Geographical And Social Changes As A Result Of The Back Country Rebellions

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As a result of the Back Country Rebellions, America experienced geographical, social, and political changes in the years 1763-1794.

The March of the Paxton Boys was a rebellion formed in 1763 after the French-Indian war to retaliate against local Indians. The Paxton Boys were a group of Scots-Irish frontiersmen from central and eastern Pennsylvania that came together to form this rebellion. The March of the Paxton Boys included many iconic events, for example the Conestoga Massacre, where the Paxton Boys murdered 21 Native Americans. Social change occured as tensions boiled between the rebels and local Native Americans.

The Paxton Boys and their efforts resulted in a lot of geographical change with the numerous conflicts with the Native Americans. Most of the attacks resulted in Native American land being taken by force. Towards the end of the rebellion, in January 1764, 250 Paxton Boys marched to …show more content…

The rebellion was a sign of justification for constitutional reform. As a result, the Articles of Confederation were revised not long after the end of the rebellion, thus the new consitution was signed on September 17th, 1787. In a way, Shay’s Rebellion also resulted in geographical change. With the new constitution, slavery was left out of the discussion, which paved the way for tensions to rise and cause the American Civil War.

The Whiskey Rebellion was a rebellion that occured in early 1791 as a result of Alexander Hamilton’s domestic tax on whiskey. In the United States, this was the first tax ever on a domestic product, so the whiskey tax outraged many Americans, resulting in boiling social tension. Hamilton originally enforced this tax to recover from debt caused by the Revolutionary War. Whiskey was one of America’s most popular beverages in the 18th century, so it wasn’t long before chants of “No taxation without representation” filled the streets in