Joan of Plattsburg

Joan of Plattsburg

Drama, Comedy | March 5, 1918

Joan, an earnest little orphan who lives in an asylum near the World War I training camp at Plattsburg, reads the story of "Joan of Arc" and soon imagines that she is the reincarnation of the peasant-soldier. As she sits in the cellar reading, she hears voices plotting against the government. She thinks the voices are from another world but they actually belong to a group of German spies. The agents plan to acquire the important invention of a young man named Ingleton, who is staying at the camp under the guardianship of Captain Lane. Joan relates this information to the captain, with whom she is in love, but he at first refuses to believe her. Later, however, he learns that the plot is real, and with Joan's help, he captures the spies.

Joan of Plattsburg

Drama, Comedy | March 5, 1918

Joan of Plattsburg
Joan, an earnest little orphan who lives in an asylum near the World War I training camp at Plattsburg, reads the story of "Joan of Arc" and soon imagines that she is the reincarnation of the peasant-soldier. As she sits in the cellar reading, she hears voices plotting against the government. She thinks the voices are from another world but they actually belong to a group of German spies. The agents plan to acquire the important invention of a young man named Ingleton, who is staying at the camp under the guardianship of Captain Lane. Joan relates this information to the captain, with whom she is in love, but he at first refuses to believe her. Later, however, he learns that the plot is real, and with Joan's help, he captures the spies.
Producers Goldwyn Pictures Corporation
Original title Joan of Plattsburg
Directors William Humphrey, George Loane Tucker
Writers Porter Emerson Browne, George Loane Tucker

Cast

Mabel Normand

as Joan

Robert Elliott

as Capt. Lane

William Frederic

as Supt. Fisher

Joseph W. Smiley

as Ingleton

Edward Elkas

as Silverstein

Willard Dashiell

as Colonel

Edith McAlpin

as Mrs. Lane

Isabel Vernon

as Mrs. Miggs