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Ruth Beryl Martin, loved singing, performing

June 17, 2025

Ruth Beryl Martin passed away Monday, May 26, 2025.

She is survived by her husband, Norman Ryan; her two daughters, Heather Torain and Andreia Torain; her one remaining sister, Carolyn (Cardin); her two grandchildren, Jazz and Amber Torain-Fass; and her nieces, nephews, grand-nieces, and -nephews.

Beryl was born in 1939 in Blooming Glen, Pa., to Helen (Leatherman) and Wayne Martin, the oldest of four children (including Mary Ann (Kinney)and Floyd) in a dutiful, musical Mennonite family. Early on, she assumed care of her younger siblings, forming in her an enduring sense of nurturing and responsibility for others in the world around her. She had a wide-open and passionate heart, expressed vibrantly through her music.

She played the piano and sang throughout her life, singing barbershop quartet (sextet) with her entire family and becoming the first of her family to attend college, earning her BA in music at Goshen College. Continuing to sing and perform throughout these years, she eventually moved to Philadelphia and began teaching music for the School District of Philadelphia. During this time, she joined Singing City and performed throughout the Mid-Atlantic states and New England, often sharing stages with the Philadelphia Orchestra and New York Philharmonic.

In Singing City, she met W. Glenn Torain, whom she married in 1970. Though from vastly different backgrounds, they found common ground in music and social justice, dreaming of fighting inequality personally through their interracial marriage and family. Heather was born the same year they married, and Andreia was born in 1972. The family lived in Powelton Village and attended First Unitarian Church of Philadelphia. Here, Beryl met lifelong friends and established herself as a leader in her professional, neighborhood, and church communities, completing her MA in music at Temple University, leading choral groups and school musicals, raising children, and singing in the choir and periodically playing the piano at First Unitarian services throughout this time.  

In 1987, Beryl’s long-standing back problems came to a head, leading the way to divorce, retirement, a subsequent long-term partner, Elliot Fruman, and a short time in a little house on Stillman Street. In 1991, she finally found her “sanctuary” on Collins Pond in Southern Delaware, where she lived the last 34 years of her life, providing space for many celebrations and gatherings throughout her years there. During this time, she became involved with Mountain Laurel Autoharp Gathering and Wooden Canoe Heritage Association Assembly, making many trips through Pennsylvania and New York State to gather, play music, and enjoy nature throughout these years. She also enjoyed making trips to visit her daughter, Heather, in San Francisco and then Portland, Ore., to be with her grandchildren.

In Delaware, Beryl was a founding member of Unitarian Universalists of Southern Delaware, providing weekly piano music and establishing herself as a beloved church community member.

She married Norman Ryan May 5, 2012, intending to live out her last years with her loving partner and friend. She would say that they “wore a groove” between Georgetown and Edenton, N.C., from four years of traveling back and forth before Norman moved to Delaware to live in her house on the pond.

She kept her lifelong passions of reading, crocheting, adventuring, playing piano and autoharp, and her love of nature and the sea alive until the end, sharing her vibrant and beautiful soul with everyone she encountered. She will be lovingly remembered and missed by all who knew her. May her spirit continue to gift her goodness to the world from the other side.

Visit Beryl's Life Memorial webpage at parsellfuneralhomes.com.