Orders and medals For her service as president of the Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, Murdoch was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire, Civil Division (CBE) in the 1961 Birthday Honours list. For her role in building a new children's hospital in Melbourne, she was appointed a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire, Civil Division (DBE) in the 1963 New Year Honours list. In June 1989, she was appointed a Companion of the Order of Australia, Civil Division (AC) for services to the community also receiving the Centenary Medal in 2001 for her philanthropic services to the Australian arts community.
Honours Murdoch was an honorary fellow of the
Australian Institute of Landscape Architects and helped to establish the Elisabeth Murdoch Chair of Landscape Architecture and the Australian Garden History Society. In 1983, she was awarded an honorary Doctorate of Laws by the
University of Melbourne in acknowledgement of her contributions to research, the arts and philanthropy.
Trinity College, Melbourne, installed her as a fellow in 2000. That year a portrait of Murdoch for the
National Portrait Gallery in Canberra was the first portrait commissioned of the Victorian Tapestry Workshop. The image was composed by painter Christopher Pyett, adapted on computer by
Normana Wight and woven by Merrill Dumbrell. In 2001 Murdoch was inducted onto the
Victorian Honour Roll of Women. In the same year, Treloars gave her name to a new rose introduction. Following extensive donations to the
Royal Botanic Gardens in Melbourne, a Tasmanian species of
Boronia (
B. elisabethiae) was named after her. In 2009, the main performance venue of the
Melbourne Recital Centre was named in her honour. and in the same year she was elected an Honorary Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities. In 2010,
Geelong Grammar School completed a new girls' boarding house named in her honour. In January 2007, aged 97 years and 11 months, Murdoch surpassed Dame
Alice Chisholm as Australia's longest-lived dame. ==Patronage==