In 1839, Missouri tax collectors arrived in Van Buren and Davis counties of the Iowa Territory; Iowa would not be a state until 1846, though Missouri had achieved statehood in 1821. In 1837, Missouri had commissioned a new survey of the northern border and moved it 9 miles into Iowa Territory. Of course, this didn't go over well with the Iowans. The tax collectors were chased out but not before they chopped down a few trees with behives; honey was a valuable commodity that could be sold to make up the tax bill. Sheriff Uriah Gregory of Clark County, Missouri, went to support the tax collectors, but instead found himself arrested and jailed.
Governor Lilburn Boggs of Missouri dispatched General David Willock with 11 mounted state militia.
Governor Robert Lucas of Iowa Territory called out the militia and sent them to the border. It was a less impressive bunch, armed with pitchforks, antique guns, and even a sausage stuffer.
General Willock wasn't about to get into a bloodletting over a boundary dispute.
The war fizzled without bloodshed and the issue of the border was argued in court. It was eventually decided by the Supreme Court in 1849, settling on the Sullivan Line that was surveyed in 1816.
This was not the first 'war' between states over the borders. Michigan and Ohio had the Toledo War several years before the Honey War.

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