Beau is the epitome of what a mastiff is suposed to be.  He is a guardian and protects his turf,  but is a complete southern gentlemen who prefers the lady of the house.  His demeanor is one of caution and loyalty.  He loves to play and is incredibly strong.  He is sweet and loves attention.  He snores like a freight train. 
He is of the finest blood line, with 41 champions in just the past five generations.  
He has an unbroken chain of champions going back 14 generations.
 
Below is a little note on his Namesake 
Sayre's Two Ponds
General Beauregard 
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Beau at 6 Months
Beau in first show
Beau head shot 18 months
Beau 21 months
See Beau's Pedigree
 

Pierre Gustave Toutant de Beauregard  (May 28, 1818February 20, 1893), best known as a general for the Confederate Army during the American Civil War, was also a writer, civil servant, and inventor. He was the first prominent Confederate general, commanding the defenses of Charleston, South Carolina, for the Battle of Fort Sumter, and was the victor at the First Battle of Bull Run. He commanded armies in the Western Theater for the Battle of Shiloh and Siege of Corinth. His arguably greatest achievement was in saving the city of Petersburg, Virginia (and thus, also the Confederate capital of Richmond) from assaults by overwhelmingly superiorUnion Army forces in June 1864. However, his influence over Confederate strategy was marred by his poor professional relationships with President Jefferson Davis and other senior generals and officials. Today he is commonly referred to as P.G.T. Beauregard, but during the war he rarely used his first name and signed correspondence as G.T. Beauregard.

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The Army of Northern Virginia was the first to design a flag with the cross of St. Andrew, and Gen. P. G. T. Beauregard proposed adopting a version of it as the standard battle flag of the Confederate army.
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G.T. Beauregard
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