Ruth Moench Bell


Ruthinda Evelyn Moench Bell was a teacher at Utah Agricultural College.

Biography

Ruth Moench Bell was born on January 29, 1878, in Ogden, Utah, the daughter of Louis Frederick Moench and Ruthinda Eveline Hill.
She graduate from Ashmore School of Expression and had a B. S. from Utah Agricultural College; she attended also University of Chicago, University of California, Berkeley and Columbia University. She studied and traveled in Europe.
She moved to Logan, Utah, and married to George A. Bell. Their children were: Ruth M Bell Hockensmith, Alladine, George, Richard Quentin Bell. They lived at 84 East Third St., North, Logan, Utah.
She was a teacher at Utah Agricultural College. She was the head of the Department of Dramatic Art at Utah Agricultural College from 1900 to 1907; she was director of Community Children's Plays, staging her own adaptations of The Blue Bird and Peter Pan; her serials and plays were published in all the magazines of the state; articles appeared in Harper's Weekly, The Delineator, The Woman's Magazine, Boston Cooking School, American Motherhood; she was a writer of scenarios for the Gaumont Company and other film companies; she was the author of Plotting the Play, which carried an introduction by Clayton Hamilton. She was associate founder of the Utah Agricultural College Little Theatre, Campus Players Club and Playmakers Club.
She was also a member of: Business and Professional Women's Club, Utah Agricultural College Faculty League, Utah Agricultural College Woman's Club, Periwig, Theta Alpha Phi.
She died on September 1, 1957, and is buried at Logan City Cemetery, Logan.