Benjamin Tasker Sr.

Benjamin Tasker Sr. (c. 1690 – June 19, 1768) was the 21st Proprietary Governor of Maryland from 1752 to 1753. He also occupied a number of other significant colonial offices, including, on various occasions, being elected Mayor of Annapolis.

Career
Benjamin Tasker was born around 1690 in Calvert County, Maryland, to Rebecca Isaacs (née Brooke) and Thomas Tasker. 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 October 1731, Tasker was one of the founders of the Baltimore Ironworks Company.

In 1740, Governor Samuel Ogle was dispatched to England following England's declaration of war against Spain. He left Tasker with his power of attorney and in addition "the task of supervising the construction of a new house at Belair."

Family
Tasker married Ann Bladen, daughter of William Bladen Attorney-General of Maryland, in on July 31, 1711. They had ten children:
 * William Tasker (1713-1715)
 * Bladen Tasker (1719-1721)
 * Benjamin Tasker Jr. (1720–1760), Mayor of Annapolis and slave trader.
 * Bladen Tasker (1722-1723).
 * Anne Tasker (1728–1817), married the much older Gov. Samuel Ogle (1694–1752).
 * Rebecca Tasker (1724–1797) married Daniel Dulany the Younger in 1749.
 * Elizabeth Tasker (1726–1789) married Christopher Lowndes (1713–1785), merchant of Bladensburg, Maryland and slave trading partner of Benjamin Tasker Jr. in 1747.
 * Bladen Tasker (1730-1731).
 * Frances Ann Tasker (1738–1787), married the wealthy planter Robert Carter (of Nominy, Westmoreland County, Virginia) at the age of sixteen, in 1754.

Death and legacy
Tasker died on June 19, 1768, in Annapolis. He was buried in St. Anne's Churchyard in Annapolis. His tombstone reads:

Legacy
Benjamin Tasker Middle School, in Bowie, Maryland, is named after him.