7 / 10
The Raid is a small Twentieth Century Fox production about a Civil War incident most Americans have never heard of. Hugo Fregonese directed it. Van Heflin plays Major Neal Benton, a Confederate officer who has escaped from a Union prison camp at Plattsburgh and is plotting a raid on St. Albans, Vermont with five fellow escapees. Anne Bancroft plays Katy Bishop, the Vermont widow Benton boards with while preparing the raid. Lee Marvin plays Lieutenant Robinson. Richard Boone plays a Union captain on Benton’s trail.
The historical event is real. On October 19, 1864, twenty-one Confederate soldiers operating out of Canada conducted the northernmost ground action of the American Civil War, robbing three banks in St. Albans of approximately two hundred thousand dollars and killing one civilian. The film compresses the incident and gives it a six-man raiding party instead of twenty-one, but the basic shape is accurate.
The Setup
Benton arrives in St. Albans posing as a Canadian businessman scouting investment opportunities. He boards with Katy Bishop, a Union widow with a young son. He scouts the town’s banks, telegraph office, and federal cavalry detachment. He sends signals to his men still in Canada. He prepares the raid.
The first half is the espionage half. Benton has to maintain his cover while the town treats him with Vermont hospitality. He attends church. He helps Katy’s son with arithmetic. He has dinner with the local minister. The film does a competent job of showing a man whose mission requires him to develop genuine attachments he intends to betray.
For Writers
An undercover protagonist creates immediate dramatic engine. The audience knows what Benton is planning. The townspeople do not. Every scene generates tension because the audience is waiting for the moment when his cover slips or the raid occurs. The lesson is that dramatic irony, where the audience knows something the other characters do not, is one of the most reliable tools available to a writer. Use it deliberately. The reader holds the secret along with the protagonist. They become accomplices.
The Bishop Subplot
Katy Bishop’s husband died in the Union army. Her son thinks of Benton as a father figure within weeks. Benton, who has been planning to torch the town, finds himself unable to commit fully to the destruction he came to cause. The romantic subplot is handled with restraint. The film does not pretend Benton is suddenly going to abandon the mission for the widow. He completes the raid. He chooses what to burn and what to spare. The pet horse he gave to her son survives because he tells his men not to torch that particular barn.
The choice is small enough that the audience can believe a hardened Confederate raider would make it without abandoning his cause. The film is honest about what Benton is willing to compromise on and what he is not.
For Writers
A character with conflicting loyalties does not have to choose one over the other for the entire arc. Real people compromise selectively. They preserve what they can. They give up what they have to. Benton burns the town and saves one barn. The lesson is that internal conflict in a character works best when the character makes specific, partial choices that protect the things they cannot bear to lose while accepting the cost of the things they can. Total commitment in either direction is rarely how moral conflict actually resolves.
The Raid Itself
The raid sequence is the climax and the weakest part of the film. The historical raid involved bank robberies, attempted arson, and one civilian death. The film compresses this into a tight ten minutes of action. The bank robberies are staged competently. The chase out of town toward the Canadian border is functional. The actual incident in St. Albans was more chaotic and more bloodless than the film makes it look.
Van Heflin carries the climax through the strength of the earlier characterization. The audience cares about whether the raid succeeds because the audience cares about Benton. The action itself is unremarkable. The character work is what holds.
For Writers
A weak climax is acceptable if the build-up has done its work. The Raid’s climax is competent without being exceptional. The film holds together because the previous hour established Benton as someone the audience invested in. The lesson is that character development carries climaxes that action alone cannot. If the action of your climax is not your strongest material, make sure the character work leading into it is.
Craft Note
Hugo Fregonese directed. Sydney Boehm wrote, adapted from Herbert Ravenel Sass’s 1937 article in The Saturday Evening Post about the St. Albans Raid. Van Heflin as Major Neal Benton. Anne Bancroft as Katy Bishop. Lee Marvin as Lieutenant Robinson. Richard Boone as Captain Foster. Tommy Rettig as Larry Bishop. Released August 1954. Modest Twentieth Century Fox production. Filmed largely in California standing in for Vermont.
The Verdict
7/10. A small, well-made Civil War espionage film with a strong character study at the center. Van Heflin is excellent. The lesser-known historical incident makes for a fresh setting. The action climax is the weakest section. Worth watching if you have exhausted the major Civil War films.
FAQ
Was the St. Albans Raid real?
Yes. October 19, 1864. Twenty-one Confederate soldiers operating from Canadian territory robbed three St. Albans banks of approximately two hundred thousand dollars and killed one civilian. It was the northernmost ground action of the Civil War.
Is the film accurate to the historical record?
Compressed. The film uses six raiders instead of twenty-one. The Katy Bishop romance is fictional. The basic shape of the raid is accurate.
What happened to the real raiders?
Most fled back to Canada. The Canadian authorities arrested some of them. A Canadian court eventually released them on grounds that the raid was an act of war rather than common robbery. About one-third of the stolen money was returned to St. Albans.
Who is Hugo Fregonese?
An Argentine director who made several Hollywood films in the 1950s. Apache Drums and Black Tuesday are his other better-known American productions.
Is Anne Bancroft really in this?
Yes, early in her career. She had not yet broken through with The Miracle Worker (1962) or The Graduate (1967).
How does it compare to other Civil War espionage films?
Better than most. The setting in Vermont and the small-scale raid premise are more interesting than the usual big-battle Civil War cinema.
Should I watch this?
If you like Van Heflin or have an interest in the lesser-known incidents of the Civil War, yes. If you want a major Civil War film, look elsewhere.