Ward, Mrs. Samuel (Julia Rush),
mother of Mrs. Howe:
marriage and education: her charm of character, [5];
anecdotes of, [5],[6];
her tact, [6];
death, [10],[11].

Ward, Samuel,
brother of Mrs. Howe,
sent to Round Hill School, [5];
travels in Europe: at home, [45];
his defense of society,[46];
enlivens the austerity of the Ward household, [49];
establishes a home of his own, [53];
marries Emily Astor, [65];
his appearance and education, [67];
travels abroad, [68];
his lack of interest in business, his second marriage, [69];
goes to California, [70];
Indian adventures, [70], [71];
life in Washington: becomes "King of the Lobby," [72];
his friends, [72], [73];
his visit to Lord Rosebery: death at Pegli: volume of poems, [73].

Ward, Mrs. Samuel (Emily Astor),
her marriage, [65];
her fine voice, [74], [75].

Ward, Mrs. Samuel (Medora Grimes),
married, [69].

Ward, William, [19].

Waring, Col. George E., [404].

Washington,
Samuel Ward in, [72];
Charles Sumner's residence in, [180];
Count Gurowski in, [221]-[223];
Mrs. Eames's position there, [224];
funeral of Gurowski in, [226];
condition of, during the civil war, [269], [270];
Mrs. Howe lectures in, [308].

Washington, Gen. George, [9];
his attention to Mrs. Cutler, [35];
waited on by "Daughters of Liberty," [36];
birthday celebrated in Rome, [203].

Wasson, David A.,
a member of the Radical Club, [282];
his reply to Mr. Abbott, [289].

Webster, Daniel,
Theodore Parker's sermon on, 164;
defeated for the senatorship by Sumner, [218].