Ruth Wales Du Pont
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Ruth Wales du Pont (June 10, 1889 – November 7, 1967) was an American socialite, philanthropist, amateur classical composer, and spouse of Henry Francis du Pont, who founded Winterthur Museum, Garden and Library.


Early life and family

Ruth Wales was born in the wealthy
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suburb of
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on June 10, 1889, the only child of Edward Howe Wales and Ruth Holmes Hawks Wales. Her father was a stockbroker,
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aide, US Navy Reserve commodore, and philander who preferred to stay in Washington, D.C. Ruth grew up in Hyde Park with her grandmother and mother, to whom she was very close. Her paternal grandfather was New York City Parks Commissioner Salem Howe Wales, while her maternal uncle by marriage was US Senator
Elihu Root Elihu Root (; February 15, 1845February 7, 1937) was an American lawyer, Republican politician, and statesman who served as Secretary of State and Secretary of War in the early twentieth century. He also served as United States Senator from N ...
.
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was her neighbor and later attended her wedding. She boarded at the elite preparatory Miss Spence's School from the age of 12, where she excelled academically. Vivacious and gregarious, Wales grew up as a socialite who mingled with elite East Coast families and "generally kicked up her heels" at
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, Bar Harbor, Watch Hill,
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, and New York. Every summer she sojourned at the luxury resort village of Southampton on
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, where her grandfather,
Salem Howe Wales Salem Howe Wales (October 4, 1825 – December 2, 1902) was an American journalist, politician, and philanthropist who held various leadership offices in the government of New York City, served as managing editor of the ''Scientific American'', ...
, maintained a lakeside mansion called Ox Pasture. In her early twenties, her father escorted her on a tour of England and France, where she received a tour of the royal stables from
Rosa Lewis Rosa Lewis (''née'' Ovenden; 1867–1952) was an English cook and owner of The Cavendish Hotel in London, located at the intersection of Jermyn Street and Duke Street, St. James. Known as the "Queen of Cooks", her culinary skills were highly pri ...
, a former cook and
King Edward VII Edward VII (Albert Edward; 9 November 1841 – 6 May 1910) was King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and Emperor of India, from 22 January 1901 until his death in 1910. The second child and eldest son of Queen Victoria a ...
's mistress, whom Ruth declared "one of the most fascinating women I have ever met." In the same letter, however, she wrote approvingly of the British class structure, which "certainly keeps people in their place . . . no overlapping of the classes."


Marriage and children

In 1916, after a seven-year courtship, she married Henry Francis du Pont (1880–1969). Nine years her elder, H. F. was introverted and socially awkward, happy to spend his days raising cattle, collecting antiques, and running the family estate in Winterthur near
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. His beloved mother had died while he was in college, and he had a difficult relationship with his irascible and domineering father, former US senator and colonel Henry Algernon du Pont (1838–1926). After Henry and Ruth married, they lived at Winterthur with the elder du Pont, whose demands included banning divorcées from Winterthur and requiring his granddaughters to speak French in his presence. Ruth's anxiety and insomnia mounted until by 1918 she was taking "nerve medicine." By 1921 she had largely moved out of Winterthur, and in 1924 she took a rest cure at the Austen Riggs Center in
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. Despite their distinct personalities and familial challenges, the couple were to all appearances devoted to each other. In contrast to her husband, Ruth had little interest in farming or gardening and preferred to sojourn at their
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apartment in
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, where she could enjoy New York's society and cultural amenities. Often accompanied by Henry or their daughters, she also stayed at Chestertown House (their summer residence in Southampton) or the family's winter home in Boca Grande, Florida. Ruth deferred most of Winterthur's domestic management, including menus and decor, to her husband, who enjoyed such details. Henry and Ruth had two daughters, Pauline Louise du Pont Harrison (1918–2007) and Ruth Ellen du Pont Lord (1922–2014). In her memoirs, Ruth Ellen recalled her mother as kind but aloof, rarely lifting or holding the child in her lap. Pauline married New York attorney Alfred C. Harrison. Ruth Ellen married
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professor George deForest Lord of
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.


Musical compositions

Ruth took piano lessons from the age of 13 and became an amateur classical composer. Even a year into her marriage, she traveled weekly to the
Peabody Conservatory The Peabody Institute of The Johns Hopkins University is a private conservatory and preparatory school in Baltimore, Maryland. It was founded in 1857 and opened in 1866 by merchant/financier and philanthropist George Peabody (1795–1869) ...
in
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, where she studied harmony under famed conductor
Gustav Strube Gustav Strube (3 March 1867 – 2 February 1953) was a German-born conductor and composer. He was the founding conductor of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra in 1916, and taught at the Peabody Conservatory. He wrote two operas, ''Ramona'', which ...
. She quit her studies amid the pressures of family life in the 1920s, though she continued to write music and play Winterthur's grand piano to entertain guests. She composed a chorus for a ragtime, one organ sonata, at least one waltz, one berceuse, four dances, fugues (all but one of which she lost at a railway station), and the introduction and first act of an opera she called ''A New England Romance'', based on the novella ''
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'' by
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. Ruth also produced original songs and scores for some of her favorite poems, including
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's "The Night Rider" and "Home from the Hill." Conductor Brian Cox described her as a "significant but forgotten composer" and "one of the few Delaware composers who wrote for the art of it." Ruth's compositions were publicly performed in various Delaware venues. In 1976, the Christ Church Christiana Hundred held a music festival featuring her pseudo-
Baroque The Baroque (, ; ) is a style of architecture, music, dance, painting, sculpture, poetry, and other arts that flourished in Europe from the early 17th century until the 1750s. In the territories of the Spanish and Portuguese empires including t ...
"Fugue in G Minor for Organ," performed by Stefan Kozinski. This piece was later recorded for a 1993 album entitled ''Music from the Banks of the Brandywine'', conducted by Brian Cox and mostly consisting of pieces by
Alfred I. du Pont Alfred Irénée du Pont (May 12, 1864 – April 28, 1935) was an American industrialist, financier, philanthropist and a member of the influential Du Pont family. Alfred du Pont first rose to prominence through his work in his family's Delaware ...
. In 1995, the New Tankopanicum Orchestra's concert at Winterthur Museum featured the first public performance of music she composed. In 2014, the Wilmington Community Orchestra, conducted by Brian Cox, held the world premiere of another piece she wrote.


Personal beliefs

Like her husband, Ruth was a staunch Republican who deplored her old friend Franklin Delano Roosevelt's
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policies. When her younger daughter vowed to vote for FDR, Ruth was outraged. She considered FDR "a traitor to his class" and in 1936 "made so vitriolic a speech in support of Alfred Landon, the Republican candidate, that one Winterthur resident in the audience said it was sure to gain votes for Roosevelt." Her animosity toward FDR, born perhaps of a personal sense of betrayal by a friend, was little softened by the passage of time. In 1954, Ruth wrote a letter to the Secretary of the Treasury saying she would pay for the recall of all Roosevelt dimes. Ruth and her husband were
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who attended Christ Church Christiana Hundred, the du Pont family's traditional house of worship near Winterthur.


Death and legacy

Ruth died on November 7, 1967, at Delaware Division Hospital in Wilmington, where she had been hospitalized since October 12. She was interred in the Du Pont de Nemours Cemetery in Wilmington. Ruth was survived by her husband, both daughters, eight grandchildren, and two grand-grandchildren. Alexander Ames and Devon Ennis (2019) have argued that "Ruth Wales du Pont is an underrepresented figure in Winterthur’s history as it is shared with visitors today." Apart from her bedroom and the grand piano on which she performed for guests, "her presence is rarely evoked on introductory tours." However, in 2020, an exhibit at Winterthur Museum recounted Ruth's life and featured various objects belonging to her, including her sheet music collection and a recreation of her wedding dress. In 1961, Ruth and her husband donated land on Captains Neck Lane in Southampton to conservation. The preserve was named the Ruth Wales du Pont Sanctuary. Ruth was a trustee of the reconstruction of Tryon Palace in
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. The mansion had been designed by her ancestor, the architect John Hawks.


Further reading

*


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:du Pont, Ruth Wales 1889 births 1967 deaths 20th-century American composers 20th-century American philanthropists American women classical composers American classical composers American women philanthropists American socialites Ruth Wales Peabody Institute alumni People from Hyde Park, New York Spence School alumni Burials at Du Pont de Nemours Cemetery People associated with Winterthur Museum, Garden and Library 20th-century women philanthropists