And the winner of Day 2’s Ring of Secrets is:

Elizabeth Sarah Hartwig!

Everyone else who has entered before is still entered today, PLUS for the weekly drawing on Friday of the $15 Bath & Body Works gift card! So keep on wracking up those entries! On Saturday, a whole new drawing widget will be there, so the daily drawings will start fresh too.

I’ve so enjoyed hearing everyone’s favorite reads of the year thus far! Some of them I’ve read, some I have on my TBR pile, some are new to me, but all sound great!

Now, Wednesdays on Writing Roseanna are for “Remember When.” So today is:

Remember When . . . Plots Were Dastardly?

One of my primary sources of information for my latest manuscript, Circle of Spies (Culper Ring Series Book 3), was a diary from one of the conspirators in the Lincoln Assassination. He, along with Booth and the other conspirators, was a member of the Southern-sympathizing secret society, Knights of the Golden Circle (K.G.C.).
In the diary, there’s a single line that grabbed my attention. It had no bearing on my story, so I didn’t actually look it up until after I’d finished my book, but it was something I couldn’t forget: the yellow fever plot.
The wha?
Yeah…that demanded some research. Which led me to information about Dr. Luke Blackburn. He was a physician. He was a philanthropist. He was governor of Kentucky from 1879-1883. He spent most of his life working to stop the spread of yellow fever and is credited with the first successful quarantine against the disease.
He’s also reportedly guilty of attempting to infect the Union troops with diseased clothes and linens. Modern medicine tells us yellow fever doesn’t in fact spread this way, but there was in fact an outbreak of the fever in New Bern in the fall of 1864, and the K.G.C. were quick to credit it to a successful plot…though they were disappointed it didn’t spread to Washington as they had planned.
And was that all of their terrible plans? Oh no. Another that they tried on several attempts was the planned burning of every major Northern city on a single night. They had agents placed in every major city, all of whom were supposed to ignite a blaze at a given time on a given day. Only…
Yeah. The plans fell through, and the K.G.C. who hadn’t been assigned an active role were left baffled at why this “foolproof” path to victory was abandoned. Perhaps the members backed out…perhaps telegrams got lost…who knows. But can you imagine what might have happened had they succeeded?

My question to you today (you can pick which, or answer both):

What’s one thing that you think would be different today 
if the Confederacy had won the Civil War?

or

Would you have wanted to live in the hoop-dress era?
Why or why not?

a Rafflecopter giveaway