Online Encyclopedia

SIR BANASTRE TARLETON (1754-1833)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 428 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

See also:
SIR BANASTRE TARLETON (1754-1833)  ,
See also:
English soldier, was the son of John Tarleton (1719-1773), a Liverpool merchant, and was born in Liverpool on the 21st of August 17 J4 . Educated at Oxford he entered the army, and in December 1775 he sailed as a volunteer to
See also:
America with
See also:
Earl, afterwards Marquess, Cornwallis, and his services during the
See also:
American War of Independence in the
See also:
year 1776 gained for him the position of a brigade major of cavalry . He was
See also:
present at the
See also:
battle of
See also:
Brandywine and at other engagements in 1777 and 1778, and as the
See also:
commander of the
See also:
British legion, a mixed force of cavalry and
See also:
light
See also:
infantry, he proceeded at the beginning of 178o to South Carolina, rendering valuable services to
See also:
Sir Henry Clinton in the operations which culminated in the capture of
See also:
Charleston . He was responsible for a British victory at Waxhaw in May 1780, and he materially helped Cornwallis to win the battle of Camden in the succeeding August . He was completely victorious in an engagement with Thomas Sumter at Fishing Creek, or
See also:
Catawba Fords, but was not equally successful when he encountered the same general at Blackstock Hill in November 178o; then in
See also:
January 1781, in spite of much
See also:
personal valour, he was defeated with heavy loss at
See also:
Cowpens . Having been successful in a skirmish at Tarrants House, and having taken
See also:
part in the battle of Guilford in March 1781, he marched with Cornwallis into Virginia, and after affording much assistance to his commander-in-chief he was instructed to hold Gloucester . This
See also:
post, however, was surrendered to the Americans with
See also:
Yorktown in
See also:
October 1781, and Tarleton returned to England on parole . In 1790 he entered parliament as member for Liverpool, and with the exception of a single year he remained in the House of
See also:
Commons until 1812 . In 1794 he became a major-general; in 1812 a general; and he held a military command in Ireland and another in England . In 1815 he was made a
See also:
baronet . He died without issue at Leintwardine in Shropshire on the 25th of January 1833 . For some time Tarleton lived with the actress Mary Robinson (Perdita), and his portrait was painted both by Reynolds and by Gainsborough .

Sir Banastre wrote a

See also:
History of the
See also:
Campaigns of 178o and 1781 in the
See also:
Southern Provinces of North America (
See also:
London, 1781), which, although of some value, is marred by the author's vanity and by his attacks on Cornwallis . It was criticized by Colonel
See also:
Roderick Mackenzie in his Strictures on
See also:
Lieutenant-Colonel Tarleton's History (1781) and in the Cornwallis Correspondence .

End of Article: SIR BANASTRE TARLETON (1754-1833)
[back]
TARKANI, or TARKALANRI
[next]
RICHARD TARLTON (d. 1588)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.