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  1. Artemas Ward Jr. (January 9, 1762 – October 7, 1847), like his father, Artemas Ward, was a United States representative from Massachusetts. He served in the Thirteenth Congress and Fourteenth Congress (1813–1817). He was a member of the Federalist Party. Biography. Ward was born in Shrewsbury in the Province of Massachusetts Bay ...

  2. Artemis Ward (1727-1800) fue un importante general americano en la Guerra de Independencia de los Estados Unidos y congresista por Massachusetts. Es considerado un líder político muy efectivo; el presidente John Adams como "...universalmente estimado, muy querido y leal a su armada y su país."

  3. Artemas Ward was born May 20, 1848 in New York City, In 1863 he served with the New York State soldiers’ depot. Later he moved to Philadelphia entering the Cuban export and import business. In 1872 he married Rebecca Robinson and they had one son, Artemas Ward Jr. Ward founded and published “The Philadelphia Grocer”.

  4. Artemas Ward 1762. In addition to being the first Commander-in-Chief of the army during the American Revolution, General Ward served publicly in many ways throughout his lifetime. The Museum is named in his honor. For more information, see his biography.

  5. March 3, 1979. General Artemas Ward is a bronze statue of American Revolutionary War general Artemas Ward. It is sited in the center of Ward Circle, which was specifically made for the statue, at the intersection of Nebraska and Massachusetts Avenue in the American University Park neighborhood of Washington, D.C.

  6. 10 de abr. de 2024 · Artemas Ward was a general in the Massachusetts militia at the outset of the American Revolution. He assumed command of the colonial forces during the early days of the Siege of Boston and directed operations until General George Washington arrived in July 1775. General Artemas Ward played a key role in the early days of the Revolutionary War.