Edwin Ridsdale Tate (1862-1922) was a British antiquary, artist and architect based in York.[1][2]
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Tate was born in York, where his birth was registered in the Bootham sub-district. For a time, he worked for local architectural firm R. Gould and C. Fisher. Before returning to York, he also worked in London and Carlisle.[3] In 1916, he married Mary Louise Elsworth Wray at Holy Trinity, Micklegate.[2] He died in York, and his death was registered in the East York district.[4]
The buildings for which Tate is best-known are an anchorage attached to All Saints, North Street (1910) and the Tempest Anderson Hall (1912). Both were built of reinforced concrete.
In 1915 Tate was commissioned by David Leith Presley, editor of the York Herald newspaper, to draw a panoramic bird’s eye view of York as it looked in the 15th century. This was to celebrate the 20,000th copy of the York Gazette, and was published in that newspaper on May 18, 1915. Tate’s pen and ink drawing showed the city with its castle and water-filled moat, and more than 40 churches within the city walls, and captured something of what the city would have looked like during its medieval heyday, including