No definite evidence of Ward’s parentage has been discovered, but he was probably a member of the family of this name which resided at Bridgwater in the first quarter of the fifteenth century. The Bridgwater merchant Richard Ward† and his son John, who in 1403 were implicated in the plundering of a Spanish ship, between them attested the Bridgwater elections to the Parliaments of 1410, 1413 (May), 1414 (Nov.), 1415 and 1419, and Richard served two terms as steward of the borough in the early years of Henry IV’s reign as well as representing it in the Commons in 1407.
Ward’s reasons for seeking election to Parliament remain obscure, but he was probably an attractive candidate for the boroughs that returned him, for his services came cheap. In 1450 the community of Bridport paid him and his colleague John Burgess II* just 13s. 4d. between them,
