He was born in Mount Street,
Mayfair,
London, on 19 March 1765, the son of John Ward by his wife Rebecca Raphael. His father was a merchant in
Gibraltar and, also for many years, was chief clerk to the civil department of the ordnance in the garrison there. His mother belonged to a
Sephardic Jewish family from
Genoa. Robert Ward was educated first at
Robert Macfarlane's private school at
Walthamstow, and then at
Westminster School. He entered
Christ Church, Oxford, matriculating on 12 February 1783. In 1785 he became a student of the
Inner Temple. Ward now switched from the western to the northern circuit, to take advantage of his new connections. He had also a small common-law practice in London and before the privy council. He wrote another legal work to order, for the government. A reward in the shape of a judgeship in
Nova Scotia was offered Ward; then in June 1802, he received from Pitt an offer of a safe seat in the House of Commons. Ward was Member of Parliament (MP) for
Cockermouth from 1802 to 1806, On the formation of the
Duke of Portland's ministry of 1807, with the appointment of Mulgrave as
First Lord of the Admiralty, Ward was given a seat on the Admiralty board. Turning down an offer of a
Treasury lordship, Ward remained at the Admiralty till June 1811, when he was appointed
Clerk of the Ordnance. He served in this office under Mulgrave, who was head of the department, till 1823. He made a lengthy report on the state of the ordnance department in Ireland, which was published on 9 November 1816. The following year he made a survey of the eastern and southern coast of England for the same purpose, and in 1819 for the north of England. Retiring from the Commons after the session of 1823, he was appointed auditor of the
Civil List. Ward retired as a widower to Hyde House in 1823 to write his novel
Trentaine, or The Man of Refinement. He was married for a second time in 1828 to Jane Plumer, the widow and heiress of
William Plumer (1736–1822), adopted the additional name of Plumer and took up residence at
Gilston Park, Hertfordshire, which his wife had inherited from her late husband. His office as auditor of the Civil List was incorporated into the treasury in January 1831, and, again a widower, he spent time abroad. He was married for a third time in 1833 to Mary, the daughter of
General Sir George Anson. In 1845, the couple were living at 2
Upper Brook Street,
Mayfair. Early in 1846 he moved with his wife to the official residence of her father, who was the governor of
Chelsea Hospital, and died there on 13 August the same year. There is a portrait of Ward by
Henry Perronet Briggs, an engraving of which by
Charles Turner is prefixed to his
Memoirs. ==Works==