After the Civil War, Ware moved back to Burlington, Iowa, where he briefly edited the
Burlington Hawkeye, a local paper. He moved to Kansas in May 1867, taking up a substantial acreage in
Cherokee County. He moved to
Fort Scott, Kansas, in September 1870 after receiving a job offer at the
Fort Scott Monitor. In 1872, Ware became editor of the
Monitor. In 1874, he began publishing poems under the pseudonym "Ironquill". His "The Washerwoman's Song", first published in 1876, was widely popular. == Politics and law ==