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Ellis Ward was born the youngest son of Isaac Ward and his wife Winifred on September 13, 1846, at Newbury-on-Hudson in New York's Hudson River Valley. Ellis Ward and his eight brothers rowed regularly in the Hudson River's Newburgh Bay from the 1850s through the 1870s and became one of the most famous families in the history of the sport of rowing. His life illustrates many aspects of rowing as it was developing in America during the nineteenth century. Here along the Hudson River, rowboats were used as transportation, even as ferries, throughout the nineteenth century. During these early days of the sport of rowing in America, rowing clubs sprung up in towns like Newburgh and Poughkeepsie as early as the 1830s. For several decades, semiprofessional races of skilled oarsmen, with cash prizes awarded to the winners, drew large crowds and considerable betting. These races were discontinued in the the early 1870s, after incidents such as a disputed 1865 race in Poughkeepsie that ended with a rampaging mob and the death of a spectator. As professional racing declined, college rowing became more prominent. It was in this environment that Ellis Ward came of age.
Although Isaac was described as a laborer in 1850, ten years later the census listed him as a fisherman, with real estate valued at $1,000; in 1860 he lived with his wife and four of his children. Gilbert, then 18, was now a boatman. Ellis, the youngest, was just thirteen. By 1860, Ellis Ward's older brothers were already competing as semiprofessional rowers. "Josh" Ward won many singles titles, including the U.S. professional single sculls title on October 11, 1859, and set world records which still stand to this day. Ellis took up competitive racing at age 17, participating in a "boys" race at Cornwall-on-the-Hudson. Soon he joined three of his brothers (Ellis, Henry, Josh and Gilbert) to race as a team; their many wins included the 1865 professional four-oared championship of America and a world title in 1871 at Saratoga. Newspapers from the 1860s and 1870s contained numerous accounts of races rowed by the Ward brothers either singly or as a crew. All four brothers are in the Rowing Hall of Fame. The Ward brothers earned prize money for their efforts. In 1875 Josh Ward participated in a four-oar race held in New York City between an English and an American crew. The winning crew won $5,000 and the title of world champions. The race's sponsor Bernard Biglin selected Josh and William Henry "Hank" Ward, along with John Biglin and Thomas Elliott, for the American crew. In 1880 Ellis Ward lost a single scull race in Philadelphia-and a prize of $300; the National Police Gazette of November 6, 1880, reported that New Brunswick rower R. J. Nagle came in first on the three-mile course.
In 1879, when Ellis Ward was thirty-three years old, he began coaching crew at Penn. His tenure lasted until 1912, with a few short breaks. In 1887 Ward resigned for the season because of controversy over the stroke he trained his athletes to use; a graduate student acted as trainer that year, but Ward was back the following season. Ward was also absent for a four year period from 1892 until 1895 when he trained rowers at the Manhattan Athletic Club in New York City.
Ellis Ward was one of the most prominent rowing coaches, if not the most prominent coach, in America during these years, with sixty-five victories to his credit. Ward's coaching career at Penn reveals much about the development of college athletics in America. When Ward began as Penn's crew coach, he was not employed by the University. The United States census for 1880, the year after he began coaching, lists him as living in Philadelphia with his wife Martha and three small children; his occupation is given as "oarmaker." At this time the University provided no financial support for student athletics; there were no athletic facilities and no paid athletic staff. The College Boat Club and the Alumni Athletic Association, not the University, would have provided any funds to Ward during his first decade as trainer and coach. Coaching was just one manifestation of Ward's dedication to rowing. As coaching positions ebbed and flowed, he maintained his craftsman skills and to those he returned at the end of his life. In 1910, when Ellis F. Ward and Martha Ward, plus her sister, were living near the Delaware River at 5924 Tulip Street in the Wissinoming section of Philadelphia, Ellis Ward had listed his primary occupation as coach at the University. In 1920 he and Martha were still living in the house on Tulip Street, along with their son Riddon H. Ward; the seventy-three year old father and the forty-two year old son both listed their occupations as oar-making. Ellis Ward died in his Tulip Street home July 25, 1922. | |
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