Sneha Girap (Editor)

William Hayes Ward

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Name
  
William Ward


William Hayes Ward William Hayes Ward Abbeville Institute

Died
  
1916, South Berwick, Maine, United States

Education
  
Amherst College, Phillips Academy

Books
  
The Seal Cylinders of Wester, What I Believe and why, The Hittite Gods in Hittite Art, Micah - Zephaniah - Nahum

William Hayes Ward (June 25, 1835 - August 29, 1916) was an American clergyman, editor, and Orientalist, born at Abington, Mass.

He graduated from Phillips Academy, Andover, in 1852, Amherst College in 1856, and the Andover Theological Seminary in 1859. He served as pastor of a church at Oskaloosa, Kans. in 1859-60, and as professor of Latin at Ripon College in Wisconsin (1865–68). He joined the editorial staff of the New York Independent in 1868 and remained with the Independent thereafter, rising by degrees to editor in chief (1896–1913), and then honorary editor. He directed the Wolfe Expedition to Babylonia (1884–85) and was twice president of the American Oriental Society (1890–94 and 1909–10). He was the father of Herbert D. Ward. His works include:

  • The World's Christian Hymns (1883), with his sister Susan Hayes Ward
  • Report of the Wolfe Expedition to Babylonia (1885)
  • Biography of Sidney Lanier (1885)
  • Cylinders and Other Ancient Oriental Seals in the Library of J. Pierpont Morgan (1909)
  • The Seal Cylinders of Western Asia (1910)
  • What I Believe and Why (1915)
  • References

    William Hayes Ward Wikipedia