Ware graduated from
Wellesley College in 1972. She matriculated in the graduate program in history at
Harvard University in the fall of 1972, completing her A.M in 1973. Ware completed the Ph.D. in 1978, writing a dissertation about feminists in the New Deal under the direction of
Barbara Miller Solomon, a pioneering scholar in American women's history. A second mentor was political historian Frank Freidel. Ware began her career in teaching as a lecturer at Harvard from 1973 to 1978, and in the years her following completion of the Ph.D., taught at
Tufts University, the
University of New Hampshire, and Harvard. In 1986, she was appointed as an assistant professor of history at
New York University. Ware attained the rank of professor with
tenure before she left NYU in 1995 to pursue a full-time career in writing, editing and speaking. Since 1995 she has taught at Harvard and at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In 2014, upon the retirement of historian
Nancy Cott, Ware was appointed as Senior Advisor to the
Schlesinger Library at the
Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University. Ware held this post until
Jane Kamensky was appointed Carl and Lily Pforzheimer Foundation Director in May 2015. In her early work as a political historian, Ware established herself as an authority on women in the federal government during the
New Deal. Her revised dissertation,
Beyond Suffrage: Women and the New Deal (Harvard University Press, 1981) was the first historical
monograph to show the pivotal role played by feminist progressive reformers like
Frances Perkins and
Molly Dewson in implementing
social welfare at the federal level. As
Nancy F. Cott wrote in a review of Ware's book, perhaps its most vital contribution to the field of
women's history was its emphasis on "historical generation" and its recognition that political women "relied on each other for mutual support, advice and patronage"—much as political men did. Ware's research on women has been influential across fields. Political scientist
Jo Freeman rated Ware's follow-up volume,
Partner and I: Molly Dewson, Feminism, and New Deal Politics, as "excellent". Ware showed how Dewson not only brought hundreds of women into the federal government, but also revolutionized presidential campaign practices to such an extent that presidential advisor
James Farley referred to her as "the General". Since becoming an independent scholar, Ware has published and edited numerous books. In 2001, she became the general editor of
Notable American Women, a multi-volume reference work that documents the history of women in the United States, Under Ware's direction,
Harvard University Press published Volume 5 of this crucial biographical resource in 2004. Since 2012, Ware has been the general editor of
American National Biography Online, published by
Oxford University Press. Ware serves as Chair of the Associate Board of Clio Visualizing History, a nonprofit group dedicated to creating innovative online history exhibits designed to attract students and educators and appeal to a wide public audience. She was part of the collaborative team that created and she wrote the text for
Click! The Ongoing Feminist Revolution and a companion exhibit to her book
Why They Marched: Untold Stories of the Women Who Fought for the Right to Vote (Harvard, 2019) was published as
Visualizing Votes for Women: Nineteen Objects from the 19th Amendment Campaign. Ware is married to Donald R. Ware, head of the
Intellectual Property Department at Foley Hoag LLP in Boston. == Books ==