[6] Hall was runner-up to Fred Perry at the 1931 Eastern Grass Court Championships at Rye, New York, losing a long five set final.
[7] He won the Canadian Covered Courts Championships indoor tournament in Montreal for a second time in January 1932, defeating George Lott, the ranking U.S. No.
[10] Hall won the Eastern Clay Court Championships at the Jackson Heights Tennis Club in Queens, New York City in 1933 defeating Frank Shields, the U.S. No.
[11] He defended his Eastern Clay Court title in 1934 defeating Clifford Sutter in the final in three straight sets.
[16] Hall won the United North and South tournament at the Pinehurst Resort in 1937 defeating Wayne Sabin in the final in three straight sets.
[17] In July, 1938 Hall won the Nassau Bowl Championships in Glen Cove, Long Island on grass defeating Frank Kovacs in the semifinal and defending champion Gilbert Hunt in the final.
[18] The match between the 40-year-old Hall and the 18-year-old Kovacs, the new rising star on the tennis circuit, was described by Allison Danzig in the N.Y. Times, "... the Jersey veteran fought like a lion and kept on fighting when fatigue was settling in .
It was a masterpiece of stroke production and tactics.”[2] Hall experienced some difficult opposition at the U.S. National Tennis Championships at Forest Hills, N.Y.
[19] He defeated Guillermo Lemus of Mexico in the second round of the 1954 River Oaks Championships on clay in Houston, Texas at the age of 56 years.