List of St. Paul's College, Sydney alumni

This is a partial listing of alumni of St. Paul's College, Sydney.

Contents

Rhodes scholars

  • 1907 Garnet Portus
  • 1908 Richard Waddy
  • 1911 Hugh Ward
  • 1915 Walter Crawford
  • 1920 Vernon Treatt
  • 1925 Allan Callaghan
  • 1931 David Garnsey
  • 1935 Keith Bradfield
  • 1939 Walter Hughes
  • 1940 Basil Travers
  • 1946 William Woodward
  • 1948 Louis Davies
  • 1951 Adrian Henchman
  • 1953 James McLeod
  • 1956 John Bailey
  • 1960 Malcolm Swinburn
  • 1961 David Garnsey
  • 1964 J. Dyson Heydon
  • 1975 Peter King
  • 1990 Andrew Bell
  • 1992 Scott Nixon
  • 1995 Peter Barnett
  • 2001 Andrew Charlton
  • 2003 Benjamin Juratowitch
  • 2007 Eric Knight
  • 2009 Nikolas Kirby
  • 2010 David Llewellyn
  • 2011 Nathaniel Ware

Alumni by discipline

Science and medicine

  • Peter Orlebar Bishop (b. 1917), physiologist
  • Sir Denis Browne (1892–1967), surgeon
  • John Chalmers (b. 1937), medical scientist
  • Louis Davies (1923–2001), physicist
  • Sir Lorimer Dods (1900–1981), paediatrician
  • William Sutherland Dun (1868–1934), palaeontologist
  • A.P. Elkin (1891–1979), anthropologist
  • Michael Hall (b. 1931), physicist
  • Sir George Halliday (1901–87), surgeon
  • W.C.B. Harvey (1897-1981), physician[1]
  • Dr Richmond Jeremy (1899-1995), physician
  • Richard Kingsford, environmentalist
  • James Lance (b. 1926), neurologist
  • James McLeod (b. 1932), neurologist
  • Edward Pearson Ramsay (1842–1916), ornithologist and zoologist
  • Ray Stalker (b. 1930), engineer

Politics and law

  • J.P. Abbott (1891–1965), former Australian Minister for Home Security
  • John Anderson (b. 1956), former Australian Deputy Prime Minister
  • Nigel Bowen (1911–94), former Federal Court judge, Australian Foreign Minister
  • Dyson Heydon (b 1943), High Court judge
  • Norman de Horne Rowland (1865–1931), former judge in Papua New Guinea
  • William McMahon(1908–88), former Australian Prime Minister
  • Sir John Beverley Peden (1871–1946), legal scholar
  • A.B. Piddington (1862–1945), former High Court judge and Royal Commissioner
  • Robert Pring (1853–1922), former NSW Supreme Court judge
  • Andrew Refshauge (b. 1949), former New South Wales Deputy Premier
  • Thomas Roseby (1867–1929), former Chief Judge of Mauritius
  • E.M. Stephen (1870–1939), former NSW Supreme Court judge
  • Sir Kenneth Street (1890–1972), former NSW Chief Justice
  • Sir Philip Street (1863–1938), former NSW Chief Justice
  • Robert Tickner (b. 1951), former Australian Minister for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs
  • Sir Vernon Treatt (1897–1984), former NSW state parliament minister
  • Lloyd Waddy, Family Court judge and convenor of Australians for Constitutional Monarchy
  • Gough Whitlam (b. 1916), former Australian Prime Minister
  • Dudley Williams (1889–1962), former High Court judge
  • William Windeyer (b. 1936), NSW Supreme Court judge

Sports

  • Roger Barton (1875–1957), rugby player
  • Al Baxter (b. 1977), rugby union player with Australian national team
  • Percy Brereton Colquhoun (1866–1936), rugby player, tennis player and cricketer
  • Frederick Campbell (1846–1928), co-founder of Rugby in Australia
  • Ed Cowan, Australian Test cricketer
  • Tim Davidson, Western Force back rower, holder of unique record as Captain of Sydney University Rugby Firsts in each of six consecutive Shute Shield Premiership victories
  • Henry Montague Faithfull (1848–1908), rugby player and cricketer
  • Daniel Halangahu (b. 1984), rugby union player with NSW Waratahs
  • Michael Hawker, former rugby union player and captain of Australian national team
  • Mac Hughes, rugby union player with Australian national team
  • Thomas Henry Iceton (1849–1908), cricketer
  • Luke Inman, Commonwealth Games rugby 7s player
  • George Deas Thompson (1845–1877), co-founder of Rugby in Australia
  • Claude Tozer (1890–1920), cricketer

Arts and humanities

  • Henry Kingsley Archdall (1886–1976), theologian
  • Alan Atkinson (b. 1946), historian
  • Arnold Bode (1866–1952), composer
  • Ernest Henry Burgmann (1885–1967), church leader
  • George Alexander Chambers (1877–1963), church leader (Africa)
  • Terence Clarke, composer and theatre director
  • John Cobley (1914–89), historian
  • Peter Cousens, actor and singer
  • Leslie Cowlishaw (1877–1943), medical historian
  • L.F. Fitzhardinge (1908–93), historian
  • Tim Freedman, lead singer of The Whitlams
  • H.M. Green (1881–1962), literary historian
  • John Gaden, actor
  • George Robert Hyam (1875–1944), music-hall composer
  • Tony Jones, journalist and television presenter
  • Grant Lindeman (1886–1968), painter
  • Miles Little, poet
  • Gavin Long (1901–68), historian
  • David Marr, biographer and writer
  • Morgan O'Neill, film director, actor, and singer
  • Dowell O'Reilly (1865–1923), poet
  • Adam Spencer, radio host
  • Chris Taylor, comedian
  • Fredrick Watson (1878–1945), historian

References

  1. ^ Fellows of learned societies (FRS etc) and entries in Australian Dictionary of Biography