Benjamin Tasker, Sr.
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Benjamin Tasker (1690 – June 19, 1768) was the Provincial Governor of Maryland from 1752 to 1753.[1]
Tasker became a naval officer at Annapolis, Maryland in 1719 and served until 1742. He also served in the municipal and provincial government as: member and president of the Governor's Council, 1722-1768; member of the Lower House of the Maryland Legislature, 1715-1717, 1720-1722; member of the Upper House, 1722-1766, 1768; President of the Upper House, 1734-1766, 1768; Annapolis alderman, 1720, 1754-1766; Mayor of Annapolis, 1721-1722, 1726-1727, 1747-1748, 1750-1753, 1756-1757; President of the Council in 1752; acting governor of Maryland, 1753.
In 1731, Tasker was one of the founders of the Baltimore Ironworks Company.
Tasker married Ann Bladen in 1711.[1] They had a son Benjamin Tasker, Jr. (1720-1760). Their daughter Anne Tasker (1723-1817), married the much older Samuel Ogle (1694-1752).[2]
On his passing in 1768, Benjamin Tasker was buried in St. Anne's Churchyard in Annapolis.[3] His tombstone reads:
"Here are deposited the remains of the Honourable Benjamin Tasker who departed this 1life the 19th of June AD 1768 in the 78th year of his Age which though of a constitution naturally weak and tender he attained through the efficiency of an exemplary temperance At the time of his decease he was President of the Council a station he had occupied for thirty two years The offices of Agent and receiver general and judge of the prerogative Court he successively exercised Such were his qualities his probity equanimity candor benevolence that no one was more respected more beloved So diffusive and pure his humanity so singular the influence of his deportment that he was no one's enemy nor any one his These tombs are erected in the year 1826 in the place of the original ones which have decayed by the liberality and filial affection of Mrs. Ann Dulany of the City of London still longer to perpetuate the memory of those of her respected ancestors whose remains are deposited beneath them."[3]
[edit] References
- ^ a b Richardson, Hester Dorsey (1903). Side-lights on Maryland History: With Sketches of Early Maryland Families. Baltimore, Maryland: Williams and Wilkins Company, 17-18. ISBN 0806302968.
- ^ Richardson, Hester Dorsey (1903). Side-lights on Maryland History: With Sketches of Early Maryland Families. Baltimore, Maryland: Williams and Wilkins Company, 190-193. ISBN 0806302968.
- ^ a b Ridgely, Helen West (1908). Historic Graves Of Maryland And The District Of Columbia With The Inscriptions Appearing On The Tombstones In Most Of The Counties Of The State And In Washington And Georgetown. New York: The Grafton Press, 5. OCLC 23907948.
Preceded by Thomas Larkin |
Mayor of Annapolis 1721–1722 |
Succeeded by Vachel Denton |
Preceded by Vachel Denton |
Mayor of Annapolis 1726–1727 |
Succeeded by Vachel Denton |
Preceded by Michael MacNamara |
Mayor of Annapolis 1747–1748 |
Succeeded by John Ross |
Preceded by John Bullen |
Mayor of Annapolis 1750–1753 |
Succeeded by Michael MacNamara |
Preceded by Samuel Ogle |
Provincial Governor of Maryland 1752–1753 |
Succeeded by Horatio Sharpe |
Preceded by John Brice, Jr. |
Mayor of Annapolis 1756–1757 |
Succeeded by John Bullen |