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Lester Frank Ward (June 18, 1841 – April 18, 1913) was an American botanist, paleontologist, and sociologist. The first president of the American Sociological Association, James Q. Dealey characterized Ward as a "great pioneer" in the development of American sociology, with contemporaries referring to him as "the Nestor of American sociologists". His 1883 work Dynamic Sociology was influential in establishing sociology as a distinct field in the United States. However, despite its initial impact his work was quickly sidelined during the later institutionalization and development of American sociology.
Lester Frank Ward | |
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![]() Lester Ward, age 43 | |
Born | Lester Frank Ward June 18, 1841 Joliet, Illinois, U.S. |
Died | April 18, 1913 Washington, D.C., U.S. | (aged 71)
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Known for | Paleobotany, Telesis, sociology, and the introduction of sociology as field of higher education |
Spouse(s) | Elizabeth Carolyn Vought (Lizzie); Rosamond Asenath Simons |
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Biography
Childhood: 1841–1858
Most, if not all of what is known about Ward's early life comes from the biography, Lester F. Ward: A Personal Sketch, written by Emily Palmer Cape in 1922. Lester Frank Ward was born in Joliet, Illinois. He was the youngest of 10 children born to Justus Ward and his wife Silence Rolph Ward. Justus Ward (d. 1858) was of New England colonial descent and worked on farms in addition to being an itinerant mechanic. Silence Ward was the daughter of a clergyman; she was educated and fond of literature. The family lived in poverty during Ward's early years.
When Ward was one year old, the family moved closer to Chicago, to Cass, now known as Downers Grove, Illinois about twenty-three miles from Lake Michigan. The family then moved to a homestead in nearby St. Charles, Illinois where Ward's father built a saw mill business making railroad ties. As a child, Ward had to worked in farms, mills, and factories to supplement his family income, giving him little time for his education. Ward first attended a formal school at St. Charles, Kane County, Illinois, in 1850 when he was nine years old. He was known as Frank Ward to his classmates and friends and showed a great enthusiasm for books and learning, liberally supplementing his education with outside reading. Four years after Ward started attending school, his parents, along with Lester and an older brother, Erastus, traveled to Iowa in a covered wagon for a new life on the frontier.
Starting college: 1858–1862
In 1858, Justus Ward unexpectedly died, and the boys returned the family to the old homestead they still owned in St. Charles. Ward's estranged mother, who lived two miles away with Ward's sister, disapproved of the move, and wanted the boys to stay in Iowa to continue their father's work. The two brothers lived together for a short time in the old family homestead they dubbed "Bachelor's Hall," doing farm work to earn a living, and encouraged each other to pursue an education and abandon their father's life of physical labor.
In late 1858, the two brothers moved to Pennsylvania at the invitation of Lester Frank's oldest brother Cyrenus (9 years Lester Frank's senior), who was starting a business making wagon wheel hubs and needed workers. The brothers saw this as an opportunity to move closer to civilization and to eventually attend college.
The business failed, however, and Lester Frank, who still didn't have the money to attend college, found a job teaching in a small country school; in the summer months he worked as a farm laborer. He finally saved enough money to attend college and enrolled in the Susquehanna Collegiate Institute in 1860. While he was at first self-conscious about his spotty formal education and self learning, he soon found that his knowledge compared favorably to his classmates', and he was rapidly promoted.
Civil War service and further studies: 1862–1873
Ward was a "fervent opponent of slavery" and enlisted in the Union Army to fight in the Civil War in August, 1862. He suffered three gunshot wounds in the Battle of Chancellorsville and was discharged from service on November 18, 1864 due to physical disability. After the war, Ward moved to Washington. In Washington, he worked at the Treasury Department from 1865 until 1872. Ward attended Columbian College, now the George Washington University, and graduating in 1869 with the degree of A.B. In 1871, after he received the degree of LL.B, he was admitted to the Bar of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia. However, Ward never practiced law. In 1873, he completed his A.M. degree.
Government work and research in Washington, DC
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2Wlc0dmRHaDFiV0l2Wmk5bVlpOVhZWEprWDJGdVpGOW1iM056YVd4ZmRISmxaVjkwY25WdWEzTXVhbkJuTHpNMU1IQjRMVmRoY21SZllXNWtYMlp2YzNOcGJGOTBjbVZsWDNSeWRXNXJjeTVxY0djPS5qcGc=.jpg)
Ward concentrated on his work as a researcher for the federal government. At that time almost all of the basic research in such fields as geography, paleontology, archaeology and anthropology were concentrated in Washington, DC, and a job as a federal government scientist was a prestigious and influential position. From 1881 until 1888 Ward worked as an assistant geologist at the U.S. Geological Survey In 1883 he was made Geologist of the U.S. Geological Survey. While he worked at the Geological Survey he became friends with John Wesley Powell, the second director of the US Geological Survey (1881–1894) and the director of the Bureau of Ethnology at the Smithsonian Institution. In 1892, he was named Paleontologist for the USGS, a position he held until 1906.
According to Edward Rafferty, Ward was part of a group of "Washington intellectuals" who "wanted to place social science within the structure of government and public life itself". Ward believed that centering research activity in government actions would benefit democratic progress, and evade the partisanship, corruption, and conflict of post-Civil War politics. Broadly, Ward's overarching project represented the "monumental exposition of the relation of the state to social progress" Working from the perspective that social research could be used to improve policy and the function of government, Ward was noted by his contemporaries for engaging in "the most advanced views yet taken by an avowed sociologist in the advocacy of a comprehensive program of social reform through the medium of legislation".
During this time, Ward was very productive in writing and circulating works on his interests concerning nature and society. Ward published his Guide to the flora of Washington and vicinity (1881), followed shortly afterwards by the first volume of Dynamic Sociology: Or applied social science as based upon statistical sociology and the less complex sciences (1883), alongside his Sketch of Paleobotany (1885), Synopsis of the Flora of the Laramie Group (1885), and Types of the Laramie Flora (1887).
Gaining notability
Reflecting his growing prominence as a scholar and acceptance in academic circles, Ward was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1889. In 1900, he was elected as the president of International Institute of Sociology in France. Ward was also a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and a member of the National Academy of Sciences.
From 1891 to 1905, Ward continued to publish numerous texts on natural history and sociology, with the circulation of his work in both areas contributing to his growing notability. These works included sociological writings on Neo-Darwinism and Neo-Lamarckism (1891), The Psychic Factors of Civilization (1893), multiple articles in Contributions to Social Philosophy (1895–1897), the second volume of his Dynamic Sociology (1897), and his Outlines of Sociology (1898).
The founding of the American Sociological Association: 1905
In 1905, American sociologists debated the creation of an independent professional association that would be distinct from other existing collectives for historians, economists, and political scientists. C. W. A. Veditz, a professor at George Washington University who admired Ward's work, sought Ward's opinion on the matter, with Ward arguing in favor of an organization that could mirror Paris' International Institute of Sociology.
At a meeting of approximately three hundred sociologists at the December 27th 1905 American Economic Association, Ward made a strong argument for the establishment of the American Sociological Association, with the assembled sociologists passing Ward's motion and forming a committee to establish the association's charter and founding officers. Ward became the first president of the American Sociological Association on December 28, 1905, after his colleauges Ross, Small, and Giddings motioned for him to receive the honor. Ward was chosen for the role out of a belief among the committee that "all sociologists are under a heavy debt of gratitude" to his work, and because of Ward's commitment to raise the discipline's profile and esteem in a society where sociology was "not merely discredited, but almost entirely unknown".
Teaching at Brown and final years: 1906–1913
After becoming the first president of the American Sociological Association, Ward's reputation and prominence as a sociologist in America was at its peak. In 1906, Ward became chair of sociology at Brown University. Previously, Ward had given "extended courses of lectures on sociology" at the University of Chicago and at Stanford University.
Prior to taking up the position at Brown, Ward and his wife travelled to Europe and Ward took part in various presentations and debates. Ward was popular at Brown, as a teacher and colleauge; a fellow professor, Samuel Mitchell, described him as "pre-eminent" among the "many able scholars and teachers" at Brown. One of Ward's students, Sara Algeo, wrote that "studying with Prof. Ward was like sitting at the feet of Aristotle, or Plato ... He was the wisest man I have ever known." In 1910, Ward taught at the University of Wisconsin Madison's sociology department during their summer school
Ward delivered public lectures and seminars in the United Kingdom and across the United States. Towards the end of his life, Ward critiqued the eugenics movement as founded on a "distrust of nature" and "egotism", and instead argued that a program of social welfare (or 'euthenics') would be far more effective in curing social ills than what was proposed by eugenicists.
Despite gaining recognition for his work and professional esteem, Ward felt increasingly isolated in this later stage of his career as his focus on systematization was at odds with the work of other social scientists who were more focused on policy and legislation. During his later years, Ward remained a productive writer. In 1906 Ward published Applied Sociology: A Treatise on the Conscious Improvement of Society by Society, and in 1908 an article on Social Classes in the Light of Modern Sociological Theory followed in the American Journal of Sociology. Ward's final major work, Glimpses of the Cosmos, was published posthumously, with the help of Sarah Comstock and Sarah Simons, in six volumes beginning in 1913 and continuing until 1918.
Death: 1913
After several weeks of sickness, Ward died on April 17, 1913 at his home on Rhode Island Avenue. Prominent social scientists including Emile Durkheim, Ferdinand Tonnies, Patrick Geddes, Thorstein Veblen, and Albion Small mourned his death. His colleagues at Brown University eulogized Ward as a "profound student, and an original investigator in the most abstruse problems which the human mind can grapple", describing him as "a genial associate" and "an inspiring teacher". In a eulogy in the Washington Herald, C. W. A. Veditz remarked that "his death marks the disappearance of a scientists who will unquestionably rank as one of the half-dozen greatest thinkers in his field that the world has produced"
Ward was first buried at Glenwood Cemetery in Washington, but was later moved to Brookside Cemetery, Watertown in Jefferson County, New York to be with his wife. The only surviving public memorial commemorating Ward is in the Pennsylvania village of Myersburg, where a state historical sign describes Ward as "the American Aristotle".
Personal life
Marriages
While attending the Susquehanna Collegiate Institute, Ward met Elizabeth "Lizzie" Carolyn Vought and fell in love. They married on August 13, 1862. Shortly afterward, he enlisted in the Union Army and was sent to the Civil War front. After the war he successfully petitioned for work with the federal government in Washington, DC, where the couple moved.
Lizzie assisted him in editing and contributing to a newsletter called The Iconoclast, dedicated to free thinking and critiquing organized religion. She gave birth to a son, but the child died when he was less than a year old. Lizzie died in 1872 at the age of thirty. Lester Frank Ward went on to marry Rosamond Asenath Simons (1840–1913) as his second wife in the year 1873.
Personal Character
Reflecting after his death, James Q. Dealey, one of Ward's friends, wrote that Ward "had a deeply emotional nature" which was "suppressed by his close devotion to intellectual pursuits", while he was "really fond of social life" he became "so absorbed in his work that to a quite large extent he lived a lonely life during his last years" and rarely socialized away from his university connections. Dealey described Ward as a committed teacher who "was seldom absent from his classes" and "was most systematic in the preparation of his lectures", even towards the end of his life when "he could barely put one foot before another and could hardly carry the weight of his books", Ward cherished teaching.
Emily Palmer Cape wrote that Ward "always stressed the power of an education which teaches a knowledge of the materials and forces of nature, and their relation to our own lives." Cape noted that Ward "loved nature, and to be out of doors" and enjoyed giving "a long and beautiful description of the earth" whenever possible.
Family
Ward's immediate family were politically active and involved in various social causes. Lester Ward's older brother, Cyrenus Ward, was "heavily involved in the politics of labor unions and working-class reform" and in the middle of the 1860s he became a leading member of the socialist movement in New York City. Cyrenus Ward went on to join Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels in the International Workingmen's Association, to which he was elected a council member, before being arrested as a spy during the Franco-Prussian War. Lester Ward detailed Cyrenus' activities in The Iconoclast, and went on to secure jobs for him at the Geological Survey and the Bureau of Statistics via his network in Washington. Lester Ward's other brothers, Lorenzo and Justin, were both politically active in the cooperative movement and the prohibitionist movement respectively.
Works and ideas
Ward hoped to use his scientific literacy to contribute an American version of historical-materialist Sociology, opposing the then popular work of Herbert Spencer with critique inspired by Karl Marx. Working in the Enlightenment tradition, Ward associated his project with the advancement of democratic principles in the United States. As Ward explained in the Preface to Dynamic Sociology: Or Applied Social Science as Based Upon Statistical Sociology and the Less Complex Sciences, it was his belief that: "The real object of science is to benefit man. A science which fails to do this, however agreeable its study, is lifeless. Sociology, which of all sciences should benefit man most, is in danger of falling into the class of polite amusements, or dead sciences. It is the object of this work to point out a method by which the breath of life may be breathed into its nostrils."
Political beliefs
Ward approached society through the lens of producerism, or the celebration of productive workers, for example artisans, skilled laborers, merchants, and craftspeople, as opposed to nonproducers who simply accumulated capital and resources., Ward believed that government should provide society with understanding of socioeconomic conditions to ensure that the state progressed as a whole. Ward was critical of "privilege, monopoly, and the evils of financial capitalism", and supported abolitionism, temperance, and public education.
Nature, evolution and conservation
Ward had a lifelong interest in nature, beginning in childhood and extending throughout his time as a government clerk active in local biological societies, and as a formally trained paleobiologist. Ward engaged with Lamarckian ideas, or the theory that the natural environment shapes organisms. Ward wrote on the topic in Neo-Darwinism and Neo-Lamarckism, and was enthusiastic in his support of Darwin's findings and theories.
Reflecting a popular trend at the time, Ward made connections between evolution, patterns in the natural world, and his perspectives on society. Ward wrote that "the process of evolution is organization", reflecting that in his opinion "the process is the same" across biological, chemical, physical, and social forms of organization. Ward believed that "the universal comprehension of nature" would lead to a situation where "every human could do his part", stressing that recognising this interconnectedness and interdependence "should inspire one to add to the whole" and to "contribute one's share ot life's great continuous flow."
Ward understood human conflict and war as evolutionary forces responsible for progress. From Ward's perspective, conflict enabled the rise of Homo Sapiens over other creatures, and saw the expansion of what he considered to be more technologically advanced races and nations. Ward saw war as a natural evolutionary process that could be painful, slow, and ineffective. He argued to recognize these characteristics of war, but to replace it with a more progressive system which minimized harm.
He wrote:
Darwin has taught us that the chief barrier to the advance of any species of plants or animals is its competition with other plants and animals that contest the same ground. And therefore the fiercest opponents of any species are the members of the same species which demand the same elements of subsistence. Hence the chief form of relief in the organic world consists in the thinning-out of competitors. Any species of animals or plants left free to propagate at its normal rate would overrun the earth in a short time and leave no room for any other species. Any species that is sufficiently vigorous to resist its organic environment will crowd out all others and monopolize the earth. If nature permitted this there could be no variety, but only one monotonous aspect devoid of interest or beauty. Whatever we may think of the harsh method by which this is prevented, we cannot regret that it is prevented, and that we have a world of variety, interest, and aesthetic attractiveness.
Alongside George Perkins Marsh, John Wesley Powell, and W J McGee, Ward's ideas concerning conservation and the management of natural resources helped to inform the conservation movement of the early 20th century. However, the extent of Ward's contributions to scientific understandings of nature has been debated, with John Burnham writing that "Ward's unbelievable egotism and his ostentatious display of technical terminology misled many writers into believing he was a "great" or "distinguished" natural scientist." Ward's desire to "prove his knowledge of all scientific subjects", and his "habit of creating difficult neologisms in his books" proved to be "particularly bothersome to many readers of his work".
Welfare state and laissez faire
Ward was a supporter of the concept of the welfare state. Ward argued that those critical of the development of a social safety as 'paternalistic' were hypocritical for themselves receiving "relief from their own incompetency" in their private enterprise as capitalists and industrialists. Ward's ideas influenced a rising generation of progressive political leaders, such as Herbert Croly, and his ideas came to help shape early welfare policy in the United States. However, there are few demonstrable direct links between his writings and the actual programs of the founders of the welfare state and the New Deal.
Reflecting his overarching engagement with discussions of evolution, Ward critiqued Herbert Spencer and Spencer's theories of laissez-faire and survival of the fittest which were popular in socio-economic thought in the United States after the American Civil War. Ward positioned himself in opposition to Spencer and the American political scientist William Graham Sumner, an advocate for Spencer's ideas, who had promoted the principles of laissez-faire. The historian Henry Steele Commager argued that Ward "trained his heaviest guns" on "the superstitions that still held domain over the mid of his generation", of which "laissez-faire was the most stupefying"
Women's equality
Ward advocated for equal rights for women, at times drawing on metaphors and analogies from his interest in the study of the natural world to support his arguments. He gave a speech on the topic to the Fourteenth Dinner of the Six O’clock Club in Washington on April 26, 1888, at Willard’s Hotel. Ward was of the opinion that "there is no fixed rule by which Nature has intended that one sex should excel the other, any more than there is any fixed point beyond which either cannot develop." Ward summarized his position as "true science teaches that the elevation of woman is the only sure road to the evolution of man." Despite Ward's interest in the topic of equal rights for women, Clifford H. Scott summarised that "practically all the suffragists ignored" Ward.
Legacy in American sociology
As Robert Kessler summarized, "reputation came slowly and faded rapidly" for Ward, while his early work was "epoch-making" and his impact led to Hofstadter naming him the "American Aristotle", by the middle of the 20th century Ward had "passed so completely from the contemporary scene" and is now largely undiscussed in modern American sociology. Eric Royal Lybeck argues that the broadness of Ward's research was responsible for his work being "shunted from the centre of sociological discourse to the margins of posterity" While Ward's work was wide sweeping and attempted to synthesize insights from a broad spectrum of research themes and subjects, the institutionalization of sociology in the United States led to a hyperfocus on discrete and specialized problems which was at odds with the scale of his approach. Albion Small suggested that Ward remained too attached to the positivism of Auguste Comte and the evolutionism of Herbert Spencer at a time when other social scientists were moving towards other social models and methods of analysis. It was Small's assessment that Ward clung to a "pure science" approach in social research, and was more of a "museum investigator" interested in labeling, categorising, and developing schema. Cumulatively, this meant that while Ward was "highly regarded and influential" in the early history of sociology in the United States, his approach and contributions rapidly became redundant as the field changed.
Even during his lifetime, C. W. A. Veditz suggested that due to translation and wide circulation, Ward's works may have been better known in Germany, France, Switzerland, Russia, and Japan than they were in the United States.
Ward's diaries, writings, and photographs
All but the first of his voluminous diaries were reportedly destroyed by Rosamond after his death. Ward's first journal, Young Ward's Diary: A Human and Eager Record of the Years Between 1860 and 1870..., remains under copyright. A collection of Ward's writings and photographs is maintained by the Special Collections Research Center of the George Washington University. The collection includes articles, diaries, correspondence, and a scrapbook. GWU's Special Collections Research Center is located in the Estelle and Melvin Gelman Library.
Literature
- Becker, Ernest (1975). Escape From Evil. New York / London: Free Press / Collier MacMillan. OCLC 780436838 (all editions).
- John Chynoweth Burnham (1956). Lester Frank Ward in American thought. Annals of American sociology. Washington, D.C.: Public Affairs Press. ISBN 978-0742522176.
- Samuel Chugerman (1939). Lester F. Ward, the American Aristotle: A Summary and Interpretation of His Sociology. Literary Licensing, LLC. ISBN 978-1-258-10598-3.
- Chriss, James J. (2006). "The Place of Lester Ward among the Sociological Classics". Journal of Classical Sociology. 6 (1): 5–21. doi:10.1177/1468795X06061282. S2CID 145704932.
- Commager, Henry Steele (1950). "Lester Ward and the Science of Society". The American Mind: An Interpretation of American Thought and Character Since the 1880s. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-00046-7.
- Commager, Henry Steele, ed. (1967). Lester Ward and the Welfare State. New York: Bobbs-Merrill. OCLC 906058006 (all editions).
- Coser, Lewis. A History of Sociological Analysis. New York : Basic Books.
- Dahms, Harry F. – 'Lester F. Ward'
- Finlay, Barbara. "Lester Frank Ward as a Sociologist Of Gender: A New Look at His Sociological Work." Gender & Society, Vol. 13, No. 2, 251–265 (1999)
- Gossett, Thomas F. (1963). Race: The History of an Idea in America.
- Harp, Gillis J. Positivist Republic, Ch. 5 "Lester F. Ward: Positivist Whig" Positivist Republic: Auguste Comte and the Reconstruction of American Liberalism, 1865–1920
- Hofstadter, Richard. Social Darwinism in American Thought, Chapter 4, (original 1944, 1955. reprint Boston: Beacon Press, 1992). Social Darwinism in American Thought
- Largey, Gale. Lester Ward: A Global Sociologist [1]
- Mers, Adelheid. Fusion [2] Archived July 24, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
- Perlstadt, Harry. Applied Sociology as Translational Research: A One Hundred Fifty Year Voyage [3]
- Rafferty, Edward C. Apostle of Human Progress. Lester Frank Ward and American Political Thought, 1841/1913. Apostle of Human Progress: Lester Frank Ward and American Political Thought, 1841–1913
- Ravitch, Diane. Left Back: A Century of Failed School Reforms. Simon & Schuster. "Chapter one: The Educational Ladder" Left Back
- Ross, John R. Man over Nature: the origins of the conservation movement [4]
- Ross, Dorthy. The Origins of American Social Science. Cambridge University Press The Origins of American Social Science
- Seidelman, Raymond and Harpham, Edward J. Disenchanted Realists: Political Science and the American Crisis, 1884–1984. p. 26 Disenchanted Realists: Political Science and the American Crisis
- Wood, Clement. The Sociology Of Lester F Ward The Sociology Of Lester F Ward
Selected works
1880–1889
- Ward, Lester F. (1881). "Guide to the flora of Washington and vicinity". Department of the Interior: U.S. National Museum – Bulletin of the United States National Museum. 26 (22). Washington: Washington Printing Office. OCLC 504513602 (all editions).
- —— (1883). Dynamic Sociology (Vol. 1). Or Applied social science as based upon statical sociology and the less complex sciences. Vol. 1 of 2. New York: D. Appleton & Co.
- —— (1885). "Sketch of Paleobotany". Department of the Interior: U.S. National Museum – Extract from the Fifth Annual Report of the Director, 1883–'84. Washington: Washington Printing Office: 357. Bibcode:1885usgs.rept....7W. doi:10.3133/70159114.
- —— (1885). "Synopsis of the Flora of the Laramie Group". Annual Report of the U.S. Geological Survey. 6. Chicago: U.S. Geological Survey: 399–557.
- —— (1887). "Types of the Laramie Flora". Department of the Interior: U.S. National Museum – Bulletin of the United States National Museum (37). Washington: Washington Printing Office: 363–469.
1890–1899
- Ward, Lester F. (1891). Neo-Darwinism and Neo-Lamarckism. Washington: .
- Ward, Lester F. (1893). The Psychic Factors of Civilization. Boston: Ginn & Co. (reprinted 1906)
- Ward, Lester F. (1895). Contributions to Social Philosophy. II. Sociology and Cosmology. Vol. 1. Chicago: American Journal of Sociology. pp. 132–145.
- Ward, Lester F. (1895). Contributions to Social Philosophy. III. Sociology and Biology. Vol. 1. Chicago: American Journal of Sociology. pp. 313–326.
- Ward, Lester F. (1895). Contributions to Social Philosophy. IV. Sociology and Anthropology. Vol. 1. Chicago: American Journal of Sociology. pp. 426–433.
- Ward, Lester F. (1896). Contributions to Social Philosophy. V. Sociology and Psychology. Vol. 1. Chicago: American Journal of Sociology. pp. 618–632.
- Ward, Lester F. (1896). Contributions to Social Philosophy. VI. The Data of Sociology. Vol. 1. Chicago: American Journal of Sociology. pp. 738–752.
- Ward, Lester F. (1896). Contributions to Social Philosophy. VII. The Social Forces. Vol. 2. Chicago: American Journal of Sociology. pp. 82–95.
- Ward, Lester F. (1896). Contributions to Social Philosophy. VIII. The Mechanics of Society. Vol. 2. Chicago: American Journal of Sociology. pp. 234–254.
- Ward, Lester F. (1896). Contributions to Social Philosophy. IX. The Purpose of Sociology. Vol. 2. Chicago: American Journal of Sociology. pp. 446–460.
- Ward, Lester F. (1897). Contributions to Social Philosophy. X. Social Genesis. Vol. 2. Chicago: American Journal of Sociology. pp. 532–546.
- Ward, Lester F. (1897). Contributions to Social Philosophy. XI. Individual Telesis. Vol. 2. Chicago: American Journal of Sociology. pp. 699–717.
- Ward, Lester F. (1897). Contributions to Social Philosophy. XII. Collective Telesis. Vol. 2. Chicago: American Journal of Sociology. pp. 801–822.
- Ward, Lester F. (1897). Dynamic Sociology (Vol. 2). Or Applied social science as based upon statical sociology and the less complex sciences. Vol. 2 of 2. New York: D. Appleton & Co.
- Ward, Lester F. (1898). Outlines of Sociology. London: The Macmillan Co. (reprinted 1913)
1900–1909
- Ward, Lester F.Ward (January 1902). "Contemporary Sociology, I–IV (Part 1 of 3)". American Journal of Sociology. 7 (4). Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- Ward, Lester F. (March 1902). "Contemporary Sociology, V–VIII (Part 2 of 3)". American Journal of Sociology. 7 (5). Chicago: University of Chicago Press: 629–658. doi:10.1086/211087.
- Ward, Lester F. (May 1902). Contemporary Sociology, IX–XII (Part 3 of 3). American Journal of Sociology. Vol. 7. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 749–762.
- Ward, Lester F. (1903) "Pure Sociology: A Treatise on the Origin and Spontaneous Development of Society." (2,625 KB – PDF)
- Ward, Lester F. (1905). "Status of the Mesozoic floras of the United States, Vol. 1". Monographs of the U.S. Geological Survey. 48 (Part 1 – Text). Washington: Washington Printing Office: 5–616. With the collaboration of William M. Fontaine, Arthur Bibbins, and G. R. Wieland
- Ward, Lester F. (1905). "Status of the Mesozoic floras of the United States, Vol. 2". Monographs of the U.S. Geological Survey. 48 (Part 2 – Plates). Washington: Washington Printing Office: ~500pp. With the collaboration of William M. Fontaine, Arthur Bibbins, and G. R. Wieland
- Dealey, James Q.; Ward, Lester F. (1905). A Text-Book of Sociology. London: The Macmillan Co.
- Ward, Lester F. (1906). Applied Sociology. A Treatise on the Conscious Improvement of Society by Society. New York: Ginn & Co.
- Ward, Lester F. (1908). Social Classes in the Light of Modern Sociological Theory. Vol. 13. Chicago: American Journal of Sociology. pp. 617–627.
1910–1919
- Ward, Lester F. (1913). Eugenics, Euthenics, and Eudemics. Chicago: American Journal of Sociology. pp. 737–754.
- Ward, Lester F. (1913–1918). Glimpses of the Cosmos, Vol. 1. Vol. 6 vols. New York and London: G. P. Putnam's Sons.
- Ward, Lester F. (1913–1918). Glimpses of the Cosmos, Vol. 2. Vol. 6 vols. New York and London: G. P. Putnam's Sons.
- Ward, Lester F. (1913–1918). Glimpses of the Cosmos, Vol. 3. Vol. 6 vols. New York and London: G. P. Putnam's Sons.
- Ward, Lester F. (1913–1918). Glimpses of the Cosmos, Vol. 4. Vol. 6 vols. New York and London: G. P. Putnam's Sons.
- Ward, Lester F. (1913–1918). Glimpses of the Cosmos, Vol. 5. Vol. 6 vols. New York and London: G. P. Putnam's Sons.
- Ward, Lester F. (1913–1918). Glimpses of the Cosmos, Vol. 6. Vol. 6 vols. New York and London: G. P. Putnam's Sons.
References
- "WARD, Lester Frank". The International Who's Who in the World. 1912. p. 1067. Archived from the original on June 13, 2024. Retrieved March 15, 2016.
- Dealey, James Quayle (1925). "Masters of Social Science: Lester Frank Ward". Social Forces. 4 (2): 257–272. doi:10.2307/3004574. ISSN 0037-7732. JSTOR 3004574. Archived from the original on May 29, 2024. Retrieved May 29, 2024.
- Small, Albion W. (1916). "Fifty Years of Sociology in the United States (1865–1915)". American Journal of Sociology. 21 (6): 749–758. doi:10.1086/212570. ISSN 0002-9602. JSTOR 2763629. Archived from the original on March 26, 2024. Retrieved March 26, 2024.
- Lybeck, E. R. (2013). "Lester Ward and Patrick Geddes in early American and British sociology". History of the Human Sciences, 26(2), p. 52.
- Cape, Emily Palmer (1922). Lester F. Ward: A Personal Sketch.
- Sniegoski, S. J. (1985). "State Schools 'versus' Parental Rights: The Legacy of Lester Frank Ward". The Journal of Social, Political, and Economic Studies, 10(2), 215.
- Martha Mitchell (1993). "Ward, Lester F.". Encyclopedia Brunoniana. Providence, RI: Brown University Library. Archived from the original on February 11, 2022. Retrieved February 11, 2022.
He enlisted in the Union army in August 1862, only a few days after his secret marriage to Elisabeth Vought.
- The Washington herald. [volume] (Washington, D.C.), 19 April 1913. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress. https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045433/1913-04-19/ed-1/seq-5/
- Cape, E. P. (1922). Lester F. Ward: A Personal Sketch GP Putnam's Sons. p. 31
- The Washington herald. [volume] (Washington, D.C.), 19 April 1913. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress. <https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045433/1913-04-19/ed-1/seq-5/>
- Rafferty, E. (2003). Apostle of human progress: Lester Frank Ward and American political thought, 1841–1913. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 7
- Rafferty, E. (2003). Apostle of human progress: Lester Frank Ward and American political thought, 1841–1913. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 10
- Barnes, H. E. (1919). "Two Representative Contributions of Sociology to Political Theory: The Doctrines of William Graham Sumner and Lester Frank Ward". American Journal of Sociology, 25(1), p. 3.
- "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Archived from the original on June 14, 2024. Retrieved April 10, 2024.
- Cape, E. P. (1922). Lester F. Ward: A Personal Sketch. GP Putnam's Sons. p. 35
- Cape, E. P. (1922). Lester F. Ward: A Personal Sketch. GP Putnam's Sons. p. 34
- Rafferty, E. (2003). Apostle of human progress: Lester Frank Ward and American political thought, 1841–1913. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 262
- Cape, E. P. (1922). Lester F. Ward: A Personal Sketch. GP Putnam's Sons.
- The Providence news. (Providence [R.I.]), 08 March 1906. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress. <https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn91070630/1906-03-08/ed-1/seq-9/>
- Rafferty, E. (2003). Apostle of human progress: Lester Frank Ward and American political thought, 1841–1913. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 269–272
- Rafferty, E. (2003). Apostle of human progress: Lester Frank Ward and American political thought, 1841–1913. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 275
- Ladysmith news-budget. [volume] (Ladysmith, Rusk County, Wis.), 10 March 1910. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress. <https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85040245/1910-03-10/ed-1/seq-4/>
- Rafferty, E. (2003). Apostle of human progress: Lester Frank Ward and American political thought, 1841–1913. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 280
- Rafferty, E. (2003). Apostle of human progress: Lester Frank Ward and American political thought, 1841–1913. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 273–274
- Rafferty, E. (2003). Apostle of human progress: Lester Frank Ward and American political thought, 1841–1913. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 283
- Rafferty, E. (2003). Apostle of human progress: Lester Frank Ward and American political thought, 1841–1913. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 281
- The Washington herald. [volume] (Washington, D.C.), 27 April 1913. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress. <https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045433/1913-04-27/ed-1/seq-27/>
- Cape, E. P. (1922). Lester F. Ward: A Personal Sketch. GP Putnam's Sons. pp. 65–66
- Rafferty, E. (2003). Apostle of human progress: Lester Frank Ward and American political thought, 1841–1913. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 2
- Cape, E. P. (1922). Lester F. Ward: A Personal Sketch. GP Putnam's Sons. p. 28
- Cape, E. P. (1922). Lester F. Ward: A Personal Sketch. GP Putnam's Sons. pp. 29–30
- Cape, E. P. (1922). Lester F. Ward: A Personal Sketch. GP Putnam's Sons. p. 30
- American Sociological Association. "American Sociological Association – Lester Ward". www2.asanet.org. Archived from the original on August 13, 2013. Retrieved August 23, 2013.
- Cape, E. P. (1922). Lester F. Ward: A Personal Sketch. GP Putnam's Sons. p. 13
- Cape, E. P. (1922). Lester F. Ward: A Personal Sketch. GP Putnam's Sons. p. 14
- Cape, E. P. (1922). Lester F. Ward: A Personal Sketch. GP Putnam's Sons. p. 45
- Rafferty, E. (2003). Apostle of human progress: Lester Frank Ward and American political thought, 1841–1913. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 119–120
- Rafferty, E. (2003). Apostle of human progress: Lester Frank Ward and American political thought, 1841–1913. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 120
- Ward, Lester. (1883). Dynamic Sociology: Or Applied Social Science as Based Upon Statistical Sociology and the Less Complex Sciences.
- Rafferty, E. (2003). Apostle of human progress: Lester Frank Ward and American political thought, 1841–1913. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 11
- Rafferty, E. (2003). Apostle of human progress: Lester Frank Ward and American political thought, 1841–1913. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 10
- Rafferty, E. (2003). Apostle of human progress: Lester Frank Ward and American political thought, 1841–1913. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 14
- Burnham, J. C. (1954). "Lester Frank Ward as natural scientist". American Quarterly, 6(3), 260.
- Ward, Lester Frank (1891). "Neo-Darwinism and Neo-Lamarckism". Archived from the original on June 13, 2024. Retrieved June 12, 2024.
- Cape, E. P. (1922). Lester F. Ward: A Personal Sketch. GP Putnam's Sons. pp. 185–186
- Cape, E. P. (1922). Lester F. Ward: A Personal Sketch. GP Putnam's Sons. pp. 187–188
- Ward, L. F. (1916). Pure sociology: A treatise on the origin and spontaneous development of society. Macmillan Company.
- Mike Hawkins (1997). Social Darwinism in European and American Thought, 1860–1945: Nature as Model and Nature as Threat. Cambridge University Press. p. 13. ISBN 978-0521574341. Archived from the original on June 13, 2024. Retrieved March 15, 2016.
- Ward, Lester Frank (1913). "Eugenics, Euthenics, and Eudemics" (PDF). American Journal of Sociology, 18(6), 737–754.
- Ross, J. R. (1975). "Man over nature: Origins of the conservation movement". American Studies, 16(1), 49–62.
- Burnham, J. C. (1954). "Lester Frank Ward as natural scientist". American Quarterly, 6(3), 265.
- Rafferty, E. (2003). Apostle of human progress: Lester Frank Ward and American political thought, 1841–1913. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 8
- Lester Frank Ward, Forum XX, 1895, quoted in Henry Steel Commager's The American Mind: An Interpretation of American Thought and Character Since the 1880s (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1950), p. 210.
- Lester Ward and the welfare state. Bobbs-Merrill. 1967. ISBN 978-0-672-50998-8. Archived from the original on June 13, 2024. Retrieved June 12, 2024.
- Steven L. Piott (2006). American Reformers, 1870–1920: Progressives in Word And Deed. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0742527638. Archived from the original on June 13, 2024. Retrieved March 15, 2016.
- Commager, Henry Steel. (1950). The American Mind: An Interpretation of American Thought and Character Since the 1880s (New Haven: Yale University Press).
- Ward, Frank Lester. (1888) "Our Better Halves," https://gynocentrism.com/2015/05/15/our-better-halves-1888/ Archived June 12, 2024, at the Wayback Machine
- Cape, E. P. (1922). Lester F. Ward: A Personal Sketch. GP Putnam's Sons. p. 134
- Clifford H. Scott, "A Naturalistic Rationale For Women's Reform: Lester Frank Ward on the Evolution of Sexual Relations," Historian (1970) 33#1 pp. 54–67
- Hofstadter. (1945). Social Darwinism in American Thought. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. p. 55
- Kessler, R. A. (1956). Lester F. Ward as Legal Philosopher. NYLF, 2, 389.
- Lybeck, E. R. (2013). "Lester Ward and Patrick Geddes in early American and British sociology". History of the Human Sciences, 26(2), p. 51.
- Rafferty, E. (2003). Apostle of human progress: Lester Frank Ward and American political thought, 1841–1913. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 285–286
- Lybeck, E. R. (2013). "Lester Ward and Patrick Geddes in early American and British sociology". History of the Human Sciences, 26(2), pp. 51–53.
- Guide to the Lester Frank Ward Papers, 1883–1919 Archived November 19, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, Special Collections Research Center, Estelle and Melvin Gelman Library, the George Washington University
- Becker 1975: online available in Internet Archive.
- Ross, Edward A. (1939). "Review of Lester F. Ward, The American Aristotle". American Sociological Review. 4 (6): 859–861. doi:10.2307/2083768. ISSN 0003-1224. JSTOR 2083768. Archived from the original on May 14, 2024. Retrieved May 14, 2024.
- Guthrie, Elton F. (1939). "Review of Lester F. Ward, The American Aristotle". American Sociological Review. 4 (6): 861–862. doi:10.2307/2083769. ISSN 0003-1224. JSTOR 2083769. Archived from the original on May 14, 2024. Retrieved May 14, 2024.
- Finlay 1999: abstract Archived December 5, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- Gossett : new edition 1997 in Google Books Archived June 13, 2024, at the Wayback Machine.
- hdl:2027/mdp.39015086632505
- Patten, Simon N. (1894). "The Failure of Biologic Sociology". The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 4 (6): 63–91. doi:10.1177/000271629400400604. ISSN 0002-7162. JSTOR 1008869.
- "Pure Sociology: A Treatise Concerning the Origin and Spontaneous Development of Society . Lester F. Ward". Journal of Political Economy. 11 (4): 655–656. 1903. doi:10.1086/251002. ISSN 0022-3808. Archived from the original on June 13, 2024. Retrieved April 19, 2024.
Further reading
Primary sources
- Commager, Henry Steele, ed., Lester Frank Ward and the Welfare State (1967), major writings by Ward, and long introduction by Commager
- Stern, Bernhard J. ed. Young Ward's Diary: A Human and Eager Record of the Years Between 1860 and 1870 as They Were Lived in the Vicinity of the Little Town of Towanda, Pennsylvania; in the Field as a Rank and File Soldier in the Union Army; and Later in the Nation's Capital, by Lester Ward Who became the First Great Sociologist This Country Produced (1935)
Secondary sources
- Bannister, Robert. Sociology and Scientism: The American Quest for Objectivity, 1880–1940 (1987), pp. 13–31.
- Burnham, John C. "Lester Frank Ward as Natural Scientist," American Quarterly 1954 6#3 pp. 259–265 in JSTOR
- Chugerman, Samuel. Lester F. Ward, the American Aristotle: A Summary and Interpretation of His Sociology (Duke University Press, 1939)
- Fine, Sidney. Laissez Faire and the General-Welfare State: A Study of Conflict in American Thought, 1865–1901 (1956), pp. 252–288
- Muccigrosso, Robert, ed. Research Guide to American Historical Biography (1988) 3:1570–1574
- Nelson, Alvin F. "Lester Ward's Conception of the Nature of Science," Journal of the History of Ideas (1972) 33#4 pp. 633–638 in JSTOR
- Piott, Steven L. American Reformers, 1870–1920: Progressives in Word and Deed (2006); examines 12 leading activists; see chapter 1 for Ward.
- Scott, Clifford H. Lester Frank Ward (1976)
External links
Primary sources
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOW1MMlpoTDFkcGEybHhkVzkwWlMxc2IyZHZMbk4yWnk4ek5IQjRMVmRwYTJseGRXOTBaUzFzYjJkdkxuTjJaeTV3Ym1jPS5wbmc=.png)
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODBMelJqTDFkcGEybHpiM1Z5WTJVdGJHOW5ieTV6ZG1jdk16aHdlQzFYYVd0cGMyOTFjbU5sTFd4dloyOHVjM1puTG5CdVp3PT0ucG5n.png)
- Guide to the Lester Frank Ward Collection, 1860–1913, Brown University Library Collections
- Guide to the Lester Frank Ward Papers, 1883–1919, Special Collections Research Center, Estelle and Melvin Gelman Library, the George Washington University Archived November 19, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
- Smithsonian Institution Archives. "Lester Frank Ward Papers, 1882–1913, with Related Materials to Circa 1965". collections.si.edu. Archived from the original on March 7, 2016. Retrieved August 23, 2013.
- Lester Ward (search of Archive.org). "Internet Archive Search: Ward, Lester". archive.org/. Retrieved August 23, 2013.
Secondary sources
- Ralf Schreyer. "Lester Frank Ward: Sociology – Primary Resources". www.geocities.ws/ralf_schreyer. Retrieved August 23, 2013.
- The Sunday Review; Towanda, Pennsylvania
- Short biography Archived March 3, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
- A Lester Ward web site
- Public Sociology website
- Mansfield University Sociology professor Gale Largey produced a 90 minute documentary on Lester Frank Ward that was featured at the 2005 Centennial of the American Sociological Association and is available upon request from the director.
- Works by or about Lester Frank Ward at the Internet Archive
- Works by Lester Frank Ward at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
Lester Frank Ward June 18 1841 April 18 1913 was an American botanist paleontologist and sociologist The first president of the American Sociological Association James Q Dealey characterized Ward as a great pioneer in the development of American sociology with contemporaries referring to him as the Nestor of American sociologists His 1883 work Dynamic Sociology was influential in establishing sociology as a distinct field in the United States However despite its initial impact his work was quickly sidelined during the later institutionalization and development of American sociology Lester Frank WardLester Ward age 43BornLester Frank Ward 1841 06 18 June 18 1841 Joliet Illinois U S DiedApril 18 1913 1913 04 18 aged 71 Washington D C U S Alma mater Susquehanna Collegiate Institute Towanda Pennsylvania Columbian College Brown UniversityOccupations Geologist Sociologist professorEmployers U S Geological Survey Smithsonian Institution Brown UniversityKnown forPaleobotany Telesis sociology and the introduction of sociology as field of higher educationSpouse s Elizabeth Carolyn Vought Lizzie Rosamond Asenath SimonsParentsJustus Ward Silence Rolph WardBiographyChildhood 1841 1858 Most if not all of what is known about Ward s early life comes from the biography Lester F Ward A Personal Sketch written by Emily Palmer Cape in 1922 Lester Frank Ward was born in Joliet Illinois He was the youngest of 10 children born to Justus Ward and his wife Silence Rolph Ward Justus Ward d 1858 was of New England colonial descent and worked on farms in addition to being an itinerant mechanic Silence Ward was the daughter of a clergyman she was educated and fond of literature The family lived in poverty during Ward s early years When Ward was one year old the family moved closer to Chicago to Cass now known as Downers Grove Illinois about twenty three miles from Lake Michigan The family then moved to a homestead in nearby St Charles Illinois where Ward s father built a saw mill business making railroad ties As a child Ward had to worked in farms mills and factories to supplement his family income giving him little time for his education Ward first attended a formal school at St Charles Kane County Illinois in 1850 when he was nine years old He was known as Frank Ward to his classmates and friends and showed a great enthusiasm for books and learning liberally supplementing his education with outside reading Four years after Ward started attending school his parents along with Lester and an older brother Erastus traveled to Iowa in a covered wagon for a new life on the frontier Starting college 1858 1862 In 1858 Justus Ward unexpectedly died and the boys returned the family to the old homestead they still owned in St Charles Ward s estranged mother who lived two miles away with Ward s sister disapproved of the move and wanted the boys to stay in Iowa to continue their father s work The two brothers lived together for a short time in the old family homestead they dubbed Bachelor s Hall doing farm work to earn a living and encouraged each other to pursue an education and abandon their father s life of physical labor In late 1858 the two brothers moved to Pennsylvania at the invitation of Lester Frank s oldest brother Cyrenus 9 years Lester Frank s senior who was starting a business making wagon wheel hubs and needed workers The brothers saw this as an opportunity to move closer to civilization and to eventually attend college The business failed however and Lester Frank who still didn t have the money to attend college found a job teaching in a small country school in the summer months he worked as a farm laborer He finally saved enough money to attend college and enrolled in the Susquehanna Collegiate Institute in 1860 While he was at first self conscious about his spotty formal education and self learning he soon found that his knowledge compared favorably to his classmates and he was rapidly promoted Civil War service and further studies 1862 1873 Ward was a fervent opponent of slavery and enlisted in the Union Army to fight in the Civil War in August 1862 He suffered three gunshot wounds in the Battle of Chancellorsville and was discharged from service on November 18 1864 due to physical disability After the war Ward moved to Washington In Washington he worked at the Treasury Department from 1865 until 1872 Ward attended Columbian College now the George Washington University and graduating in 1869 with the degree of A B In 1871 after he received the degree of LL B he was admitted to the Bar of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia However Ward never practiced law In 1873 he completed his A M degree Government work and research in Washington DC Ward and fossil tree trunks Ward concentrated on his work as a researcher for the federal government At that time almost all of the basic research in such fields as geography paleontology archaeology and anthropology were concentrated in Washington DC and a job as a federal government scientist was a prestigious and influential position From 1881 until 1888 Ward worked as an assistant geologist at the U S Geological Survey In 1883 he was made Geologist of the U S Geological Survey While he worked at the Geological Survey he became friends with John Wesley Powell the second director of the US Geological Survey 1881 1894 and the director of the Bureau of Ethnology at the Smithsonian Institution In 1892 he was named Paleontologist for the USGS a position he held until 1906 According to Edward Rafferty Ward was part of a group of Washington intellectuals who wanted to place social science within the structure of government and public life itself Ward believed that centering research activity in government actions would benefit democratic progress and evade the partisanship corruption and conflict of post Civil War politics Broadly Ward s overarching project represented the monumental exposition of the relation of the state to social progress Working from the perspective that social research could be used to improve policy and the function of government Ward was noted by his contemporaries for engaging in the most advanced views yet taken by an avowed sociologist in the advocacy of a comprehensive program of social reform through the medium of legislation During this time Ward was very productive in writing and circulating works on his interests concerning nature and society Ward published his Guide to the flora of Washington and vicinity 1881 followed shortly afterwards by the first volume of Dynamic Sociology Or applied social science as based upon statistical sociology and the less complex sciences 1883 alongside his Sketch of Paleobotany 1885 Synopsis of the Flora of the Laramie Group 1885 and Types of the Laramie Flora 1887 Gaining notability Reflecting his growing prominence as a scholar and acceptance in academic circles Ward was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1889 In 1900 he was elected as the president of International Institute of Sociology in France Ward was also a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and a member of the National Academy of Sciences From 1891 to 1905 Ward continued to publish numerous texts on natural history and sociology with the circulation of his work in both areas contributing to his growing notability These works included sociological writings on Neo Darwinism and Neo Lamarckism 1891 The Psychic Factors of Civilization 1893 multiple articles in Contributions to Social Philosophy 1895 1897 the second volume of his Dynamic Sociology 1897 and his Outlines of Sociology 1898 The founding of the American Sociological Association 1905 In 1905 American sociologists debated the creation of an independent professional association that would be distinct from other existing collectives for historians economists and political scientists C W A Veditz a professor at George Washington University who admired Ward s work sought Ward s opinion on the matter with Ward arguing in favor of an organization that could mirror Paris International Institute of Sociology At a meeting of approximately three hundred sociologists at the December 27th 1905 American Economic Association Ward made a strong argument for the establishment of the American Sociological Association with the assembled sociologists passing Ward s motion and forming a committee to establish the association s charter and founding officers Ward became the first president of the American Sociological Association on December 28 1905 after his colleauges Ross Small and Giddings motioned for him to receive the honor Ward was chosen for the role out of a belief among the committee that all sociologists are under a heavy debt of gratitude to his work and because of Ward s commitment to raise the discipline s profile and esteem in a society where sociology was not merely discredited but almost entirely unknown Teaching at Brown and final years 1906 1913 After becoming the first president of the American Sociological Association Ward s reputation and prominence as a sociologist in America was at its peak In 1906 Ward became chair of sociology at Brown University Previously Ward had given extended courses of lectures on sociology at the University of Chicago and at Stanford University Prior to taking up the position at Brown Ward and his wife travelled to Europe and Ward took part in various presentations and debates Ward was popular at Brown as a teacher and colleauge a fellow professor Samuel Mitchell described him as pre eminent among the many able scholars and teachers at Brown One of Ward s students Sara Algeo wrote that studying with Prof Ward was like sitting at the feet of Aristotle or Plato He was the wisest man I have ever known In 1910 Ward taught at the University of Wisconsin Madison s sociology department during their summer school Ward delivered public lectures and seminars in the United Kingdom and across the United States Towards the end of his life Ward critiqued the eugenics movement as founded on a distrust of nature and egotism and instead argued that a program of social welfare or euthenics would be far more effective in curing social ills than what was proposed by eugenicists Despite gaining recognition for his work and professional esteem Ward felt increasingly isolated in this later stage of his career as his focus on systematization was at odds with the work of other social scientists who were more focused on policy and legislation During his later years Ward remained a productive writer In 1906 Ward published Applied Sociology A Treatise on the Conscious Improvement of Society by Society and in 1908 an article on Social Classes in the Light of Modern Sociological Theory followed in the American Journal of Sociology Ward s final major work Glimpses of the Cosmos was published posthumously with the help of Sarah Comstock and Sarah Simons in six volumes beginning in 1913 and continuing until 1918 Death 1913 After several weeks of sickness Ward died on April 17 1913 at his home on Rhode Island Avenue Prominent social scientists including Emile Durkheim Ferdinand Tonnies Patrick Geddes Thorstein Veblen and Albion Small mourned his death His colleagues at Brown University eulogized Ward as a profound student and an original investigator in the most abstruse problems which the human mind can grapple describing him as a genial associate and an inspiring teacher In a eulogy in the Washington Herald C W A Veditz remarked that his death marks the disappearance of a scientists who will unquestionably rank as one of the half dozen greatest thinkers in his field that the world has produced Ward was first buried at Glenwood Cemetery in Washington but was later moved to Brookside Cemetery Watertown in Jefferson County New York to be with his wife The only surviving public memorial commemorating Ward is in the Pennsylvania village of Myersburg where a state historical sign describes Ward as the American Aristotle Personal lifeMarriages While attending the Susquehanna Collegiate Institute Ward met Elizabeth Lizzie Carolyn Vought and fell in love They married on August 13 1862 Shortly afterward he enlisted in the Union Army and was sent to the Civil War front After the war he successfully petitioned for work with the federal government in Washington DC where the couple moved Lizzie assisted him in editing and contributing to a newsletter called The Iconoclast dedicated to free thinking and critiquing organized religion She gave birth to a son but the child died when he was less than a year old Lizzie died in 1872 at the age of thirty Lester Frank Ward went on to marry Rosamond Asenath Simons 1840 1913 as his second wife in the year 1873 Personal Character Reflecting after his death James Q Dealey one of Ward s friends wrote that Ward had a deeply emotional nature which was suppressed by his close devotion to intellectual pursuits while he was really fond of social life he became so absorbed in his work that to a quite large extent he lived a lonely life during his last years and rarely socialized away from his university connections Dealey described Ward as a committed teacher who was seldom absent from his classes and was most systematic in the preparation of his lectures even towards the end of his life when he could barely put one foot before another and could hardly carry the weight of his books Ward cherished teaching Emily Palmer Cape wrote that Ward always stressed the power of an education which teaches a knowledge of the materials and forces of nature and their relation to our own lives Cape noted that Ward loved nature and to be out of doors and enjoyed giving a long and beautiful description of the earth whenever possible Family Ward s immediate family were politically active and involved in various social causes Lester Ward s older brother Cyrenus Ward was heavily involved in the politics of labor unions and working class reform and in the middle of the 1860s he became a leading member of the socialist movement in New York City Cyrenus Ward went on to join Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels in the International Workingmen s Association to which he was elected a council member before being arrested as a spy during the Franco Prussian War Lester Ward detailed Cyrenus activities in The Iconoclast and went on to secure jobs for him at the Geological Survey and the Bureau of Statistics via his network in Washington Lester Ward s other brothers Lorenzo and Justin were both politically active in the cooperative movement and the prohibitionist movement respectively Works and ideasWard hoped to use his scientific literacy to contribute an American version of historical materialist Sociology opposing the then popular work of Herbert Spencer with critique inspired by Karl Marx Working in the Enlightenment tradition Ward associated his project with the advancement of democratic principles in the United States As Ward explained in the Preface to Dynamic Sociology Or Applied Social Science as Based Upon Statistical Sociology and the Less Complex Sciences it was his belief that The real object of science is to benefit man A science which fails to do this however agreeable its study is lifeless Sociology which of all sciences should benefit man most is in danger of falling into the class of polite amusements or dead sciences It is the object of this work to point out a method by which the breath of life may be breathed into its nostrils Political beliefs Ward approached society through the lens of producerism or the celebration of productive workers for example artisans skilled laborers merchants and craftspeople as opposed to nonproducers who simply accumulated capital and resources Ward believed that government should provide society with understanding of socioeconomic conditions to ensure that the state progressed as a whole Ward was critical of privilege monopoly and the evils of financial capitalism and supported abolitionism temperance and public education Nature evolution and conservation Ward had a lifelong interest in nature beginning in childhood and extending throughout his time as a government clerk active in local biological societies and as a formally trained paleobiologist Ward engaged with Lamarckian ideas or the theory that the natural environment shapes organisms Ward wrote on the topic in Neo Darwinism and Neo Lamarckism and was enthusiastic in his support of Darwin s findings and theories Reflecting a popular trend at the time Ward made connections between evolution patterns in the natural world and his perspectives on society Ward wrote that the process of evolution is organization reflecting that in his opinion the process is the same across biological chemical physical and social forms of organization Ward believed that the universal comprehension of nature would lead to a situation where every human could do his part stressing that recognising this interconnectedness and interdependence should inspire one to add to the whole and to contribute one s share ot life s great continuous flow Ward understood human conflict and war as evolutionary forces responsible for progress From Ward s perspective conflict enabled the rise of Homo Sapiens over other creatures and saw the expansion of what he considered to be more technologically advanced races and nations Ward saw war as a natural evolutionary process that could be painful slow and ineffective He argued to recognize these characteristics of war but to replace it with a more progressive system which minimized harm He wrote Darwin has taught us that the chief barrier to the advance of any species of plants or animals is its competition with other plants and animals that contest the same ground And therefore the fiercest opponents of any species are the members of the same species which demand the same elements of subsistence Hence the chief form of relief in the organic world consists in the thinning out of competitors Any species of animals or plants left free to propagate at its normal rate would overrun the earth in a short time and leave no room for any other species Any species that is sufficiently vigorous to resist its organic environment will crowd out all others and monopolize the earth If nature permitted this there could be no variety but only one monotonous aspect devoid of interest or beauty Whatever we may think of the harsh method by which this is prevented we cannot regret that it is prevented and that we have a world of variety interest and aesthetic attractiveness Alongside George Perkins Marsh John Wesley Powell and W J McGee Ward s ideas concerning conservation and the management of natural resources helped to inform the conservation movement of the early 20th century However the extent of Ward s contributions to scientific understandings of nature has been debated with John Burnham writing that Ward s unbelievable egotism and his ostentatious display of technical terminology misled many writers into believing he was a great or distinguished natural scientist Ward s desire to prove his knowledge of all scientific subjects and his habit of creating difficult neologisms in his books proved to be particularly bothersome to many readers of his work Welfare state and laissez faire Ward was a supporter of the concept of the welfare state Ward argued that those critical of the development of a social safety as paternalistic were hypocritical for themselves receiving relief from their own incompetency in their private enterprise as capitalists and industrialists Ward s ideas influenced a rising generation of progressive political leaders such as Herbert Croly and his ideas came to help shape early welfare policy in the United States However there are few demonstrable direct links between his writings and the actual programs of the founders of the welfare state and the New Deal Reflecting his overarching engagement with discussions of evolution Ward critiqued Herbert Spencer and Spencer s theories of laissez faire and survival of the fittest which were popular in socio economic thought in the United States after the American Civil War Ward positioned himself in opposition to Spencer and the American political scientist William Graham Sumner an advocate for Spencer s ideas who had promoted the principles of laissez faire The historian Henry Steele Commager argued that Ward trained his heaviest guns on the superstitions that still held domain over the mid of his generation of which laissez faire was the most stupefying Women s equality Ward advocated for equal rights for women at times drawing on metaphors and analogies from his interest in the study of the natural world to support his arguments He gave a speech on the topic to the Fourteenth Dinner of the Six O clock Club in Washington on April 26 1888 at Willard s Hotel Ward was of the opinion that there is no fixed rule by which Nature has intended that one sex should excel the other any more than there is any fixed point beyond which either cannot develop Ward summarized his position as true science teaches that the elevation of woman is the only sure road to the evolution of man Despite Ward s interest in the topic of equal rights for women Clifford H Scott summarised that practically all the suffragists ignored Ward Legacy in American sociologyAs Robert Kessler summarized reputation came slowly and faded rapidly for Ward while his early work was epoch making and his impact led to Hofstadter naming him the American Aristotle by the middle of the 20th century Ward had passed so completely from the contemporary scene and is now largely undiscussed in modern American sociology Eric Royal Lybeck argues that the broadness of Ward s research was responsible for his work being shunted from the centre of sociological discourse to the margins of posterity While Ward s work was wide sweeping and attempted to synthesize insights from a broad spectrum of research themes and subjects the institutionalization of sociology in the United States led to a hyperfocus on discrete and specialized problems which was at odds with the scale of his approach Albion Small suggested that Ward remained too attached to the positivism of Auguste Comte and the evolutionism of Herbert Spencer at a time when other social scientists were moving towards other social models and methods of analysis It was Small s assessment that Ward clung to a pure science approach in social research and was more of a museum investigator interested in labeling categorising and developing schema Cumulatively this meant that while Ward was highly regarded and influential in the early history of sociology in the United States his approach and contributions rapidly became redundant as the field changed Even during his lifetime C W A Veditz suggested that due to translation and wide circulation Ward s works may have been better known in Germany France Switzerland Russia and Japan than they were in the United States Ward s diaries writings and photographsAll but the first of his voluminous diaries were reportedly destroyed by Rosamond after his death Ward s first journal Young Ward s Diary A Human and Eager Record of the Years Between 1860 and 1870 remains under copyright A collection of Ward s writings and photographs is maintained by the Special Collections Research Center of the George Washington University The collection includes articles diaries correspondence and a scrapbook GWU s Special Collections Research Center is located in the Estelle and Melvin Gelman Library LiteratureBecker Ernest 1975 Escape From Evil New York London Free Press Collier MacMillan OCLC 780436838 all editions John Chynoweth Burnham 1956 Lester Frank Ward in American thought Annals of American sociology Washington D C Public Affairs Press ISBN 978 0742522176 Samuel Chugerman 1939 Lester F Ward the American Aristotle A Summary and Interpretation of His Sociology Literary Licensing LLC ISBN 978 1 258 10598 3 Chriss James J 2006 The Place of Lester Ward among the Sociological Classics Journal of Classical Sociology 6 1 5 21 doi 10 1177 1468795X06061282 S2CID 145704932 Commager Henry Steele 1950 Lester Ward and the Science of Society The American Mind An Interpretation of American Thought and Character Since the 1880s Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 00046 7 Commager Henry Steele ed 1967 Lester Ward and the Welfare State New York Bobbs Merrill OCLC 906058006 all editions Coser Lewis A History of Sociological Analysis New York Basic Books Dahms Harry F Lester F Ward Finlay Barbara Lester Frank Ward as a Sociologist Of Gender A New Look at His Sociological Work Gender amp Society Vol 13 No 2 251 265 1999 Gossett Thomas F 1963 Race The History of an Idea in America Harp Gillis J Positivist Republic Ch 5 Lester F Ward Positivist Whig Positivist Republic Auguste Comte and the Reconstruction of American Liberalism 1865 1920 Hofstadter Richard Social Darwinism in American Thought Chapter 4 original 1944 1955 reprint Boston Beacon Press 1992 Social Darwinism in American Thought Largey Gale Lester Ward A Global Sociologist 1 Mers Adelheid Fusion 2 Archived July 24 2011 at the Wayback Machine Perlstadt Harry Applied Sociology as Translational Research A One Hundred Fifty Year Voyage 3 Rafferty Edward C Apostle of Human Progress Lester Frank Ward and American Political Thought 1841 1913 Apostle of Human Progress Lester Frank Ward and American Political Thought 1841 1913 Ravitch Diane Left Back A Century of Failed School Reforms Simon amp Schuster Chapter one The Educational Ladder Left Back Ross John R Man over Nature the origins of the conservation movement 4 Ross Dorthy The Origins of American Social Science Cambridge University Press The Origins of American Social Science Seidelman Raymond and Harpham Edward J Disenchanted Realists Political Science and the American Crisis 1884 1984 p 26 Disenchanted Realists Political Science and the American Crisis Wood Clement The Sociology Of Lester F Ward The Sociology Of Lester F WardSelected works1880 1889 Ward Lester F 1881 Guide to the flora of Washington and vicinity Department of the Interior U S National Museum Bulletin of the United States National Museum 26 22 Washington Washington Printing Office OCLC 504513602 all editions 1883 Dynamic Sociology Vol 1 Or Applied social science as based upon statical sociology and the less complex sciences Vol 1 of 2 New York D Appleton amp Co 1885 Sketch of Paleobotany Department of the Interior U S National Museum Extract from the Fifth Annual Report of the Director 1883 84 Washington Washington Printing Office 357 Bibcode 1885usgs rept 7W doi 10 3133 70159114 1885 Synopsis of the Flora of the Laramie Group Annual Report of the U S Geological Survey 6 Chicago U S Geological Survey 399 557 1887 Types of the Laramie Flora Department of the Interior U S National Museum Bulletin of the United States National Museum 37 Washington Washington Printing Office 363 469 1890 1899 Ward Lester F 1891 Neo Darwinism and Neo Lamarckism Washington Ward Lester F 1893 The Psychic Factors of Civilization Boston Ginn amp Co reprinted 1906 Ward Lester F 1895 Contributions to Social Philosophy II Sociology and Cosmology Vol 1 Chicago American Journal of Sociology pp 132 145 Ward Lester F 1895 Contributions to Social Philosophy III Sociology and Biology Vol 1 Chicago American Journal of Sociology pp 313 326 Ward Lester F 1895 Contributions to Social Philosophy IV Sociology and Anthropology Vol 1 Chicago American Journal of Sociology pp 426 433 Ward Lester F 1896 Contributions to Social Philosophy V Sociology and Psychology Vol 1 Chicago American Journal of Sociology pp 618 632 Ward Lester F 1896 Contributions to Social Philosophy VI The Data of Sociology Vol 1 Chicago American Journal of Sociology pp 738 752 Ward Lester F 1896 Contributions to Social Philosophy VII The Social Forces Vol 2 Chicago American Journal of Sociology pp 82 95 Ward Lester F 1896 Contributions to Social Philosophy VIII The Mechanics of Society Vol 2 Chicago American Journal of Sociology pp 234 254 Ward Lester F 1896 Contributions to Social Philosophy IX The Purpose of Sociology Vol 2 Chicago American Journal of Sociology pp 446 460 Ward Lester F 1897 Contributions to Social Philosophy X Social Genesis Vol 2 Chicago American Journal of Sociology pp 532 546 Ward Lester F 1897 Contributions to Social Philosophy XI Individual Telesis Vol 2 Chicago American Journal of Sociology pp 699 717 Ward Lester F 1897 Contributions to Social Philosophy XII Collective Telesis Vol 2 Chicago American Journal of Sociology pp 801 822 Ward Lester F 1897 Dynamic Sociology Vol 2 Or Applied social science as based upon statical sociology and the less complex sciences Vol 2 of 2 New York D Appleton amp Co Ward Lester F 1898 Outlines of Sociology London The Macmillan Co reprinted 1913 1900 1909 Ward Lester F Ward January 1902 Contemporary Sociology I IV Part 1 of 3 American Journal of Sociology 7 4 Chicago University of Chicago Press Ward Lester F March 1902 Contemporary Sociology V VIII Part 2 of 3 American Journal of Sociology 7 5 Chicago University of Chicago Press 629 658 doi 10 1086 211087 Ward Lester F May 1902 Contemporary Sociology IX XII Part 3 of 3 American Journal of Sociology Vol 7 Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 749 762 Ward Lester F 1903 Pure Sociology A Treatise on the Origin and Spontaneous Development of Society 2 625 KB PDF Ward Lester F 1905 Status of the Mesozoic floras of the United States Vol 1 Monographs of the U S Geological Survey 48 Part 1 Text Washington Washington Printing Office 5 616 With the collaboration of William M Fontaine Arthur Bibbins and G R Wieland Ward Lester F 1905 Status of the Mesozoic floras of the United States Vol 2 Monographs of the U S Geological Survey 48 Part 2 Plates Washington Washington Printing Office 500pp With the collaboration of William M Fontaine Arthur Bibbins and G R Wieland Dealey James Q Ward Lester F 1905 A Text Book of Sociology London The Macmillan Co Ward Lester F 1906 Applied Sociology A Treatise on the Conscious Improvement of Society by Society New York Ginn amp Co Ward Lester F 1908 Social Classes in the Light of Modern Sociological Theory Vol 13 Chicago American Journal of Sociology pp 617 627 1910 1919 Ward Lester F 1913 Eugenics Euthenics and Eudemics Chicago American Journal of Sociology pp 737 754 Ward Lester F 1913 1918 Glimpses of the Cosmos Vol 1 Vol 6 vols New York and London G P Putnam s Sons Ward Lester F 1913 1918 Glimpses of the Cosmos Vol 2 Vol 6 vols New York and London G P Putnam s Sons Ward Lester F 1913 1918 Glimpses of the Cosmos Vol 3 Vol 6 vols New York and London G P Putnam s Sons Ward Lester F 1913 1918 Glimpses of the Cosmos Vol 4 Vol 6 vols New York and London G P Putnam s Sons Ward Lester F 1913 1918 Glimpses of the Cosmos Vol 5 Vol 6 vols New York and London G P Putnam s Sons Ward Lester F 1913 1918 Glimpses of the Cosmos Vol 6 Vol 6 vols New York and London G P Putnam s Sons References WARD Lester Frank The International Who s Who in the World 1912 p 1067 Archived from the original on June 13 2024 Retrieved March 15 2016 Dealey James Quayle 1925 Masters of Social Science Lester Frank Ward Social Forces 4 2 257 272 doi 10 2307 3004574 ISSN 0037 7732 JSTOR 3004574 Archived from the original on May 29 2024 Retrieved May 29 2024 Small Albion W 1916 Fifty Years of Sociology in the United States 1865 1915 American Journal of Sociology 21 6 749 758 doi 10 1086 212570 ISSN 0002 9602 JSTOR 2763629 Archived from the original on March 26 2024 Retrieved March 26 2024 Lybeck E R 2013 Lester Ward and Patrick Geddes in early American and British sociology History of the Human Sciences 26 2 p 52 Cape Emily Palmer 1922 Lester F Ward A Personal Sketch Sniegoski S J 1985 State Schools versus Parental Rights The Legacy of Lester Frank Ward The Journal of Social Political and Economic Studies 10 2 215 Martha Mitchell 1993 Ward Lester F Encyclopedia Brunoniana Providence RI Brown University Library Archived from the original on February 11 2022 Retrieved February 11 2022 He enlisted in the Union army in August 1862 only a few days after his secret marriage to Elisabeth Vought The Washington herald volume Washington D C 19 April 1913 Chronicling America Historic American Newspapers Lib of Congress https chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn83045433 1913 04 19 ed 1 seq 5 Cape E P 1922 Lester F Ward A Personal Sketch GP Putnam s Sons p 31 The Washington herald volume Washington D C 19 April 1913 Chronicling America Historic American Newspapers Lib of Congress lt https chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn83045433 1913 04 19 ed 1 seq 5 gt Rafferty E 2003 Apostle of human progress Lester Frank Ward and American political thought 1841 1913 Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 7 Rafferty E 2003 Apostle of human progress Lester Frank Ward and American political thought 1841 1913 Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 10 Barnes H E 1919 Two Representative Contributions of Sociology to Political Theory The Doctrines of William Graham Sumner and Lester Frank Ward American Journal of Sociology 25 1 p 3 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Archived from the original on June 14 2024 Retrieved April 10 2024 Cape E P 1922 Lester F Ward A Personal Sketch GP Putnam s Sons p 35 Cape E P 1922 Lester F Ward A Personal Sketch GP Putnam s Sons p 34 Rafferty E 2003 Apostle of human progress Lester Frank Ward and American political thought 1841 1913 Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 262 Cape E P 1922 Lester F Ward A Personal Sketch GP Putnam s Sons The Providence news Providence R I 08 March 1906 Chronicling America Historic American Newspapers Lib of Congress lt https chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn91070630 1906 03 08 ed 1 seq 9 gt Rafferty E 2003 Apostle of human progress Lester Frank Ward and American political thought 1841 1913 Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers pp 269 272 Rafferty E 2003 Apostle of human progress Lester Frank Ward and American political thought 1841 1913 Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 275 Ladysmith news budget volume Ladysmith Rusk County Wis 10 March 1910 Chronicling America Historic American Newspapers Lib of Congress lt https chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn85040245 1910 03 10 ed 1 seq 4 gt Rafferty E 2003 Apostle of human progress Lester Frank Ward and American political thought 1841 1913 Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 280 Rafferty E 2003 Apostle of human progress Lester Frank Ward and American political thought 1841 1913 Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers pp 273 274 Rafferty E 2003 Apostle of human progress Lester Frank Ward and American political thought 1841 1913 Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 283 Rafferty E 2003 Apostle of human progress Lester Frank Ward and American political thought 1841 1913 Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 281 The Washington herald volume Washington D C 27 April 1913 Chronicling America Historic American Newspapers Lib of Congress lt https chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn83045433 1913 04 27 ed 1 seq 27 gt Cape E P 1922 Lester F Ward A Personal Sketch GP Putnam s Sons pp 65 66 Rafferty E 2003 Apostle of human progress Lester Frank Ward and American political thought 1841 1913 Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 2 Cape E P 1922 Lester F Ward A Personal Sketch GP Putnam s Sons p 28 Cape E P 1922 Lester F Ward A Personal Sketch GP Putnam s Sons pp 29 30 Cape E P 1922 Lester F Ward A Personal Sketch GP Putnam s Sons p 30 American Sociological Association American Sociological Association Lester Ward www2 asanet org Archived from the original on August 13 2013 Retrieved August 23 2013 Cape E P 1922 Lester F Ward A Personal Sketch GP Putnam s Sons p 13 Cape E P 1922 Lester F Ward A Personal Sketch GP Putnam s Sons p 14 Cape E P 1922 Lester F Ward A Personal Sketch GP Putnam s Sons p 45 Rafferty E 2003 Apostle of human progress Lester Frank Ward and American political thought 1841 1913 Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers pp 119 120 Rafferty E 2003 Apostle of human progress Lester Frank Ward and American political thought 1841 1913 Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 120 Ward Lester 1883 Dynamic Sociology Or Applied Social Science as Based Upon Statistical Sociology and the Less Complex Sciences Rafferty E 2003 Apostle of human progress Lester Frank Ward and American political thought 1841 1913 Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 11 Rafferty E 2003 Apostle of human progress Lester Frank Ward and American political thought 1841 1913 Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 10 Rafferty E 2003 Apostle of human progress Lester Frank Ward and American political thought 1841 1913 Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 14 Burnham J C 1954 Lester Frank Ward as natural scientist American Quarterly 6 3 260 Ward Lester Frank 1891 Neo Darwinism and Neo Lamarckism Archived from the original on June 13 2024 Retrieved June 12 2024 Cape E P 1922 Lester F Ward A Personal Sketch GP Putnam s Sons pp 185 186 Cape E P 1922 Lester F Ward A Personal Sketch GP Putnam s Sons pp 187 188 Ward L F 1916 Pure sociology A treatise on the origin and spontaneous development of society Macmillan Company Mike Hawkins 1997 Social Darwinism in European and American Thought 1860 1945 Nature as Model and Nature as Threat Cambridge University Press p 13 ISBN 978 0521574341 Archived from the original on June 13 2024 Retrieved March 15 2016 Ward Lester Frank 1913 Eugenics Euthenics and Eudemics PDF American Journal of Sociology 18 6 737 754 Ross J R 1975 Man over nature Origins of the conservation movement American Studies 16 1 49 62 Burnham J C 1954 Lester Frank Ward as natural scientist American Quarterly 6 3 265 Rafferty E 2003 Apostle of human progress Lester Frank Ward and American political thought 1841 1913 Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 8 Lester Frank Ward Forum XX 1895 quoted in Henry Steel Commager s The American Mind An Interpretation of American Thought and Character Since the 1880s New Haven Yale University Press 1950 p 210 Lester Ward and the welfare state Bobbs Merrill 1967 ISBN 978 0 672 50998 8 Archived from the original on June 13 2024 Retrieved June 12 2024 Steven L Piott 2006 American Reformers 1870 1920 Progressives in Word And Deed Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0742527638 Archived from the original on June 13 2024 Retrieved March 15 2016 Commager Henry Steel 1950 The American Mind An Interpretation of American Thought and Character Since the 1880s New Haven Yale University Press Ward Frank Lester 1888 Our Better Halves https gynocentrism com 2015 05 15 our better halves 1888 Archived June 12 2024 at the Wayback Machine Cape E P 1922 Lester F Ward A Personal Sketch GP Putnam s Sons p 134 Clifford H Scott A Naturalistic Rationale For Women s Reform Lester Frank Ward on the Evolution of Sexual Relations Historian 1970 33 1 pp 54 67 Hofstadter 1945 Social Darwinism in American Thought University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia p 55 Kessler R A 1956 Lester F Ward as Legal Philosopher NYLF 2 389 Lybeck E R 2013 Lester Ward and Patrick Geddes in early American and British sociology History of the Human Sciences 26 2 p 51 Rafferty E 2003 Apostle of human progress Lester Frank Ward and American political thought 1841 1913 Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers pp 285 286 Lybeck E R 2013 Lester Ward and Patrick Geddes in early American and British sociology History of the Human Sciences 26 2 pp 51 53 Guide to the Lester Frank Ward Papers 1883 1919 Archived November 19 2016 at the Wayback Machine Special Collections Research Center Estelle and Melvin Gelman Library the George Washington University Becker 1975 online available in Internet Archive Ross Edward A 1939 Review of Lester F Ward The American Aristotle American Sociological Review 4 6 859 861 doi 10 2307 2083768 ISSN 0003 1224 JSTOR 2083768 Archived from the original on May 14 2024 Retrieved May 14 2024 Guthrie Elton F 1939 Review of Lester F Ward The American Aristotle American Sociological Review 4 6 861 862 doi 10 2307 2083769 ISSN 0003 1224 JSTOR 2083769 Archived from the original on May 14 2024 Retrieved May 14 2024 Finlay 1999 abstract Archived December 5 2008 at the Wayback Machine Gossett new edition 1997 in Google Books Archived June 13 2024 at the Wayback Machine hdl 2027 mdp 39015086632505 Patten Simon N 1894 The Failure of Biologic Sociology The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 4 6 63 91 doi 10 1177 000271629400400604 ISSN 0002 7162 JSTOR 1008869 Pure Sociology A Treatise Concerning the Origin and Spontaneous Development of Society Lester F Ward Journal of Political Economy 11 4 655 656 1903 doi 10 1086 251002 ISSN 0022 3808 Archived from the original on June 13 2024 Retrieved April 19 2024 Further readingPrimary sources Commager Henry Steele ed Lester Frank Ward and the Welfare State 1967 major writings by Ward and long introduction by Commager Stern Bernhard J ed Young Ward s Diary A Human and Eager Record of the Years Between 1860 and 1870 as They Were Lived in the Vicinity of the Little Town of Towanda Pennsylvania in the Field as a Rank and File Soldier in the Union Army and Later in the Nation s Capital by Lester Ward Who became the First Great Sociologist This Country Produced 1935 Secondary sources Bannister Robert Sociology and Scientism The American Quest for Objectivity 1880 1940 1987 pp 13 31 Burnham John C Lester Frank Ward as Natural Scientist American Quarterly 1954 6 3 pp 259 265 in JSTOR Chugerman Samuel Lester F Ward the American Aristotle A Summary and Interpretation of His Sociology Duke University Press 1939 Fine Sidney Laissez Faire and the General Welfare State A Study of Conflict in American Thought 1865 1901 1956 pp 252 288 Muccigrosso Robert ed Research Guide to American Historical Biography 1988 3 1570 1574 Nelson Alvin F Lester Ward s Conception of the Nature of Science Journal of the History of Ideas 1972 33 4 pp 633 638 in JSTOR Piott Steven L American Reformers 1870 1920 Progressives in Word and Deed 2006 examines 12 leading activists see chapter 1 for Ward Scott Clifford H Lester Frank Ward 1976 External linksLester Frank Ward at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from CommonsQuotations from WikiquoteTexts from WikisourceTaxa from WikispeciesData from Wikidata Primary sources Wikiquote has quotations related to Lester Frank Ward Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Ward Lester Frank Guide to the Lester Frank Ward Collection 1860 1913 Brown University Library Collections Guide to the Lester Frank Ward Papers 1883 1919 Special Collections Research Center Estelle and Melvin Gelman Library the George Washington University Archived November 19 2016 at the Wayback Machine Smithsonian Institution Archives Lester Frank Ward Papers 1882 1913 with Related Materials to Circa 1965 collections si edu Archived from the original on March 7 2016 Retrieved August 23 2013 Lester Ward search of Archive org Internet Archive Search Ward Lester archive org Retrieved August 23 2013 Secondary sources Ralf Schreyer Lester Frank Ward Sociology Primary Resources www geocities ws ralf schreyer Retrieved August 23 2013 The Sunday Review Towanda Pennsylvania Short biography Archived March 3 2016 at the Wayback Machine A Lester Ward web site Public Sociology website Mansfield University Sociology professor Gale Largey produced a 90 minute documentary on Lester Frank Ward that was featured at the 2005 Centennial of the American Sociological Association and is available upon request from the director Works by or about Lester Frank Ward at the Internet Archive Works by Lester Frank Ward at LibriVox public domain audiobooks