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smoothshooter said:In the incident with Col. Hangar (? ), it is likely the American shooter was aiming at the group of three mounted men, hoping to get lucky by hitting a man or a horse, and he did. And it's a shot I would probably have taken , knowing that even if I missed, it might interrupt whatever the mounted men were up to and cause them to retreat. The reason we have an account of it is because there was a hit ( on a horse ). We rarely hear about the misses, for obvious reasons. It is very possible Hangar was singled out and fired at several times that day by various rifle and musket shooters , to no effect .
I believe you make a great point about the Rifleman shooting to disrupt the enemy intentions, no matter that Hanger and Tarleton were beyond effective range for the rifle. That is a point that is often overlooked.
It was well worth a shot or a few shots to try to drive enemy Cavalry away before they could get the most and best reconnaissance information on the Americans. This is still true whether or not the American Riflemen realized there were two British Officers in the group at 400 yards distance.
Three soldiers on horseback and clustered so close together (from the Rifleman's perspective), while no doubt the British soldiers were not moving and standing still, was a very large target to shoot at for that range. Indeed, a much larger target than a single man standing still and upright at that distance.
I also concur the fact that the shot actually hit one horse was the reason Hanger recorded the incident for posterity, because it was so highly unusual and most likely far beyond the distance Riflemen normally shot at the British.
Gus