
Behind the story of Benedict Arnold were secrets until recently unknown An American officer goes undercover to unmask a Revolutionary War traitor.
Does The Scarlet Coat have end credit scenes?
No!
The Scarlet Coat does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.
Explore the complete cast of The Scarlet Coat, including both lead and supporting actors. Learn who plays each character, discover their past roles and achievements, and find out what makes this ensemble cast stand out in the world of film and television.

Bobby Driscoll
Ben Potter

John McIntire
Gen. Robert Howe

Rhys Williams
Peter Andre

George Sanders
Dr. Jonathan Odell

Peter Adams
Lt. Blair

Anne Francis
Sally Cameron

Robert Dix
Lt. Evans

Paul Frees
Narrator (voice)

Dabbs Greer
Capt. Brewster

Robin Hughes
Col. Tarleton

John Dehner
Nathanael Greene

Paul Cavanagh
Sir Henry Clinton

Michael Wilding
Maj. John Andre

James Westerfield
Col. Jameson

Cornel Wilde
Maj. John Boulton

Robert Douglas
Gen. Benedict Arnold

Michael Fox
Maj. Russell

Frank Mills
Tony

Bruce Lester
Col. Simcoe

Tris Coffin
Col. Varick

Gordon Richards
Mr. Cameron
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Challenge your knowledge of The Scarlet Coat with this fun and interactive movie quiz. Test yourself on key plot points, iconic characters, hidden details, and memorable moments to see how well you really know the film.
Which actor portrays Major John Bolton?
Cornel Wilde
Robert Douglas
George Sanders
Michael Wilding
Show hint
Read the complete plot summary of The Scarlet Coat, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.
In 1780, General Benedict Arnold, Robert Douglas, commands the Continental Army defenses at West Point. Major John Bolton, Cornel Wilde, a dragoon officer assigned to counterintelligence, intercepts and kills a British spy leaving the Storm King Tavern, and captures a letter found on his body. He reports to Gen. Robert Howe, John McIntire, that the coded message was from the British spy calling himself Gustavus to James Osborn, in care of Dr. Jonathan Odell, George Sanders of New York, stating that Arnold has taken command at West Point. The secret knowledge indicates that the spy is a “highly placed person.” Bolton returns to the tavern, where one of his contacts, stable boy Ben Potter, Bobby Driscoll, tells him that the Tory wife of a redcoat, Mrs. Sally Cameron, Anne Francis, is traveling under a flag of truce possibly carrying information to the enemy. She catches them searching her room, where Bolton takes her safe conduct pass after verbally sparring with her. A messenger arrives with a package for “Mr. Moody,” but when no one by that name can be found, another traveler, Col. Winfield, offers to deliver the package. Bolton recognizes that Winfield is an imposter, and in a struggle over the package, kills him. Other American officers arrest Bolton for murder and deliver him to Howe.
A pass through the lines found hidden in Winfield’s boot reveals that the impostor was actually Moody, a spy, who had another coded letter from Gustavus to Osborn in his possession. The package, a ream of blank paper, concealed a message from Osborn written in invisible ink requesting an urgent meeting to finalize an unknown arrangement. Howe proposes that Bolton feign desertion to the British. Bolton agrees, aware that he could be hanged if the British discover his mission. With Moody’s pass, Bolton passes through the British lines, but the British lieutenant on duty recognizes that he is not the same man who previously used the pass and follows him. In New York, Bolton calls upon Dr. Odell, trying to deliver the letter. The lieutenant bursts in to arrest Bolton, but when he addresses him as “Mr. Moody,” Odell takes Bolton and the letter to British Army Major John André, Michael Wilding, for deciphering, using a pair of spectacles to isolate key words. Bolton claims that he was Moody’s source of information. He offers to continue working for the British. Odell bluntly tells Bolton that he thinks his story is too neat and believes him to be a Rebel spy. But André takes an immediate liking to Bolton. He invites him to a dinner party that evening, where Bolton suffers an anxious moment when Sally Cameron is present. Bolton’s explanation corroborates information about the murder that André had checked, and Sally provides the perfect eyewitness.
Bolton is sent with two Tory agents to sabotage the chain barrier across the Hudson River before a British attack on the American position at Verplanck, so that British warships can pass. André gives one a letter to deliver afterwards at the Storm King Tavern. Bolton drowns one agent, but when he tries to arrest the other, is confronted by an armed Ben Potter, who still thinks that Bolton is a murderer and deserter. The agent disarms Ben and nearly kills Bolton. Ben finds his gun and shoots the agent. At a secret meeting with Howe, Bolton uses spectacles to decipher the letter, which points to Gustavus as someone at West Point with authority. Bolton volunteers to return to New York to identify the mysterious “James Osborn.” Odell more than ever believes Bolton is a spy, but Bolton convinces André that the British agents completed their mission. To trap him, Odell writes a false dispatch from “Mr. Osborn” for Bolton to steal. At another dinner, Bolton notices that Sally Cameron only pretends to toast the King. She has also fallen in love with him and warns Bolton about Odell’s trap. The British attack on Verplanck is crushed and results in Bolton’s arrest as a Rebel spy. He is saved from hanging by André, who intervenes for him after Sally confesses her feelings for Bolton and begs him to vouch on Bolton’s behalf. He brokers a last-minute deal to exchange André for Arnold, but André considers the suggestion a taint on his honor and declines.
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