01/16/2026
With deep sadness, we share news of the recent passing of UHCO Professor Dr. Ruth Manny. The University of Houston College of Optometry will host a memorial service to honor Dr. Manny’s life and legacy:
Monday, January 26, 2026
4:30–6:30 p.m.
University of Houston College of Optometry
4401 Martin Luther King Blvd., Houston, TX 77204
Health 1 Building – Texas State Optical Alumni Auditorium
For those unable to attend in person, a live-stream link will be available on the college website prior to the event: https://www.opt.uh.edu/.
To assist with arrangements, the college kindly requests photos, sentiments, and stories, as well as attendance RSVPs, by January 21: https://wkf.ms/4jxaAvD.
Dr. Manny was deeply loved and many of her colleagues, students, and friends wish to share memories and stories during the service. To ensure we are respectful of time while honoring her remarkable legacy, we encourage brief video recordings of your favorite moments and the impact she had on your life. These messages will be thoughtfully compiled and respectfully presented during the service so that as many voices as possible can be included.
Dr. Manny and her family established the Manny Family Endowment to provide scholarship support for optometry students. If you would like to make a gift in honor of Dr. Manny’s memory, you may do so here: https://giving.uh.edu/optometry/manny-memorial.
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Remembering Ruth Manny
(May 17, 1951 – January 3, 2026)
Ruth Manny devoted her life to caring for others, especially children, and to making the world a little clearer – literally and figuratively – for generations. For more than fifty years, she served as a clinician, scientist, teacher, mentor, and advocate, always guided by a deep sense of responsibility to her patients, her students, and her community.
Ruth began her career as an optometrist in 1975 and never stopped learning or serving. While working in private practice, she earned advanced degrees culminating in a PhD, becoming a clinician-scientist at a time when few women followed that path. Her professional home for her entire career was the University of Houston College of Optometry, where she taught, conducted research, and cared for patients until the final days of her life.
At the heart of Ruth’s work was her care for children – especially infants, preschoolers, and children with developmental or physical challenges. She believed every child deserved the chance to see the world clearly and to reach their full potential. She co-founded a specialized clinic for children with differing abilities, creating a welcoming and respectful space for families who were often underserved elsewhere. Parents trusted her not only for her expertise, but for her kindness, patience, and ability to truly listen.
Ruth’s research changed how pediatric eye care is practiced around the world. She helped lead large national studies that improved the diagnosis and treatment of childhood vision problems such as amblyopia (lazy eye), strabismus (eye misalignment), and myopia (nearsightedness). The findings from these studies are now part of everyday clinical care, benefiting countless children she never met. Even on the day she passed away, new scientific papers bearing her name were published – quiet proof of a lifetime of sustained impact.
Yet Ruth was humble and never measured success by titles or accolades. What mattered most to her was helping others grow. She mentored dozens of graduate students, young researchers, and clinicians, many of whom credit her with shaping their careers and their values. She was known as a demanding but deeply fair mentor – someone who pushed people to do their best because she believed they could. Her former students now serve patients, teach, and lead programs across the country, extending her influence far beyond her own work.
Ruth also gave generously to the broader scientific and professional community. She reviewed hundreds of research papers and grants, served in leadership roles for national research groups, and worked behind the scenes to ensure that science was rigorous, ethical, and focused on real-world benefit. She believed that good science was a form of service – one that required honesty, discipline, and humility.
Despite her global professional impact, Ruth remained grounded and unassuming. She showed up every day for her patients, her students, her colleagues, and her family. She cared deeply about fairness, access, and doing things the right way. Those who knew her best remember not only her intellect and commitment, but her steadiness, warmth, dry humor, and unwavering integrity.
Ruth Manny leaves behind a legacy that cannot be measured only in publications or honors. It lives on in children who can see better, in clinicians who practice more thoughtfully, in scientists who approach their work with rigor and compassion, and in all those who learned from her example that service to others is life’s most meaningful work.