Magnus Tate


Magnus Tate was a Virginia lawyer, farmer and politician who served in the Virginia General Assembly and the U.S. Representative.

Early and family life

Born in Berkeley County, Virginia, Tate studied law. He was initially a Quaker and a member of the Hopewell Friends Meeting in Frederick County, Virginia in 1776, but soon afterward Quakers were forbidden to own slaves. Tate also loved horses and dogs and the fox chase.
He married and had a large family, including a son, Magnus Tate, Jr., who also served in the Virginia House of Delegates. In the 1820 Census, Tate owned 11 enslaved persons, and his household also included 13 free white persons, 5 of them under age 16 but only 2 older than 25.

Career

A farmer who lived on the Dry Run Road about three miles outside Martinsburg, the Berkeley County seat, Tate was also admitted to the bar. He practiced law in what later became the Eastern Panhandle of West Virginia.
Berkeley County voters first elected Tate to the Virginia House of Delegates in 1797 and re-elected him in 1798. He was appointed justice of the Berkeley County Court on May 19, 1798, thus becoming the county magistrate. He again won election to the House of Delegates in 1809 and 1810.
Tate was elected as a Federalist to the Fourteenth Congress with 63.35% of the vote, defeating fellow Federalist Francis White. Tate won election as the Berkeley County sheriff in 1819 and again in 1820.

Death and legacy

He died near Martinsburg, Virginia on March 30, 1823. His son Magnus Tate Jr. also became a member of the Virginia House of Delegates in 1802 and was re-elected in 1803.