As Lord of Dudley, John Ward inherited mineral bearing lands in the
Black Country region of England which included coal and limestone mines and furnaces. An agreement to construct a rail line was signed in 1827 by
James Foster, a local ironmaster, and Francis Downing, the mineral agent of John William Ward. The line connected some of the coal pits owned by the Dudley estate to the
Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal. The line opened in June 1829 and was operated by the early steam locomotive
Agenoria. This line was later connected to a network of private railways owned by John Ward's successors, which became known as the
Earl of Dudley’s Railway. John William Ward inherited estates in Jamaica from his grandmother Mary, Viscountess Dudley and Ward, which included enslaved people. After emancipation of the slaves in 1833, the Dudley estate received compensation for the freed slaves (the Earl having died by this time). ==Works==