Ruth Muzzy Conniston Morize (December 1, 1892–October 3, 1952) was a Boston socialite and musician.
Ruth Muzzy was born in Bristol, Connecticut, on December 1, 1892. She studied music at Yale, receiving a bachelor degree of music in 1915. Afterward, she studied music in Paris, France.
In 1918, Ruth married Philip Conniston, but the marriage ended in 1920 due to the death of Conniston. She taught music appreciation at Simmons College (now Simmons University) and the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston. In addition to teaching, she volunteered with the Quakers and participated in Boston and New York society. She also published at least two collections of French songs, “Chantons un Peu” and “La Cercle Francais.”
On June 27, 1929, Ruth Conniston married Andre Morize, a noted professor of French literature and culture at Harvard University. While Professor Morize directed the French summer school at Middlebury College, Ruth Morize organized the Music Center in the summer of 1938. The Music Center only ran for three years.
As World War II spread throughout Europe, Ruth Morize helped organize a unit of the Fighting French Relief and volunteered with American Aid to France and the Red Cross.
In 1952, Andre Morize divorced Ruth Morize, citing “unreasonable jealousy.” Ruth Morize challenged the validity of the French divorce, claiming desertion, and requested spousal support. The divorce was followed closely in the news. Additionally, as the case was tried in an American court, it raised the question of whether an American court could adjudicate a divorce from outside its jurisdiction and country. Ultimately, the Suffolk County, Massachusetts court awarded Ruth Morize a $150 monthly stipend from her former husband’s American funds.
Ruth Muzzy Conniston Morize died on October 3, 1952, in Paris, France.
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