Ellsworth, Scott. Midnight on the Potomac: The Last Year of the Civil War, The Lincoln
Assassination, and The Rebirth of America. New York: Penguin Random House, 2025.
ISBN: 9780593475614
Are you interested in American history, especially American Civil War history? Can you name in detail what all happened during the the last 12 months of that war? How much do you know about all the conspiracies, plots, and personalities involved on both sides? If you do not, Scott Ellsworth has a deal for you with his book Midnight on the Potomac!
Scott Ellsworth organized Midnight on the Potomac in the style of a play with three acts, two intermissions, and and an afterword. Act One covered Grant's move south to The Wilderness and on to Spotsylvania and then Petersburg, the Jubal Early invasion that almost took Washington, a look at President Lincoln, the growing number of contrabands around Washington, and the nadir of Lincoln's chances for reelection. The First Intermission was a visit to Richmond (VA) with a look at the morale and fighting spirit of the South. Act Two opens with conspiracies and plots being hatched around Lake Erie and in Canada and the introduction of the Booth family with their conflicted loyalties. Atlanta falls to Sherman and he heads east to the sea. Plots are hatched and activated to kidnapped President Lincoln before Election Day (November 8, 1865) and to to burn down New York City. The Second Intermission was a look at Christmastime in Washington and Richmond. Act Three opens with Lewis Powell who hailed from Florida in Washington trying for a shot at Lincoln while blacks joined the Union army and others pushed for basic civil rights such as education. Booth was still trying to kidnap Lincoln when Lincoln gave his 2nd Inaugural Address on a rainy March day. Then there was the visit by Lincoln to City Point (VA) to confer with General Grant which led to April 2, 1865 with the final assault on Petersburg followed quickly by the fall of Richmond and the chase of the Army of Virginia that ended at Appomattox Court House on April 9, 1865. Then Booth got his shot at eternal infamy when he assassinated Lincoln on April 14, 1865.The Third Act ends with a summary of the end of the Civil War and the chase for Booth and his co-conspirators. The Aftermath opens with an interview of D. W. Griffith and Walter Huston on the making of The Birth of a Nation and then goes on to highlight the twisting of historical events in the service of The Lost Cause, the legacies of John Wilkes Booth and Abraham Lincoln along with all who served and died to preserve the Union and set the country free.
So if you want to learn about the end of the American Civil War with all its warts and triumphs, pick up Scott Ellswoth's Midnight on the Potomac and dive in!
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