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Ruth Branning Molloy, a poet, writer, photographer, and Philadelphia
historian, was born on July 24, 1910 in the Bronx, New York.
At the age of fourteen, she graduated from West Philadelphia
High School for Girls.
In 1926, Ruth Branning enrolled at the University of Pennsylvania,
where she participated in many clubs and activities, including
Sphinx and Key, Bowling Green, and the Freshman Commission.
She was also the editor of the 1930 Record Book, and a member
of the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority.
After earning a B.S. in education from Penn, Ruth Branning
went to work for The Philadelphia Inquirer. As
an editorial assistant in the library, she researched material
for "Everybody's Column" and "100 Years Ago,"
and helped build the department's reference file. In 1932,
she married Joseph E. Molloy, head librarian at The
Philadelphia Inquirer. Most of their married life was
spent in West Philadelphia, where they raised their three
daughters.
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Ruth Molloy was a prolific writer of essays, poems and other
articles for publications such as the Saturday Evening
Post, The Inquirer, The Evening
Bulletin, and Mademoiselle and Good
Housekeeping magazines. She also took photographs,
which were published as photo essays. Her story "Twenty Below,
at the End of a Lane," a fictionalized account of her childhood,
originally printed in Mademoiselle magazine,
was included in the Best American Short Stories of 1956.
She was a regular contributor to The Pennsylvania Gazette.
Molloy was a resident of St. Mark's Square in University
City for 34 years and one of the founders of the University
City Historical Society. She often gave tours of the area
and spoke about its history to school groups and organizations.
In 1983, she initiated the "Adopt-a-Grave" program, designed
to preserve the history of graves at Woodland Cemetery in
West Philadelphia.
In 2000, Molloy's book of poems, Finally, illustrated
with her photographs, was published by Sutter House. Despite
her failing health, she continued to work on her multi-volume
history of West Philadelphia until her death, on November
8, 2002.
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Ruth Branning Molloy on her years at Penn:
"On that first day I sat in a long row of freshmen waiting
for an interview with Dean Minnick. To while away the time,
I rolled up a small piece of white paper and pretended to
be smoking a cigarette. Then my name was called. The dean
stood at his door, ready to shake my hand; I was frightened:
"I wasn't really smoking." "I know that,"
said the kindly dean in a forgiving voice. Smoking was forbidden
for coeds, although some sneaks puffed away in the rest rooms."
"Suddenly I was aware that I was a member of the Class
of 1930. The possibilities were enormous: I might go to a
dance or see a football game. Season tickets were $10, and
we, the women of the hand-picked class, were made aware of
a special privilege: we would be the first coeds allowed to
buy a season ticket, just the way the men students did. We
could even cheer and sing Pennsylvania songs-unlike, I later
learned, another institution at which coeds were not allowed
to cheer or sing at games, as their high-pitched voices might
bother the team."
"We have got to remember that women labored and were
delighted over each achievement. They learned to mention eventualities
as if they were events, to state dreams as future facts, to
talk matter-of-factly of dreams: the Valley Forge Campus,
a women's clubhouse, admission to the Wharton School, a College
for Women, a Dean of Women, a woman trustee, the privilege
of buying a season football ticket, new wallpaper in the girls'
retiring room, bubbling fountains for Bennett Hall!"
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