List of Old Scotch Collegians

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Scotch emblem 2007-small.jpg
Old Scotch Collegians Association logo

This is a list of Old Scotch Collegians, who are notable former students of Scotch College in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

Alumni of Scotch College are known as Old Boys or Old Collegians, and automatically become members of the schools alumni association, the Old Scotch Collegians Association (OSCA).[1]

Scotch College has had more alumni mentioned in Who's Who in Australia (a listing of notable Australians) than any other school,[2][3][4] and its alumni have received more Order of Australia honours than any other school.[5]

Vice regal[]

  • Sir Zelman CowenGovernor General of Australia
  • Peter HollingworthGovernor General of Australia
  • Sir Ninian StephenGovernor General of Australia and Justice of the High Court of Australia
  • Sir Henry WinnekeGovernor of Victoria and Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Victoria

Academia and science[]

Chancellors and Vice-Chancellors[]

  • Sir Zelman Cowen – Vice Chancellor of University of New England, Vice-Chancellor of University of Queensland
  • Peter Darvall – Vice-Chancellor of Monash University
  • Sir Arthur Dean – Chancellor of the University of Melbourne
  • Sir David Derham – Vice-Chancellor of the University of Melbourne
  • Sir Archibald Glenn – Chancellor of La Trobe University
  • Raymond Martin – Vice-Chancellor of Monash University
  • Sir John MonashMonash University named after him, Vice-Chancellor of University of Melbourne
  • Sir Walter MurdochMurdoch University named after him, Chancellor and Vice-Chancellor of University of Western Australia
  • Sir George Paton – Vice-Chancellor of the University of Melbourne
  • David Penington – Vice-Chancellor of the University of Melbourne
  • Ian Renard – Chancellor of the University of Melbourne
  • Sir Lindsay Ride – Vice Chancellor of the University of Hong Kong
  • Sir Kenneth Wheare – Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University

Others – academia and science[]

Business[]

Law[]

Chief justices[]

Others – law[]

Media, entertainment, culture and the arts[]

Military[]

Chiefs of services[]

  • Major General Sir Julius BrucheChief of the General Staff
  • Air Marshal Barry GrationChief of the Air Staff
  • General Peter GrationChief of the Australian Defence Force
  • Vice Admiral Sir Alan McNicollChief of the Royal Australian Navy[11]
  • General Sir John Monash – First Australian overall Commander of the Australian Corps, face on Australian $100 note, Monash University named after him

Others – military[]

  • Raymond Brownell – Air Commodore, WWI flying ace
  • Sir Neil Hamilton Fairley – Brigadier, Director of Medicine, Australian Military Forces during WWII
  • Greg Garde – Major General, Deputy Chief Australian Defence Force (Reserves) (Australia's highest ranking reservist)
  • Oliver David Jackson – Commander 1st Australian Task Force in South Vietnam (1966–1967)
  • Robert Little – top scoring Australian fighter pilot in WWI, killed in action May 1918
  • Sir James Whiteside McCay – Lieutenant General
  • Sir William Refshauge – Major General
  • Robert Smith – Brigadier General WWI, Commander 5th Brigade
  • Sir Clive Steele – Major General
  • Alan Stretton – Major General, Head of National Disaster Organisation, responsible for managing and rebuilding Darwin after Cyclone Tracy
  • Hugh Randall Syme - Bomb Defuser, grandson of David Syme
  • Paul Symon – Major General, Deputy Chief of Army, Director-General of the Australian Secret Intelligence Service
  • Ian Upjohn – Lieutenant Colonel, Commanding Officer of 4th/19th Prince of Wales's Light Horse, commander of Australian troops in Solomon Islands

Politics and public service[]

Prime ministers and presidents[]

Premiers[]

Cabinet ministers[]

  • Bill Baxter – Victorian Nationals Roads & Ports Minister
  • Mark Dreyfus – Federal Attorney General
  • Ivor Greenwood – Federal Liberal Minister
  • Mac Holten – Federal Nationals Minister, Administrator of Christmas Island
  • Dr David Kemp – Federal Liberal Minister
  • Rod Kemp – Federal Liberal Minister
  • Jim Kennan – Victorian Attorney General, Victorian Labor Opposition Leader
  • Sir John Latham – Deputy Prime Minister of Australia, Chief Justice of the High Court of Australia
  • John Leckie – Federal Minister
  • Sir James Whiteside McCay – Federal Defence Minister
  • James McColl – Federal Minister
  • Andrew Peacock – Federal Liberal Opposition Leader, Ambassador to United States of America
  • Andrew Refshauge – Labor Deputy Premier of New South Wales
  • Sir Arthur Robinson – Victorian Attorney General
  • Tony Staley – Federal Liberal Minister, Federal President of the Liberal Party of Australia
  • George Wise – Federal Minister, Postmaster-General
  • Michael Wooldridge – Federal Liberal Health Minister

Others – politics and public service[]

Sport[]

American football[]

  • Tom Hackett - punter for the University of Utah Football Team. Is a two time recipient of the Ray Guy Award[12] and member of the Pac-12 All-Century Football Team [13]

Australian rules football[]

Cricket[]

Motorsport[]

Olympics[]

Rowing[]

Rugby[]

Soccer[]

Tennis[]

  • Gerald Patterson – two times Wimbledon singles champion and world number 1 tennis player

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Membership". About OSCA. Scotch College. Archived from the original on 29 August 2007. Retrieved 26 March 2008.
  2. ^ Walker, Frank (22 July 2001). "The ties that bind". Sunday Life. The Sun-Herald. p. 16. Retrieved 12 September 2007.
  3. ^ Mark Peel and Janet McCalman, Who Went Where in Who's Who 1988: The Schooling of the Australian Elite, Melbourne University History Research Series Number 1, 1992
  4. ^ Ian Hansen, Nor Free Nor Secular: Six Independent Schools in Victoria, a First Sample, Oxford University Press, 1971
  5. ^ Topsfield, Jewel (4 December 2010). "Ties that bind prove a private education has its awards". The Age. p. 11.
    The hard copy article also published a table of the schools which were ranked in the top ten places:
    rank # Schools
    1 19 Scotch College, Melbourne
    2 17 Geelong Grammar School
    3 13 Sydney Boys High School
    =4 10 Fort Street High School, Perth Modern School and St Peter's College, Adelaide
    =7 9 Melbourne Grammar School, North Sydney Boys High School and The King's School, Parramatta
    =10 6 Launceston Grammar School, Melbourne High School, Wesley College, Melbourne and Xavier College
  6. ^ "UR-Sf 34 Professor Robert Percival Cook, Lecturer in Biochemistry, University College, Dundee and Queen's College, Dundee; Professor of Biochemistry, University of Dundee". Archive Services Online Catalogue. University of Dundee. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
  7. ^ English: Graduate & alumni profiles – Melbourne University
  8. ^ "Thomas Gibson Sloane". Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954). 29 October 1932. p. 14.
  9. ^ Australian Dictionary of Biography (2007). [1].
  10. ^ "Company Overview of Bakers Delight Holdings Ltd". Bloomberg. 14 October 2018. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  11. ^ James Mitchell, A Deepening Roar – Scotch College, Melbourne, 1851–2001, Allen & Unwin, 2001, page 308
  12. ^ Wood, Lauren. "Melbourne's Tom Hackett is the No.1 punter entering this year's NFL Draft". Herald Sun. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  13. ^ Miller, Ted (2 December 2015). "Pac-12 announces 'All-Century team'". ESPN. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  14. ^ "Crackers Chronicles – VFL/AFL Former Old Scotch Players" (PDF). . Retrieved 4 June 2020.

External links[]

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