….the proverbial “disgruntled former employee.”  Seems that in 1931, George Peter Metesky had been injured on the job and Con Edison refused to pay for any medical benefits.  So, Metesky got sore and decided to start planting bombs.  Investigators found him living with his sister and in 1957 he was sent to a mental institution where he resided until his release in 1973.   Man, this guy sure could carry a grudge!  He was blowing stuff up over 20 years after he had felt shafted.  And to think, I always thought the Mad Bomber was Darryl Lamonica. 

Pretty Lousy Sunday

Pretty Lousy Sunday

Weather Bottom Line:  Tell you what, the data was really pretty good regarding the weather event of Saturday.   The dynamics were great but there wasn’t a whole lot else going for this stuff.  We had very strong winds aloft and also a good bit of veering of the winds.  But, we weren’t all that unstable to  help things out.  In the late afternoon we got to the low to mid 60′s which was sufficient to support big storms that got going to our southwest and produced big hail, high winds and a few tornadoes.  But, but the time it got to Louisville, the sun had been down for a few hours and so the instability was gone and we got thunderstorms and winds, but nothing really severe. 

The rest of the forecast looks on track through the weekend with a chilly and blustery day on Sunday with highs struggling to get to 50.  Back to the lower 60′s for early next week.

alphainventions.com

“Thomas Paine” and Two Big Mistakes
March 22, 2009

A German Officer And the English Show Little Common Sense While a Modern Day Thomas Paine Presents His Own

A German Officer And the English Show Little Common Sense While a Modern Day Thomas Paine Presents His Own

Cruise As Von Stauffenberg Sans Accent

Cruise As Von Stauffenberg Sans Accent

On This Date in History:

Today was one of a couple of mistakes.  The first big mistake we will look at goes back to 1943.  Now, most people are well aware of the failed attempt on Hitler’s life in 1944 by Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg. This was played out recently in another Tom Cruise movie that I don’t think faired too well, Valkyrie. A bomb was placed next to Hitler at a staff meeting.  The bomb exploded but the device was placed next to a heavy table leg that protected the Fuhrer from the blast.  Hitler survived and the assassins were executed.  But, that was not the first attempt on Hitler’s life.  On this date in 1943, assassins were scratching their heads in disbelief as their plot failed before it got started.

Tresckow: Col. Klink Look Alike?

Tresckow: Col. Klink Look Alike?

It was the brainchild of Gen. Henning von Tresckow who didn’t seem to have much of a brain for such things.  He had thought back in the summer of 1941, before the European war became a true global conflict involving the United States, that Hitler was leading Germany on a road of ruin and humiliation.  So, he thought he’d simply walk up and arrest the Fuhrer.  When Hitler showed up to the location that was supposed to be his spot of detainment, he was surrounded by a bunch of SS body guards.  So, that plan got scrapped.  Undeterred, von Treskow tried again on March 13, 1943.  Hitler was to fly back to Germany from the USSR and he was to be handed a bomb disguised as a gift.  It had a timer set to explode while the plane was in the air.  All went as planned except that the detonator was defective and the bomb never went off.  Strike two.

Hitler Survived This

Hitler Survived This

A week later von Treskow tried again.  At least he was persistent.  This time he got some doof to be a suicide bomber.  He was to walk beside Hitler at a memorial dedication.  The bomber had two bombs…one in each pocket.  Both had 10 minute fuses.  But, they had a little problem.  Hitler only attended the dedication for 8 minutes.  The bomber might have been dumb but he wasn’t stupid.  When he learned that he would only be with Hitler for 8 minutes, he nixed the plan.  Von Tresckow should have stayed on the bench after he struck out.  In October 1943, he hooked up with von Stauffenberg and when the more famous Hitler assassination attempt failed on July 20, 1944, von Treskow decided to go into permanent would-be-assassin retirement when he took himself out with a grenade the following day.   No telling how many grenades it took, given this guy’s record.

Stamp Proposed by Newspaper

Stamp Proposed by Newspaper

The second big mistake

came in the mid 18th Century.  And this one is arguably bigger than the von Tresckow keystone cops episode.   After the British had won the French and Indian War, they had a pile of bills.  Since the crown was protecting the colonies, it figured that the colonies should help share the financial burden for their protection.  So, in 1764, parliament passed the Sugar Act which put a duty on all textiles, wine, coffee and sugar imported into the colonies.  Later that year, the Currency Act was passed and that devalued the money used in the colonies. But that wasn’t enough.  The next year, the crown passed the Quartering Act which meant that colonists were required to put up British soldiers in their homes…good way to save money on food and lodging for the boys overseas.  That pushed the colonists to the edge.  First there are all of these taxes and then they force uninvited guests into their homes.  But, it was on this date in 1765 that the British pushed too far, and that would ultimately be the beginning of the end.

Official Stamp

Official Stamp

The Stamp Act of 1765 required that colonists buy a stamp for all legal transactions  and commercial activity.  That included playing cards,  pamphlets and newspapers.  As politicians today have learned, its not a good idea to anger the fourth estate(the press) and I’m sure card players of the day probably had something to say in the taverns.   The colonists resisted this tax and by October of 1765, representatives from 9 colonies met at the Stamp Act Congress and drafted a Declaration of Rights and Grievances which outlined the colonists’ problems with the recent activities of the crown.  Parliament figured it was all more trouble than it was worth and enforcement would cost more than the Stamp Act would generate, so it rescinded the law.  But it was too late.   The biggest effect that the Stamp Act had was not monetary, but instead it had pushed the colonists toward independence.

Sons of Liberty Was a Rough Crowd

Sons of Liberty Was a Rough Crowd

The Stamp Act was the catalyst for the formation of the Sons of Liberty, who were a bunch of tradesman, mainly around Boston, who organized into a permanent group of agitators and resistance to pretty much anything that the crown did that they did not like.  There were other groups across the colonies that also organized.  The Stamp Act had served to rally the colonies into a united cause whereas previously they had been separate entities.  Eventually, you know where that led….to the bloody and complex transition from a bunch of independent colonies under British rule to a United States of America.  All because the government tried to squeeze more money out of the people without the consent of said people.

Thomas Paine Speaks via Youtube!

We The People Stimulus Package

We The People Stimulus Package

The Second American Revolution

The Second American Revolution

Today, there is a popular video of a gentleman portraying the revolutionary agitator Thomas Paine.  You can find that video at the right….”Thomas Paine” seems to think that we the people need to wake up and so he presents his “We the People Stimulus Package.” View it and see what you think.    If you like it, look at the “common sense” from our modern day “Paine” from July of 2008 called “The Second American Revolution.” As with all things in free speech, you can decide if its common sense or rubbish…but you should at least listen and consider his words.

SPC Convective Outlook Probability Mon AM to Tue AM

SPC Convective Outlook Probability Mon AM to Tue AM

SPC Convective Outllook Tue AM to Wed AM

SPC Convective Outllook Tue AM to Wed AM

Weather Bottom Line:

The weather story remains the same.  As expected we got to 61 on Saturday and look for mid to upper 60′s on Sunday.  Monday and Tuesday will be in the 70′s and perhaps Wednesday as well.  Still, Monday morning through Tuesday morning looks to be a pretty good bet for some action in the plains.  After that, the SPC has an area to our southwest that is suspicious.  After that, the upper pattern sets up with a flow such that shortwaves, or upper lows will have an opportunity to move through and if they did, wherever the dynamics were best suited, strong storms will erupt.  Trouble is, its tough to say exactly when and where that scenario will set up.  My guess is that from midweek through the end of the week, there will be a relatively unsettled pattern with probably a risk of strong storms somewhere from the southern plains and lower Mississippi Valley into and through the Ohio Valley.  We’ll have to wait to see how it shakes out.  Don’t look for any real chilly weather this week…we are getting deeper into spring, you know?

DAY 4-8 CONVECTIVE OUTLOOK
NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK
0351 AM CDT SAT MAR 21 2009

VALID 241200Z – 291200Z

…DISCUSSION…

A LARGE-SCALE TROUGH WILL REMAIN ANCHORED OVER THE CENTRAL CONUS
THROUGH THE EXTENDED PERIOD WITH A SERIES OF DYNAMIC SHORT WAVE
TROUGHS ROTATING THROUGH THE MEAN LONG WAVE PATTERN.  ON D4 /TUE MAR
24TH/…IT APPEARS THE FIRST IMPULSE WILL SHIFT EWD THROUGH THE SRN
PLAINS INTO THE MID MS VALLEY…CONTRIBUTING TO STRONG TO SEVERE
TSTM DEVELOPMENT ALONG A SEWD-ADVANCING COLD FRONT OVER PORTIONS OF
ERN OK INTO THE ARKLATEX.

FROM D5 /WED MAR 25TH/ TO ABOUT D7 /FRI MAR 27TH/…CONSIDERABLE
MODEL DIFFERENCES EXIST IN THE TIMING AND TRACK OF SUBSEQUENT
VORTICITY MAXIMA TRANSLATING THROUGH THE MEAN LARGE-SCALE TROUGH.
REGARDLESS OF THESE DIFFERENCES…MOIST ONSHORE FLOW WILL CONTINUE
ACROSS THE WRN/CNTRL GULF STATES…COINCIDENT WITH MODESTLY SHEARED
KINEMATIC ENVIRONMENT.  AS SUCH…THE POTENTIAL FOR SEVERE WEATHER
WILL EXIST THROUGH THIS TIME FRAME…THOUGH MORE PRECISE DETAILS OF
CONVECTIVE EVOLUTION REMAIN UNCERTAIN AT THIS JUNCTURE.

FROM D7 INTO D8 /SAT MAR 28TH/…LATEST RUNS OF THE ECMWF AND GFS
SUGGEST THAT A SIGNIFICANT SHORT WAVE TROUGH WILL EVOLVE OVER THE
SRN ROCKIES BEFORE SHIFTING EWD TOWARD THE MS VALLEY.  SHOULD THIS
SCENARIO UNFOLD…THE POTENTIAL WOULD EXIST FOR A MORE WIDESPREAD
SEVERE WEATHER EVENT FROM PARTS OF THE MID/LOWER MS VALLEY EWD
TOWARD THE ATLANTIC COAST.

..MEAD.. 03/21/2009

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