Plausibility Check: A revolution in early America?

Is it possible for some kind of overthrow of the government to occur within America’s newborn years? By which, I mean until at the very latest 1800. I know all about Shay’s Rebellion and it got me thinking if some large scale version of that would occur. It would essentially be the fate of so many other newly-independent and/or post-revolution countries.

The cause of it would have to be some kind of government action that made the public think that they were stepping out of their boundaries and becoming just like the Crown. Perhaps an earlier attempt to tax the people after gaining independence?

In my POD, Shay’s Rebellion is also butterflied as to not give Congress the special urge to reform the government and to make them unprepared on how to handle it (because of how long it took them to put down Shay’s in the first place).

I appreciate any input.
 
I think he's saying it isn't, at least in the same sense as OTL, because the government would learn how to deal with rebellions as a result of it
 
If Hamilton's affair is waved away, he could conceivably challenge Adams and Jefferson for the Presidency in either 1796 or 1800. If someone like Hamilton, who is so polarizing it will make Adams' presidency look tame, is elected and (very likely) starts a war with France I could see a lot of the more radical Republicans waging some sort of resistance movement. In real life, when the Kentucky/Virginia Resolutions came out, Hamilton suggested sending the army into Virginia, you could probably guess this might turn out badly. To make it worse, maybe add some manumission talk from Hamilton to make the Southern landowners uneasy.
 
Top