Various members of the Venable clan owned slaves in Prince Edward County in 1787. However, only his eldest brother Samuel W. Venable (1756–1821) actually lived in Prince Edward County in 1787, having married the daughter of Judge Paul Carrington (and was taxed on 15 slaves (seven adults and eight children), four horses and 27 other livestock). Abraham B. Venable owned eight slaves (four adults and four children) in Prince Edward County, as well as three horses and nine cattle. Their father Nathaniel Venable held a license to operate an ordinary (tavern/inn) in Prince Edward County and paid the taxes for William Anderson and Jessee Hamblet (probable overseers), as well as for 26 slaves (14 adults and 12 children), 8 horses and 44 other livestock. In the 1810 census for Prince Edward County, Abraham B. Venable owned 31 slaves, most of the six men with that surname in the county. Admitted to the bar in September 1784, Venable would come to develop a private legal practice centered at
Farmville, the county seat of
Prince Edward County, Virginia. Other members of the local bar included Richard N. Venable, Patrick Henry and Paul Carrington Jr. who were admitted in 1786 and 1788, respectively. Charles Venable was the Prince Edward County sheriff when Virginia became a Commonwealth in 1776, succeeded by Nathaniel Venable, then other men. Abraham B. Venable succeeded Robert Lawson as deputy Attorney General for the county in April 1788, and resigned the following May, succeeded by his cousin and fellow Princeton graduate, Joseph Venable. Charles Venable became one of the county's 22 magistrates in 1785, but he and Thomas Haskins were removed in July 1787 pursuant to a warrant from Lieutenant Governor Beverly Randolph. At the Virginia Ratification Convention of 1788, Patrick Henry and Robert Lawson represented Prince Edward County. Meanwhile, Abraham B. Venable was becoming involved in politics, and won election to the
Second Congress, serving from 1791 to 1799. There, he became chairman of the
Committee on Elections in the
Fourth Congress. After his congressional stint, Venable won election and thrice re-election as one of Prince Edward County's representative in the Virginia House of Delegates, mostly alongside
Peter Johnston (who would ultimately become the body's Speaker), serving from 1801 until taking his interim U.S. Senate seat. Fellow legislators in the Virginia General Assembly elected Venable to the
Senate to fill a vacancy, serving from 1803 to 1804, when he resigned (after his father's death) to practice law in Richmond. A friend of Thomas Jefferson, Venable helped found and became
president of
Bank of Virginia. ==Death and legacy==