Ware was best known for performing and composing violin music with Hungarian and Slavic themes. She played the "Old Adam" violin, an instrument once owned by a German concertmeister, Franz Adam. She also played a
Stradivarius violin, the "Mr. Soames Strad". She toured in the United States in the 1910s, sometimes including her own compositions in the program. Ware made several recordings in 1914, 1915, and 1916, some of them with pianist Francis Moore, for the
Victor and
Edison companies. She had a summer home, "Fiddler's Camp", in
Arden, Delaware. and formed a chamber trio with two other women, cellist Margaret Day and pianist Eugenia Cerniafskaya. In 1948, after her second husband died, she briefly took over his work as tour director of the
United States Marine Band. In the 1950s she gave performances mostly near her home in Delaware. Helen Ware joined the Communist Labor Party of America when her mother founded the party, in 1919. She was sometimes confused with actress
Helen Ware, or composer
Harriet Ware. == Publications ==