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  1. Lieutenant-General Sir Thomas Picton GCB (24 August 1758 [ 1 ] – 18 June 1815) was a Welsh military officer and colonial administrator who fought in the Napoleonic Wars. According to the historian Alessandro Barbero, Picton was "respected for his courage and feared for his irascible temperament". The Duke of Wellington called him "a rough ...

  2. Jun 18, 2015 · Sir Thomas Picton's reputation for brutality came from the Caribbean. In 1801, 14-year-old Luisa Calderon stood accused of being involved in the theft of around £500. The investigating magistrate ...

  3. Mar 1, 2024 · Sir Thomas Picton died at the Battle of Waterloo on 18 June 1815, at the helm of his Division despite severe wounds sustained two days earlier. He was the most senior officer killed in that battle. In the only surviving war diary by a common Welsh soldier, Private Thomas Jeremiah described him as 'our commander, right hand man and the talisman of the army among his men'.

  4. SHEE, Sir Martin Archer (1769-1850) Thomas Picton – also known as the Tyrant of Trinidad, or the Blood-Stained Governor – is a controversial figure. Historically he has been hailed a public ‘hero’, but his governance of Trinidad and his treatment of slaves marks him out as a particularly cruel leader. Picton’s reputation was built on ...

  5. Of the British officers who fell at Waterloo, writes Antony Brett-James, none was more distinguished than General Sir Thomas Picton. When, after the victory at Toulouse and the abdication of Napoleon, Sir Thomas Picton came home from south-western France, he decided to give up active service. For several years his health had been poor and he ...

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  7. Search for: 'Sir Thomas Picton' in Oxford Reference ». (1758–1815).Soldier. Born in Pembrokeshire, he joined the army at 13, but was put on half‐pay at the peace in 1783. In 1794 he volunteered for service in the West Indies and fought with distinction, being appointed governor of Trinidad, captured from the Spaniards, in 1797.

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