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  1. 6 de mai. de 2017 · On May 29, 1780, the British Legion, led by Lieutenant Colonel Banastre Tarleton, attacked Patriot militia, commanded by Colonel Abraham Buford, who were retreating through Waxhaws toward North Carolina. The encounter soon turned into a bloodbath, with Tarleton’s men offering no “quarter,” or mercy, to the defeated American troops.

  2. Banastre Tarleton was born into a middle class family in Liverpool, England. Tarleton attended Oxford and briefly studied law at the Middle Temple before his mother purchased him a cornet's commission in the 1st Dragoon Guards. He participated in the first British attack on Charleston in 1776 and eventually transferred to the 16th Light Dragoons.

  3. Banastre Tarleton is the lead singer and keyboardist of the legendary Banastre Tarleton Band. He is also a member of the acoustic guitar duo, Oatmeal for the Foxhounds, and his music therapy project, All You Need Is Love performs for children’s hospitals, retirement centers, and women’s shelters on a regular basis.

  4. The Darth Vader of Great Britain in the American Revolution, the guy they based the evil guy from The Patriot on, and a man so intensely-hardcore that the patriots used to use the term "Tarleton's Quarter" to mean "take no prisoners, ask no prisoners." "Bloody Ban" was born August 21, 1754, the fourth child of the former Lord Mayor of Liverpool.

  5. 13 de nov. de 2009 · On May 29, 1780, the treatment of Patriot prisoners by British Colonel Banastre Tarleton and his Loyalist troops leads to the coining of a phrase that comes to define British brutality for the ...

  6. Banastre Tarleton (1754 – 1833) Tarleton was born in Liverpool, one of seven children from the marriage of Jane Parker and John Tarleton. His unusual name came from his maternal grandfather, Banastre Parker of Chorley in Lancashire. On his father’s side, the Tarleton’s were Liverpool merchants going back several generations.

  7. 8 de fev. de 2022 · Banastre Tarleton’s First Commanding Raid. February 8, 2022 Armies, Battles, British, Colonial Harry Schenawolf. Artwork by William Ranney, 1845. Pompous, mercifulness, void of empathy, this British cavalryman’s ambitious impulses and self-glorifying ego demanded that all under his command follow his lead in a blood fest carved throughout ...