Per the 1900 Census for Richmond County, New York married Louise Bennett in 1869.
They were the parents of three children with zero living.
The Washington Times Monday, April 22, 1901
Obituary
Captain G.S. Luttrell Ward, a retired United States Army officer, died on Saturday morning at his home in New Brighton, Staten Island. He had been ill for about four months. Captain Ward, who was sixty years old, was a native of Philadelphia. At the outbreak of the Civil War he enlisted in a volunteer Pennsylvania regiment and served throughout the war. He then entered the Regular Army as Second Lieutenant in the Thirteenth Infantry and afterward was commissioned Captain in the Twenty-second Infantry. For seventeen years, he served as aide-de-camp on General Hancock's staff. He retired from active service on April 8, 1891. A widow survives him.
Per the 1900 Census for Richmond County, New York married Louise Bennett in 1869.
They were the parents of three children with zero living.
The Washington Times Monday, April 22, 1901
Obituary
Captain G.S. Luttrell Ward, a retired United States Army officer, died on Saturday morning at his home in New Brighton, Staten Island. He had been ill for about four months. Captain Ward, who was sixty years old, was a native of Philadelphia. At the outbreak of the Civil War he enlisted in a volunteer Pennsylvania regiment and served throughout the war. He then entered the Regular Army as Second Lieutenant in the Thirteenth Infantry and afterward was commissioned Captain in the Twenty-second Infantry. For seventeen years, he served as aide-de-camp on General Hancock's staff. He retired from active service on April 8, 1891. A widow survives him.
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