William Ward

Deceased Person

1807 – 1889

53

Who was William Ward?

William Ward was a Victorian Mayor of the city of Oxford, in England.

William Ward was the son of Henry Ward, who himself was the son of Abraham Ward from Warwickshire. His mother was Sarah Ward, the daughter of Abraham Ward from Stafford and Oxford.

Ward became a coal merchant as his father had been before him. His business was based at the canal wharf on the Oxford Canal in Jericho, Oxford.

William Ward married Harriet Timmis on 20 July 1830. They lived at the junction of St John Street and Alfred Street in central Oxford. The house is now 22 St John Street. Eleven children were born to them in this house between 1832 and 1847, all baptised at St Giles' Church nearby.

Ward was Mayor of Oxford in 1851–2 and again in 1861–2.

In 1868, Ward was elected the first President of the newly formed Oxford Constitutional Association. He became known as the father of modern Conservatism in Oxford. Ward was also a leader in the Oxford Movement. He donated the land in Jericho for the building of St Barnabas' Church in 1869.

Ward erected a drinking fountain on the site of the spring at Walton Well, located in Walton Well Road, with a plaque dated 1885.

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Born
1807
Died
Jul 20, 1889

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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