About

A place for boldness and creativity

Miss Hall’s is a place of movement and action, of collaboration and commitment. We innovate, and we adapt — both to the needs of our community and the needs of our world.

Miss Hall’s has provided, since our founding in 1898, an exceptional academic education and the opportunity to develop values core to the human experience: authenticity, respect, honor, and growth. Our students have, since the beginning, become bold and creative contributors to the common good.

History and future

These values were embodied in our founder, Mira Hinsdale Hall, a young Latin teacher in Central Massachusetts. Twenty years before the 19th Amendment granted her the right to vote, Mira Hall envisioned something radical: a world in which girls received the high-quality education they deserved.

Mira Hall in 1935

So, in 1898, she did something bold: she founded a school. As one might expect, it wasn’t easy — according to Miss Hall’s niece, Mira “began her venture with little capital beyond her youth, her determination to have the best school she could build, and the strong idealism which directed her.” But her intelligence, strength of will, and good humor won out: the school grew strong.

Mira’s convictions were tested early on, when the school burned to the ground on a cold February morning in 1923 — a contemporary news article stated “there was nothing left but chimneys and bathtubs.” It would have been easy to walk away, but Mira doubled down and invested her life’s savings into rebuilding. Classes continued off campus, and the “new” school opened the following year.

The question is not whether we are ready for the real world after Miss Hall’s, but rather: Is the world ready for us?

Class of 2019

One other tenet of Miss Hall’s has defined us over the 120-plus years of our history: a commitment to learning from those who are different from us. A 1932 article in the Berkshire Eagle newspaper celebrated this unusual aspect of Miss Hall’s School: “[Miss Hall] felt that a school which chose its pupils from… different parts of the nation and world would give them a broader concept of life. And she has not deviated from the path which she laid out in 1898. That her idea was a right one is attested to by the fact that today her pupils come from all over the world.” They still do.

Today, Miss Hall’s School still embraces Mira Hall’s vision and empowers girls to use their voices, be their authentic selves, and become bold, creative contributors to the common good.

Quick facts

  • 170 students enrolled — 70% boarding, 30% day
  • 33% of our student body is international, coming from 14 different countries around the world; domestic students come from 13 different states
  • All of our students continue on to institutions of higher learning. From the Class of 2020, 23% of graduates were accepted Early Decision and 82% were accepted Early Action.
  • We are accredited by the NEASC

Our mission

Miss Hall’s School inspires and encourages each student to pursue the highest standards of learning and character; to contribute boldly and creatively to the common good; and to seek a purposeful life based on honor, respect, growth, and personal authenticity.

Strategic design

The principles that guide our program development are outlined in our strategic plan. It prioritizes students at all times, alongside a desire to regularly reimagine curriculum in light of student need, student interest, and world events. Four areas have been our focus:

  • Innovative programs that emphasize intellectual pursuit, development of our core competencies, and personalized, experiential learning tailored to girls
  • An inclusive community that values diversity as essential to learning and problem solving, as a means to discovery and personal growth, and as a context for cultivating empathy and cultural competency
  • Commitment to engagement, service, and leadership that strengthens connections between the School and our local and global communities and provides opportunities for students to discover passions and have influence
  • A culture of adaptability, collaboration, and excellence that enables the School to address challenges, maximize opportunities for growth, and remain nimble in a changing educational landscape

MHS through the years

Photos by the renowned photographer Clemens Kalischer, who captured images of MHS students and campus life from 1958 until the mid-1970s.

 

Our leadership team

We are not afraid to speak out, to defy expectations, to teach others the meaning of empathy and acceptance for our fellow humans.

Class of 2019

Board of Trustees

Miss Hall’s is governed by a twenty-seven-member Board of Trustees who ensure the long-term sustainability of the School. This group of alumnae, parents, and friends meets four times each year.

Nancy Gustafson Ault ’73, President, Damariscotta, Maine
Laura H. Harris ’74, Vice President, Wakefield, Rhode Island
Jane S. Joukowsky P’13, Vice President, Charleston, South Carolina
Suzanne Wilson ’64, Vice President, Big Timber, Montana
Scott Quigg P’14, Treasurer, Montrose, Pennsylvania
Cornelia Cabot Whiting ’89, Clerk, New York, New York
Martha D. Bullock ’81, Portland, Maine
Alice Butler Burnham ’65, New Canaan, Connecticut
Reginald Canal P’21, Maplewood, New Jersey
Lee Carbonelli ’95, Bradenton, Florida
Anne Peterson Conolly ’70, South Burlington, Vermont
Susan Danish, New York, New York
Katie Grace Deane ’05, Medford, Massachusetts
Kristina Delgado ’09, New York, New York
Alisha Arnold Foster ’78, Arlington, Virginia
Elizabeth Welch Gustafson ’88, Basking Ridge, New Jersey
Rebecca Hajjar ’89, Brookline, Massachusetts
Herbert “Pete” Jaques, Jr., Lambertville, New Jersey
Stephanie Lawlor Kadnar ’90, Winchester, Massachusetts
Stacy Kirk ’90, Charlotte, North Carolina
Mary Kay Kosnik P’15, San Francisco, California
Sheila E. Nutt, Ed.D. P’09, Newton, Massachusetts
Susan P. O’Day ’77, Jupiter, Florida
Nancy Brewster Paternotte ’65, Baltimore, Maryland
Steven Shindler P’15, San Francisco, California
Jennifer Perkins Speers ’71, Salt Lake City, Utah
Vanessa Stair ’06, Brooklyn, New York
Yiyan Zhou ’91, Brookline, Massachusetts

Emeritus Trustee Advisory Council

Lee Auchincloss Link ’61, New York, New York
Jacqueline B. Mars ’57, McLean, Virginia
Bonnie Campbell Perkins ’57, Denver, Colorado
Patricia Manley Smith ’55, Norwich, New York
Stacey Sotirhos ’89, New York, New York
Theresa S. Thompson ’64, Lewisburg, West Virginia
Robin Brown Woods ’58, Darien, Connecticut

Learn more about our home, situated in one of the Northeast’s cultural centers, and take a virtual tour

Explore the campus

Our Expressive Arts Department allows students to explore new ways of sharing their voice and ideas — music, theater, and visual art

See how our students express themselves