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  1. The Irish Whiskey Rebellion (also known as A Change in The Wind) [2] is a 1972 crime drama, directed by Chester Erskine and starring William Devane, Anne Meara, Richard Mulligan, John Pleshette, David Groh, Stephen Joyce, and William Challee.

  2. Irish Whiskey Rebellion: Directed by Chester Erskine. With David Groh, Judi Rolin, William Challee, Joseph Stern. On the May Day in 1927 that the world anxiously awaits news of pilot Charles Lindbergh's daring flight across the Atlantic, Irish Republican Army veteran Harry arrives at Fire Island, New York, where he intends to land a shipment of ...

    • (39)
    • Drama
    • Chester Erskine
    • 1972
  3. Aug 7, 2024 · Whiskey Rebellion, uprising against the liquor tax in Pennsylvania in 1794 that was militarily quelled, though no battle ensued. A test for the new U.S. government, it was a triumph for national authority over its first rebellious adversary, winning the support of state governments in enforcing federal law.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Aug 13, 2024 · The Whiskey Rebellion was a violent uprising of small farmers against a federal excise tax on liquor, that broke out in western Pennsylvania in 1794. It was suppressed by a federal militia army raised by President Washington.

  5. The Whiskey Rebellion. Digital History ID 249. Date:1794. Annotation: Political polarization was further intensified by the outbreak of popular protests in western Pennsylvania against Hamilton's financial program. To help fund the nation's debt, Hamilton in 1791 adopted an excise tax on whiskey.

  6. Alexander Hamilton to Governor Thomas Mifflin, September 20, 1794. (Gilder Lehrman Collection) In 1791, the federal government imposed a tax on distilled spirits to pay off the nation’s debts from the American Revolution.

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  8. Mar 3, 2022 · The missed opportunity to adopt the Irish invented column still, prohibition in the United States and our own War of Independence amounted to a series of unfortunate events that systematically dismantled the Irish whiskey industry in the 1900s. Slowly Irish whiskey distilleries started to close.