Ward, Annie.
See Mailliard, Mrs. Adolph.
Ward, Frances Marion,
sent to Round Hill School, [5];
at home, [45].
Ward, Henry,
uncle of Mrs. Howe,
a lover of music and good cheer, [19].
Ward, Henry,
brother of Mrs. Howe,
sent to Round Hill School, [5];
at home, [45];
his character, [53];
death, [54].
Ward, John,
uncle of Mrs. Howe, [19];
a practical man, [20];
notes of his life, [54]-[55];
anecdote of, [66].
Ward, Louisa,
wife of Thomas Crawford, [45];
at Rome, [73];
her beauty, [137];
her journey to Rome with Mrs. Ward, [190];
established at Villa Negroni, [192];
marries Luther Terry: visited in 1867 by Mrs. Howe, [313];
goes to the consecration of Leo XIII., [425].
Ward, Richard, [19].
Ward, Gov. Samuel,
of Rhode Island, [3], note.
Ward, Samuel,
grandfather of Mrs. Howe,
appearance and manner, [19];
her father's grief at his death, [50].
Ward, Samuel,
father of Mrs. Howe,
his birth and descent, [3];
grief at his wife's death, [11];
care for his children, [11];
plans for their education, [13];
religious views become more stringent, [15];
gives up wine, tobacco, and cards, [18]-[20];
his fine taste, [45];
generosity: discussion with his son regarding social intercourse, [46];
his family habits, [47];
his observance of Sunday, [48];
ideas of propriety; religious faith, [49];
business ability, [50];
carries New York State through the crisis of 1837, [50], [51];
his early experience in Wall St., [51];
his death, [52];
his careful restraint of his daughter, [52], [53];
his portrait in the New York Bank of Commerce, [55];
condemns Goethe's "Faust," [59];
displeased with his son Samuel's work, [69].