The Anti-Federalists by Jackson Main, 1961, Edited Excerpts
All this excitement and all these fears, real or imaginary, worked a shift of opinion.
In 1780, in order to forestall a mass resignation of military officers, Congress promised half-pay pensions for life to those who would remain in service for the war’s duration. However, Congress lacked funds to honor this commitment. Antifederalists feared the army’s political power and opposed military pensions or any other measure which would differentiate the army from the general body of the population and contribute to the formation of a military caste.
Veteran army officers formed the Society of Cincinnati, a hereditary, secret organization. The
Antifederalists were later to accuse the Society of deliberately fomenting Shay’s Rebellion as part of a deep plot to overturn the government. The officers were accused of attempting to profit at the expense of the people, who had contributed as much as they had to the war and were suffering equally from the depression.
The Whiskey Rebellion by William Hodgeland, 2006, Edited Excerpts
The officers formed the Society of the