Mary Augusta Arnold Ward (born June 11, 1851, Tasmania, Australia—died March 24, 1920, London, England) was an English novelist whose best-known work, Robert Elsmere, created a sensation in its day by advocating a Christianity based on social concern rather than theology.
Mary August Arnold grew up in an atmosphere of religious searching. Her father resigned his position as a school official in Australia to become a Roman Catholic but later returned temporarily to the Anglican Church and settled the family at Oxford. In 1872 she married Humphry Ward, a fellow of Brasenose College. In 1881 they moved to London, where she wrote for the Pall Mall Gazette and other periodicals. She wrote as Mrs. Humphry Ward.
Mary Augusta Ward’s rejection of a supernaturally oriented Christianity in favour of a strong social commitment found eloquent expression in her novel Robert Elsmere (1888), the story of a young Anglican clergyman’s conversion to the belief that “Religion consists alone in the service of the people.” The popularity of this controversial work was only increased by William Gladstone’s polemical reply, “Robert Elsmere and the Battle of Belief” (1888). Ward followed its success with more than 20 other novels, notably David Grieve (1892), Sir George Tressady (1896), and Helbeck of Bannisdale (1898). By the turn of the century she had become firmly established as a best-selling author.
Ward worked tirelessly for social improvement; she was responsible for the foundation of the Invalid Children’s School (1899) and for the establishment of evening play centers by the London County Council in 1905. She opposed the Women’s Suffrage Movement, however, fearing in emancipation a loss of women’s moral influence. In 1908 she founded the Anti-Suffrage League. Her autobiography, A Writer’s Recollections, was published in 1918.