Sue F. Ward was born Sue Elleanore Fryer in Albuquerque, New Mexico, in 1935.[1][2] She was the younger daughter of Ione Pierce and E. Reeseman Fryer.[2][3] Her father worked for the Bureau of Indian Affairs, and the family traveled across the country and the world throughout her childhood, with Sue attending more than a dozen different schools during her elementary and junior high school years. A decade of her childhood was spent in Arizona, which would influence her later work as an elder rights advocate; she said she was inspired by the respect with which the Navajo treated their elders.[1][2][3]
Having settled back in the Washington area, in the Maryland suburbs, Ward became active in Democratic politics.[1][2] In 1978, she ran for Congress against Republican Rep. Marjorie Holt, but she failed to defeat the incumbent — her daughter later said she knew it was a lost cause, but "she didn't think elections should go unchallenged."[1][2][3] She also drove a school bus and became an active volunteer in this period.[3]
While Ward was active in advocating for a range of human and civil rights causes, she is best known for her work as an elder rights activist. She served older Marylanders as a social worker and government servant, and was at various times president of the National Associations of Area Agencies and State Units on Aging, the Maryland Gerontological Association, and the Commission on Legal Problems of the Elderly.[2]
From 1982 to 1991, she led the Prince George's County Department of Aging. In 1992, she was hired as director of Prince George's Department of Family Services. Then, in 1995, she was chosen as director of the Maryland Department of Aging. In 1998, when Governor Parris Glendening incorporated the department into his cabinet, she was elevated to the role of the state's first secretary of the Department of Aging.[1][2]
Ward served as secretary until 2003.[1][2] In this capacity, she fought to preserve social service organizations and retain autonomy for these programs. She battled budget crises, advocating for the importance of elder services, and worked to encourage and empower social workers.[4]
She was married to the sociologist Archibald Ward from 1959 until his death in 2000.[1][2][3] They had two daughters.[1][2][5] Archibald was 23 years her senior, and her work in elder advocacy became personal as she cared for him in his old age, as well as for her mother, who had dementia.[3]