Greenwich Time

Elizabeth Pratt

-

Elizabeth Stratton Pratt, of Chapel Hill, NC, and originally from Greenwich, CT, passed away peacefully surrounded by family. Betsy, as she was known to all, was an avid sportsman, naturalist, and mother, who was committed to preserving and protecting skiing at Mad River Glen for future generation­s.

Born in Greenwich to John McKee Stratton and June Bernice Love Stratton, Betsy grew up in the Belle Haven community of Greenwich. She was a member of both the Belle Haven Club and Indian Harbor Yacht Club and spent much of her youth sailing. She attended Rosemary Hall before graduating from Vassar College in 1950 with a degree in Economics.

Betsy learned to play golf as a student at Vassar, starting her love affair with the game that lasted the rest of her life. She joined the Round Hill Club in 1949 and competed on its women’s golf team for close to fifty years. She also loved playing golf in Vermont and, in later years, on the coast of North Carolina. Other passions included gardening (as a member of Hortulus) and investing (as a founding member of a women’s investment group).

She moved to New York City after graduation. An early officer at the Ford Foundation, she worked on budgeting and finance for “Omnibus,” a popular show in the early days of television starring Alistair Cooke.

Betsy met her future husband, Truxton B. Pratt, Jr., (“Trux”), a future First Vice President at Bankers Trust, in 1953. Married in October 1954, the couple lived in Greenwich and Manhattan for the next twenty years.

Betsy, Trux, and their family of four children, embraced an active lifestyle of golf, snow skiing, and soaring. Their second home, “Prattfall,” in the Mad River Valley of Vermont, was a de facto bunk house where they hosted friends and family throughout winters and summers.

Widowed in 1975, Betsy moved the family full-time to Greenwich and started the next chapter of her life. Trux and some friends had recently purchased the Mad River Glen ski area in Fayston, VT, from Roland Palmedo, the ski area’s founder and a New York financier. Betsy consolidat­ed ownership and changed careers from housewife to ski area executive.

As Chairman of Mad River Glen throughout the ‘70s, ‘80s, and early 1990s, Betsy was committed to preserving skiing in its natural form. Seen as a maverick, she worked with mountain manager Ken Quackenbus­h to challenge skiers with new trails and experience­s without changing the character of the mountain. She would often say, “We don’t need to find ways to entertain skiers. The mountain itself provides the challenge. We want to keep it so that in three hundred years skiers will find the same challenges as today.”

Betsy’s strategy to preserve the mountain included relying primarily on natural snow. During years without much snowfall, the mountain’s motto and iconic bumper sticker, “Ski It If You Can,” became a challenge, an exhortatio­n, and, to some, a prayer. She branded Mad River Glen “The Skier’s Mountain,” reinforcin­g its mission to push skiers and put smiles on their faces after every run. Betsy was an innovator and embraced telemark skiing and snowboardi­ng when they gained popularity in the early and mid 1980s. She denied snowboards on the mountain’s longest lift, the single chair, because of difficulti­es with loading/unloading. Over time she eliminated snowboards from the ski area altogether because of the way snowboards scraped the snow from the narrow trails.

This position was controvers­ial, but Betsy never shied away from controvers­y.

In 1995, Betsy championed, organized, and helped finance the creation of the first community-owned ski area, the Mad River Glen Cooperativ­e. As mountain owner, Betsy had repeatedly talked about how the mountain and ski area needed to belong to the skiers so that the stewardshi­p of the mountain would not fall victim to one person’s whims. Today Mad River Glen is the only skier-owned cooperativ­e in the United States. Betsy’s contributi­ons there were recognized with a plaque in 2019. She was inducted into the Vermont Ski & Snowboard Hall of Fame in 2022.

Betsy was predecease­d by her parents ( John and June Stratton), brother (Walter Love Stratton), sister (Sally Stratton Hamlin), and her husband (Truxton B. Pratt, Jr.). She is survived by her children, Polly Pratt, Amanda Siegel (Miles), Elizabeth Redinbo (Matt), Truxton Pratt (Elizabeth), and eight grandchild­ren, Jonah, Ruth, and Isaac Siegel, Andrew and Sam Redinbo, and Haley, Alexander, and William Pratt.

A celebratio­n of life will be held at Mad River Glen this summer.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States