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  1. Banastre Tarleton (1754-1833) was a British army officer who played a significant role in the American Revolutionary War and the Napoleonic Wars. Tarleton is best known for being a skilled cavalry commander who employed aggressive battle tactics. In addition to his highly successful military career, he lived as a country gentleman pursuing ...

  2. 12 de ene. de 2013 · Banastre Tarleton (21 August 1754 - 15 January 1833) was the commander of the notorious Green Dragoons and fought in many battles during the American Revolutionary War. He became known as "the butcher" to the colonials due to his brutal tactics and actions taken at the Battle of Waxhaws. After the war, he was an antagonist to the English ...

  3. Tarleton was a dandy too, wearing a green uniform based on that of a Loyalist regiment organized in New York and a helmet with plume. Lieutenant-Colonel Banastre Tarleton by Sir Joshua Reynolds, in the uniform of the British Legion, wearing a "Tarleton Helmet". The National Gallery

  4. Lieutenant Colonel Banastre Tarleton. Banastre Tarleton was born to upper middle-class parents in Liverpool, England, on August 21, 1754. At the University College, Oxford, he studied toward a law degree but was better known for his athletic abilities, participating in cricket, boxing, riding, and tennis. He was small physically, yet strong and ...

  5. Banastre Tarleton, who had intended to seize the strategic crossroads at Ninety Six, South Carolina. Tarleton, commander of the feared British Legion, was a particularly despised foe who had recently overseen the massacre of Americans at the Battle of Waxhaws after refusing their white flag…. Banastre Tarleton, after Morgan.

  6. Banastre Tarleton, né le 21 août 1754 à Liverpool , mort le 16 janvier 1833 dans la même ville, 1 er baronnet, est un militaire et un homme politique britannique. Biographie [ modifier | modifier le code ]

  7. 15 de sept. de 2021 · In 1782 Banastre was painted by Sir Joshua Reynolds, portrayed in action as commandant of the British Legion cavalry in the War of American Independence. The portrait was commissioned by one of Colonel Tarleton’s brothers on behalf of their mother. It was bequeathed to the Gallery in 1951 by Mrs Henrietta Charlotte Tarleton.