Elizabeth Blodgett Hall (November 16, 1909 – July 18, 2005) was an administrator of both secondary and college level institutions.
As a young girl she attended the Ethical Culture School, before her family moved to the Berkshire Hills of western Massachusetts.
[citation needed] While raising her four children and commuting from the suburbs, she became one of the first older adults to study at Radcliffe College, where she graduated in 1946.
[2] Hall earned a reputation as a capable educational administrator and pioneer who was able to successfully translate her vision into an innovative and sustainable institution.
In recognition for her leadership at Concord Academy and Simon's Rock, Hall received the Distinguished Alumna Award from Miss Hall's School for the leadership to guide a fledgling girls' school from obscurity to national prominence, for the vision to create a new and almost totally original institution, for the dedication, perseverance, and philanthropic commitment to turn that dream into a reality, and for her devotion to the betterment of young people.