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Samuel Ward (lobbyist)

Samuel Cutler "Sam" Ward (January 27, 1814 — May 19, 1884),[1] was an American poet, politician, author, and gourmet, and in the years after the Civil War he was widely known as the "King of the Lobby." He combined delicious food, fine wines, and good conversation to create a new type of lobbying in Washington, DC — social lobbying — over which he reigned for more than a decade.[2]

Sam Ward
"Uncle Sam"
Ward as caricatured by Spy (Leslie Ward) in Vanity Fair, January 1880
Born(1814-01-27)January 27, 1814
New York City, U.S.
DiedMay 19, 1884(1884-05-19) (aged 70)
Naples, Italy
Resting placeTrinity Church Cemetery, New York City, New York, U.S.
EducationRound Hill School
Alma materColumbia College
University of Tübingen
Political partyDemocrat
Spouses
Emily Astor
(m. 1838; died 1841)
Medora Grymes
(m. 1843)
Parent(s)Samuel Ward III
Julia Rush Cutler Ward
RelativesJulia Ward (sister)
Samuel Ward, Jr. (grandfather)

Early life edit

Ward was born in New York City into an old New England family and was the eldest of seven children. His father, Samuel Ward III, was a highly respected banker with the firm of Prime, Ward & King. His grandfather, Col. Samuel Ward, Jr. (1756—1832), was a veteran of the Revolutionary War. Sam's mother, Julia Rush Cutler, was related to Francis Marion, the "Swamp Fox" of the American Revolution.

When Ward's mother died while he was a student at the Round Hill School in Northampton, Massachusetts, his father became morbidly obsessed with his children's moral, spiritual, and physical health. It wasn't until he was a student at Columbia College, where he joined the Philolexian Society and from which he graduated in 1831, that he began to learn about the wider world.

The more he learned, the less he wanted to become a banker. He convinced his father first to let him study in Europe. He stayed for four years, mastering several languages, enjoying high society, earning a doctorate degree from the University of Tübingen, and, in Heidelberg, meeting Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, who became his friend for life.

Career edit

He returned to New York, married Emily Astor, the eldest daughter of businessman William Backhouse Astor, Sr., in January 1838 and tried to settle into the life of a young banker.

His father died unexpectedly in November 1839. Next, Ward's brother Henry died suddenly of typhoid fever. In February 1841, his wife gave birth to a son, but within days both she and the newborn died. Ward was executor of his father's several-million-dollar estate, partner now in a prestigious banking firm, guardian of his three sisters, a widower, father of a toddler, and 27 years old.

He remarried in 1843, and urged on by his new wife, Ward began speculating on Wall Street. In September 1847, the financial world was stunned by news that Prime, Ward and Co. (King had wisely withdrawn) had collapsed.

California gold rush edit

Broke, Ward joined the '49ers rushing to California. He opened a store on the San Francisco waterfront; plowed his profits into real estate; claimed he made a quarter of a million dollars in three months; and lost it all when fire destroyed his wharves and warehouses. For a time he operated a ferry in the California wilderness; he alluded to mysterious schemes in Mexico and South America; and he bobbed up in New York a wealthy man again.

He plunged back into speculating and lost all of his money again, and with it went Medora's affection. This time he finagled a berth on a diplomatic mission to Paraguay. When he sailed home in 1859, he brought with him a secret agreement with the president of Paraguay to lobby on that country's behalf and headed to Washington, DC, to begin a new career.

Washington, D.C. edit

Ward was a Democrat with many friends and family in the South. He also believed in gradual emancipation, which put him at odds with his sister, Julia Ward, who would later write "The Battle Hymn of the Republic," and her husband, Samuel Gridley Howe. But there was no question that he would remain loyal to the Union. He put his dinner table at the disposal of his neighbor Secretary of State William Henry Seward. His elegant meals, which had already begun to be noticed, provided the perfect cover for Northerners and Southerners looking for neutral ground. In the early days of the war, Ward also traveled through the Confederacy with British journalist William Howard Russell, secretly sending letters full of military details back to Seward for which he surely would have been hanged or shot if exposed.

In 1862, he told Seward he was wrong to think that the Confederacy would have rejoined the Union had war been averted: "I differ from you. I found among the leaders a malignant bitterness and contemptuous hatred of the North which rendered this lesson necessary. within two years they would have formed entangling free trade and free navigation treaties with Europe, and have become a military power hostile to us."[3]

At the war's end, Ward's friends in high places, his savoir faire, his trove of anecdotes and recipes, and his talents for diplomacy augured well for his success in Washington, where the coals were hot and ready for an era of unprecedented growth and corruption that became known as "the Great Barbeque" or "The Gilded Age."

His entrée into the Johnson administration was Secretary of the Treasury Hugh McCulloch, who, faced with the colossal task of financial reconstruction, turned for help to Ward, who won for him a partial victory via cookery. Soon he was boasting to Julia that he was lobbying for insurance companies, telegraph companies, steamship lines, railroad lines, banking interests, mining interests, manufacturers, investors, and individuals with claims. Everyone, he crowed, wanted him. What they wanted was a seat at his famous table. His plan de campagne for lobbying often began with pâté de campagne, with a client footing the bill.

Sam took great care in composing the menu and guest list for his lobby dinners. If his client's interests were financial, members of the appropriate House and Senate committees received invitations. Mining and mineral rights? That was another group of players. He also orchestrated the talk around the table and used stories from his variegated life like condiments at his dinners.

The results? "Ambrosial nights," gushed one guest. "The climax of civilization," another enthused. But how did these delightful evenings serve his clients' ends? Subtly, and therein lies what set Sam Ward apart as a lobbyist. He claimed, and guests agreed, that he never talked directly about a "project" over dinner. Instead, he let a good food, wine, and company educate and convince, launch schemes or nip them in the bud. At these evenings new friendships developed, old ones were cemented, and Sam's list of men upon whom he could call lengthened.

This was the hallmark of what reporters labeled the "social lobby," and, by the late 1860s, Sam was hailed in newspapers across the country as its "King." And yet nowhere in this age of corruption and scandal—not in the press, in congressional testimony, or in his own letters or those of his clients—was there any hint that "the King" ever offered a bribe, engaged in blackmail, or used any other such methods to win his ends.

Later life edit

By the late 1870s, the "King of the Lobby" was slowing down. Although friends urged him to retire, the truth was that he couldn't. Sam was famous, but he was not rich. He lived well—very well indeed—but on other men's money. But then his luck changed once again. Years earlier, a wealthy Californian, James Keene, had been a poor, desperately ill teenager in the California gold fields and Sam had nursed him back to health. Keene never forgot his kindness. He manipulated railroad stock with his good "SAMaritan" in mind, and, when he came East in 1878, he gave Sam the profits—nearly $750,000.

With this dramatic change in his circumstances, the "King" abdicated his crown, decamped for New York, and naively backed unscrupulous strangers developing a grand new resort on Long Island. To no one's surprise but Sam's, the project failed and Sam's final fortune evaporated.

In order to evade creditors, Sam sailed for England. He bobbed up in London and was straightaway entertained by his many friends there and then moved on to Italy. During Lent in 1884, he became ill near Naples. On the morning of May 19, he dictated one last lighthearted letter and died.[1]

Personal life edit

 
Ann Hall, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Ward (Emily Astor), 1837. Miniature on ivory, 5 1/2 x 4 1/2 in. Private collection, Barrytown, New York

In January 1838, he married Emily Astor, eldest daughter of businessman William Backhouse Astor, Sr. and Margaret Rebecca Armstrong of the Livingston family. In November 1838, Emily gave birth to their daughter, Margaret Astor Ward, who married John Winthrop Chanler, son of John White Chanler and Elizabeth Shirreff Winthrop. Together, they had ten children, including William Astor Chanler, Sr., Lewis Stuyvesant Chanler, and Robert Winthrop Chanler. In February 1841, Emily gave birth to a son, but within days both she and the newborn died. Sam was executor of his father's several-million-dollar estate, partner now in a prestigious banking firm, guardian of his three sisters, a widower, father of a toddler, and 27 years old.

In 1843, Sam married Marie Angeline "Medora" Grymes.[4] Before their marriage, Medora had been courted by August Belmont,[5] who responded to by parking his opulent carriage in front of Ward's house. Reportedly, Ward wooed her away from Belmont, convincing her to end her engagement and marry him.[6] Medora, "the daughter of the celebrated lawyer, John R. Grymes of New Orleans," was considered "the most brilliant woman of her age that America has ever produced".[6] After bearing Ward two sons in quick succession, she went to Europe with their two sons for their education. She became prominent at court, and "was an especial favorite with both Napoleon III and Eugénie."[6]

Legacy edit

Within days of his passing, obituaries appeared in dozens of newspapers in the United States and England. The New York Times' obituary filled two entire columns. The New York Tribune correctly concluded that Sam Ward's "greatest achievement was establishing himself in Washington at the head of a profession which, from the lowest depths of disrepute, he raised almost to the dignity of a gentlemanly business....He never resorted to vulgar bribery; he excelled rather in composing the enmities and cementing the rickety friendships which play so large a part in political affairs, and he tempted men not with the purse, but with banquets, graced by vivacious company, and the conversation of wits and people of the world."

Sam's book of poetry, Lyrical Recreations, soon sank into obscurity. His hilarious anonymous magazine accounts of his stint in the gold fields were edited into a volume entitled Sam Ward in the Gold Rush in 1949. For years after his death, bar patrons ordered "Sam Wards," a drink he invented of cracked ice, a peel of lemon, and yellow Chartreuse. Restaurants carried Chicken Saute Sam Ward on their menus for decades. Locke-Ober in Boston served for years a dish called Mushrooms Sam Ward. He was immortalized by his nephew author Francis Marion Crawford as the delightful Mr. Bellingham in Dr. Claudius. And Sam's name has been kept alive by scholars speculating upon the identity of the anonymous author of "The Diary of a Public Man," published in 1879.

The social lobby that Sam Ward perfected also lives on. Although entertaining by lobbyists has been circumscribed by legislation, it endures because, as Sam understood, bringing people together over good food, wine, and conversation remains a fruitful way to conduct business. As Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. noted 100 years after Sam's death, ".....every close student of Washington knows half the essential business of government is still transacted in the evening.....where the sternest purpose lurks under the highest frivolity." Sam Ward's art was to guarantee that the guests who enjoyed his ambrosial nights never focused on the purpose that lurked beneath his perfectly cooked poisson.

References edit

  1. ^ a b "A Famous Lobbyist Dead; Sam Ward Dies in Italy in His Seventy-First Year. a Man Who Enjoyed Himself in Making Others Happy--Prince of Good Fellows and Friend of Great Men". The New York Times. 20 May 1884. Retrieved 20 March 2018.
  2. ^ "Ward, Samuel. Papers" (PDF). archives.nypl.org. The New York Public Library. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
  3. ^ Nevins, Allan. The War for the Union, vol. 1, The Improvised War, 1861-1862 (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1959), p. 53.
  4. ^ Jacob, Kathryn Allamong (2010). King of the Lobby: The Life and Times of Sam Ward, Man-About-Washington in the Gilded Age. JHU Press. ISBN 9780801893971. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
  5. ^ Black, David. The King of Fifth Avenue: The Fortunes of August Belmont. New York: Dial Press. p. 50. Retrieved 4 May 2023.
  6. ^ a b c "MEDORA GRYMES The Rare Beauty Who Broke Her Betrothals To Marry Sam Ward". The Morning Journal-Courier. 14 October 1885. p. 1. Retrieved 19 October 2020.

Bibliography edit

  • Crawford, Francis Marion. Dr. Claudius. New York: Macmillan, 1883.
  • Crofts, Daniel W. A Secession Crisis Enigma: William Henry Hurlbert and "The Diary of a Public Man." Baton Rouge: Louisiana State university Press, 2010.
  • Elliott, Maud Howe. Uncle Sam Ward and His Circle. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1938.
  • Jacob, Kathryn Allamong. King of the Lobby, the Life and Times of Sam Ward. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2010.
  • Thomas, Lately (pseudonym of Robert Steele). Sam Ward "King of the Lobby". Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1965.
  • Ward, Samuel. Lyrical Recreations. New York: D. Appleton, Boston, 1865.
  • Ward, Samuel. Sam Ward in the Gold Rush. (edited by Carvel Collins) Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1949.

Notes edit

    External links edit

    • Samuel Ward, Alias Carlos Lopez UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER LIBRARY BULLETIN Volume XII · Winter 1957 · Number 2
    • Works by or about Samuel Ward at Internet Archive

    samuel, ward, lobbyist, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, tone, style, reflect, encyclopedic, tone, used, wikipedia, wikipedia, guide, writ. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions December 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed December 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Samuel Cutler Sam Ward January 27 1814 May 19 1884 1 was an American poet politician author and gourmet and in the years after the Civil War he was widely known as the King of the Lobby He combined delicious food fine wines and good conversation to create a new type of lobbying in Washington DC social lobbying over which he reigned for more than a decade 2 Sam Ward Uncle Sam Ward as caricatured by Spy Leslie Ward in Vanity Fair January 1880Born 1814 01 27 January 27 1814New York City U S DiedMay 19 1884 1884 05 19 aged 70 Naples ItalyResting placeTrinity Church Cemetery New York City New York U S EducationRound Hill SchoolAlma materColumbia CollegeUniversity of TubingenPolitical partyDemocratSpousesEmily Astor m 1838 died 1841 wbr Medora Grymes m 1843 wbr Parent s Samuel Ward IIIJulia Rush Cutler WardRelativesJulia Ward sister Samuel Ward Jr grandfather Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 California gold rush 2 2 Washington D C 2 3 Later life 3 Personal life 3 1 Legacy 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 Notes 7 External linksEarly life editWard was born in New York City into an old New England family and was the eldest of seven children His father Samuel Ward III was a highly respected banker with the firm of Prime Ward amp King His grandfather Col Samuel Ward Jr 1756 1832 was a veteran of the Revolutionary War Sam s mother Julia Rush Cutler was related to Francis Marion the Swamp Fox of the American Revolution When Ward s mother died while he was a student at the Round Hill School in Northampton Massachusetts his father became morbidly obsessed with his children s moral spiritual and physical health It wasn t until he was a student at Columbia College where he joined the Philolexian Society and from which he graduated in 1831 that he began to learn about the wider world The more he learned the less he wanted to become a banker He convinced his father first to let him study in Europe He stayed for four years mastering several languages enjoying high society earning a doctorate degree from the University of Tubingen and in Heidelberg meeting Henry Wadsworth Longfellow who became his friend for life Career editHe returned to New York married Emily Astor the eldest daughter of businessman William Backhouse Astor Sr in January 1838 and tried to settle into the life of a young banker His father died unexpectedly in November 1839 Next Ward s brother Henry died suddenly of typhoid fever In February 1841 his wife gave birth to a son but within days both she and the newborn died Ward was executor of his father s several million dollar estate partner now in a prestigious banking firm guardian of his three sisters a widower father of a toddler and 27 years old He remarried in 1843 and urged on by his new wife Ward began speculating on Wall Street In September 1847 the financial world was stunned by news that Prime Ward and Co King had wisely withdrawn had collapsed California gold rush edit Broke Ward joined the 49ers rushing to California He opened a store on the San Francisco waterfront plowed his profits into real estate claimed he made a quarter of a million dollars in three months and lost it all when fire destroyed his wharves and warehouses For a time he operated a ferry in the California wilderness he alluded to mysterious schemes in Mexico and South America and he bobbed up in New York a wealthy man again He plunged back into speculating and lost all of his money again and with it went Medora s affection This time he finagled a berth on a diplomatic mission to Paraguay When he sailed home in 1859 he brought with him a secret agreement with the president of Paraguay to lobby on that country s behalf and headed to Washington DC to begin a new career Washington D C edit Ward was a Democrat with many friends and family in the South He also believed in gradual emancipation which put him at odds with his sister Julia Ward who would later write The Battle Hymn of the Republic and her husband Samuel Gridley Howe But there was no question that he would remain loyal to the Union He put his dinner table at the disposal of his neighbor Secretary of State William Henry Seward His elegant meals which had already begun to be noticed provided the perfect cover for Northerners and Southerners looking for neutral ground In the early days of the war Ward also traveled through the Confederacy with British journalist William Howard Russell secretly sending letters full of military details back to Seward for which he surely would have been hanged or shot if exposed In 1862 he told Seward he was wrong to think that the Confederacy would have rejoined the Union had war been averted I differ from you I found among the leaders a malignant bitterness and contemptuous hatred of the North which rendered this lesson necessary within two years they would have formed entangling free trade and free navigation treaties with Europe and have become a military power hostile to us 3 At the war s end Ward s friends in high places his savoir faire his trove of anecdotes and recipes and his talents for diplomacy augured well for his success in Washington where the coals were hot and ready for an era of unprecedented growth and corruption that became known as the Great Barbeque or The Gilded Age His entree into the Johnson administration was Secretary of the Treasury Hugh McCulloch who faced with the colossal task of financial reconstruction turned for help to Ward who won for him a partial victory via cookery Soon he was boasting to Julia that he was lobbying for insurance companies telegraph companies steamship lines railroad lines banking interests mining interests manufacturers investors and individuals with claims Everyone he crowed wanted him What they wanted was a seat at his famous table His plan de campagne for lobbying often began with pate de campagne with a client footing the bill Sam took great care in composing the menu and guest list for his lobby dinners If his client s interests were financial members of the appropriate House and Senate committees received invitations Mining and mineral rights That was another group of players He also orchestrated the talk around the table and used stories from his variegated life like condiments at his dinners The results Ambrosial nights gushed one guest The climax of civilization another enthused But how did these delightful evenings serve his clients ends Subtly and therein lies what set Sam Ward apart as a lobbyist He claimed and guests agreed that he never talked directly about a project over dinner Instead he let a good food wine and company educate and convince launch schemes or nip them in the bud At these evenings new friendships developed old ones were cemented and Sam s list of men upon whom he could call lengthened This was the hallmark of what reporters labeled the social lobby and by the late 1860s Sam was hailed in newspapers across the country as its King And yet nowhere in this age of corruption and scandal not in the press in congressional testimony or in his own letters or those of his clients was there any hint that the King ever offered a bribe engaged in blackmail or used any other such methods to win his ends Later life edit By the late 1870s the King of the Lobby was slowing down Although friends urged him to retire the truth was that he couldn t Sam was famous but he was not rich He lived well very well indeed but on other men s money But then his luck changed once again Years earlier a wealthy Californian James Keene had been a poor desperately ill teenager in the California gold fields and Sam had nursed him back to health Keene never forgot his kindness He manipulated railroad stock with his good SAMaritan in mind and when he came East in 1878 he gave Sam the profits nearly 750 000 With this dramatic change in his circumstances the King abdicated his crown decamped for New York and naively backed unscrupulous strangers developing a grand new resort on Long Island To no one s surprise but Sam s the project failed and Sam s final fortune evaporated In order to evade creditors Sam sailed for England He bobbed up in London and was straightaway entertained by his many friends there and then moved on to Italy During Lent in 1884 he became ill near Naples On the morning of May 19 he dictated one last lighthearted letter and died 1 Personal life edit nbsp Ann Hall Mr and Mrs Samuel Ward Emily Astor 1837 Miniature on ivory 5 1 2 x 4 1 2 in Private collection Barrytown New YorkIn January 1838 he married Emily Astor eldest daughter of businessman William Backhouse Astor Sr and Margaret Rebecca Armstrong of the Livingston family In November 1838 Emily gave birth to their daughter Margaret Astor Ward who married John Winthrop Chanler son of John White Chanler and Elizabeth Shirreff Winthrop Together they had ten children including William Astor Chanler Sr Lewis Stuyvesant Chanler and Robert Winthrop Chanler In February 1841 Emily gave birth to a son but within days both she and the newborn died Sam was executor of his father s several million dollar estate partner now in a prestigious banking firm guardian of his three sisters a widower father of a toddler and 27 years old In 1843 Sam married Marie Angeline Medora Grymes 4 Before their marriage Medora had been courted by August Belmont 5 who responded to by parking his opulent carriage in front of Ward s house Reportedly Ward wooed her away from Belmont convincing her to end her engagement and marry him 6 Medora the daughter of the celebrated lawyer John R Grymes of New Orleans was considered the most brilliant woman of her age that America has ever produced 6 After bearing Ward two sons in quick succession she went to Europe with their two sons for their education She became prominent at court and was an especial favorite with both Napoleon III and Eugenie 6 Legacy edit Within days of his passing obituaries appeared in dozens of newspapers in the United States and England The New York Times obituary filled two entire columns The New York Tribune correctly concluded that Sam Ward s greatest achievement was establishing himself in Washington at the head of a profession which from the lowest depths of disrepute he raised almost to the dignity of a gentlemanly business He never resorted to vulgar bribery he excelled rather in composing the enmities and cementing the rickety friendships which play so large a part in political affairs and he tempted men not with the purse but with banquets graced by vivacious company and the conversation of wits and people of the world Sam s book of poetry Lyrical Recreations soon sank into obscurity His hilarious anonymous magazine accounts of his stint in the gold fields were edited into a volume entitled Sam Ward in the Gold Rush in 1949 For years after his death bar patrons ordered Sam Wards a drink he invented of cracked ice a peel of lemon and yellow Chartreuse Restaurants carried Chicken Saute Sam Ward on their menus for decades Locke Ober in Boston served for years a dish called Mushrooms Sam Ward He was immortalized by his nephew author Francis Marion Crawford as the delightful Mr Bellingham in Dr Claudius And Sam s name has been kept alive by scholars speculating upon the identity of the anonymous author of The Diary of a Public Man published in 1879 The social lobby that Sam Ward perfected also lives on Although entertaining by lobbyists has been circumscribed by legislation it endures because as Sam understood bringing people together over good food wine and conversation remains a fruitful way to conduct business As Arthur M Schlesinger Jr noted 100 years after Sam s death every close student of Washington knows half the essential business of government is still transacted in the evening where the sternest purpose lurks under the highest frivolity Sam Ward s art was to guarantee that the guests who enjoyed his ambrosial nights never focused on the purpose that lurked beneath his perfectly cooked poisson References edit a b A Famous Lobbyist Dead Sam Ward Dies in Italy in His Seventy First Year a Man Who Enjoyed Himself in Making Others Happy Prince of Good Fellows and Friend of Great Men The New York Times 20 May 1884 Retrieved 20 March 2018 Ward Samuel Papers PDF archives nypl org The New York Public Library Retrieved 30 August 2017 Nevins Allan The War for the Union vol 1 The Improvised War 1861 1862 New York Charles Scribner s Sons 1959 p 53 Jacob Kathryn Allamong 2010 King of the Lobby The Life and Times of Sam Ward Man About Washington in the Gilded Age JHU Press ISBN 9780801893971 Retrieved 30 August 2017 Black David The King of Fifth Avenue The Fortunes of August Belmont New York Dial Press p 50 Retrieved 4 May 2023 a b c MEDORA GRYMES The Rare Beauty Who Broke Her Betrothals To Marry Sam Ward The Morning Journal Courier 14 October 1885 p 1 Retrieved 19 October 2020 Bibliography editCrawford Francis Marion Dr Claudius New York Macmillan 1883 Crofts Daniel W A Secession Crisis Enigma William Henry Hurlbert and The Diary of a Public Man Baton Rouge Louisiana State university Press 2010 Elliott Maud Howe Uncle Sam Ward and His Circle New York The Macmillan Company 1938 Jacob Kathryn Allamong King of the Lobby the Life and Times of Sam Ward Baltimore The Johns Hopkins University Press 2010 Thomas Lately pseudonym of Robert Steele Sam Ward King of the Lobby Boston Houghton Mifflin Company 1965 Ward Samuel Lyrical Recreations New York D Appleton Boston 1865 Ward Samuel Sam Ward in the Gold Rush edited by Carvel Collins Stanford Stanford University Press 1949 Notes edithttps web archive org web 20140714151850 http freepages history rootsweb ancestry com dav4is people WARD743 htmExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Samuel Cutler Ward Samuel Ward Alias Carlos Lopez UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER LIBRARY BULLETIN Volume XII Winter 1957 Number 2 Works by or about Samuel Ward at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Samuel Ward lobbyist amp oldid 1165564813, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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