Biography
Ruth Tongue was born in Handsworth. She was the third and youngest child of Edwin Tongue, a Congressional Minister, and his wife Mabel Jones. The family moved to Taunton during Ruth's early childhood, and then to Middlesex in 1909. As a young woman, Tongue took classes at the London College of Music and later studied at the London City Literary Institute. She worked as a teacher, taking an interest in both music and drama. In the 1950s, she moved to Crowcombe,Controversy
Contemporary response to Tongue's work in folklore was mixed to positive. Some reviewers found her sources vague and the dates of collection confusing, but Tongue responded that most of her notes had been lost to a house fire. Tongue is remembered as a "problematic figure" and the authenticity of her folklore collections has been called into question. Her collecting methods included recalling stories from her earliest childhood and rewriting stories from memory alone. Modern critics have voiced doubts about the unique creatures and distinctive style found only in Tongue's work, and have raised the possibility that she fabricated stories and borrowed material from other books.Published books
* ''Folktales of England'', eds. Briggs and Ruth L. Tongue (1965) * ''Somerset Folklore'' (1965) * ''The Chime Child, or Somerset Singers: being an account of some of their songs collected over sixty years'' (1968) * ''Forgotten folk tales of the English counties'' (1970) * ''A Dictionary of British Folk-Tales in the English Language'' by Katharine M. Briggs (1970) - Tongue contributed numerous stories.References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tongue, Ruth Women folklorists English folklorists 1898 births 1981 deaths Storytellers