Lambert Ward


Sir Albert Lambert Ward, 1st Baronet was a volunteer soldier in the Territorial Army and a Conservative Party politician in the United Kingdom.
Ward was an officer of the Honourable Artillery Company, he was commissioned a second lieutenant in 1902. He was promoted to lieutenant in 1904. He was still a lieutenant at the formation of the Territorial Army in 1908, and was promoted to captain in 1913. He fought in World War I, soon being promoted to temporary Major and ultimately rising to the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel. In 1916 he commanded the Howe Battalion of the Royal Naval Division. After the war he continued as an officer, initially reverting to the rank of major. He was awarded the Territorial Decoration TD in 1919. He was re-promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel in 1924, commanding the unit for a period up to 1928. He was given a brevet promotion to Colonel in 1927. In 1931 he was made Honorary Colonel of the 50th Divisional Train in the Royal Army Service Corps.
He was elected at the 1918 general election Member of Parliament for Kingston upon Hull North West, and held the seat until his defeat in the Labour Party landslide at the 1945 election. He served under Ramsay MacDonald as a Lord of the Treasury from 1931 to 1935 and as Vice-Chamberlain of the Household in 1935, under Stanley Baldwin as Vice-Chamberlain of the Household in 1935 and as Comptroller of the Household from 1935 to 1937 and under Neville Chamberlain as Treasurer of the Household in 1937.
Ward was made a Baronet, of Blyth in the County of Northumberland, in the 1929 King's Birthday Honours. He was made a Commander of the Royal Victorian Order in 1937. In 1946 he was appointed a Deputy Lieutenant for the County of London.

Family

He was the son of Albert Bird Ward and Louisa Emma née Lambert, his sister Louisa Isabel Ward married John Edward Thornycroft. In 1920 he married Constance Vivian née Tidmas. Their daughter Diana Josephine Lambert Ward, Lady Spearman, was the second wife of Sir Alexander Cadwallader Mainwaring Spearman.

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