Frederick Townsend Ward (born November 29, 1831, Salem, Massachusetts, U.S.—died September 21, 1862, Tzeki [now Cixi], Zhejiang province, China) was an adventurer who commanded the “Ever Victorious Army,” a body of Western-trained troops that aided the Qing dynasty (1644–1911/12) in suppressing the Taiping Rebellion, the giant religious and political uprising that occupied South China between 1850 and 1864.
In 1860, with Taiping forces about to take Shanghai, Ward organized a force of foreign mercenaries and helped to save the city. At this time, the Western powers were attempting to maintain neutrality in the civil war, and the British arrested Ward to halt his military aid to the dynasty. He escaped, however, and organized a new army in 1862, which used Chinese troops with Western officers and arms.
The arrogance of Ward’s troops aroused tremendous resentment among the regular Chinese forces, but his tactics resulted in numerous victories, and he was therefore subsidized at great expense by the Qing government. When Ward was mortally wounded in battle, a British major, Charles George (“Chinese”) Gordon (1833–85), took his place as commander of the “Ever Victorious Army.” Although most present-day Western historians believe that this army had no more than marginal effect on suppression of the rebellion, the traditional Western interpretation is that these Western troops were crucial in the defeat of the Taipings.