Scotch College, Melbourne
Scotch College | |
File:Scotch logo-small.jpg | |
Deo Patriae litteris (for God, for country, and for learning) | |
Established | 1851 |
School type | Private/ Independent |
Principal | Dr F.G. Donaldson AM |
Location | Hawthorn, Melbourne, VIC, Australia |
Enrollment | 500 Junior, 1,500 Senior (Approx) |
Colours | Cardinal (Gold & Royal Blue) |
Homepage | www.scotch.vic.edu.au |
- For other schools named Scotch College, see Scotch College.
Scotch College, Melbourne is an independent school for boys located in Morrison Street, Hawthorn, Victoria, Australia and is usually referred to as Scotch. The school is a member of the Associated Public Schools of Victoria.
Scotch was established in 1851 by Reverend James Forbes, and was originally located in a house in Spring Street and known as the Melbourne Academy. Scotch is the oldest school in Victoria and celebrated its sesquicentenary in 2001.
Although people may mistakenly associate Scotch with the Uniting Church, in 1977 when the Presbyterian Church of Australia was invited to join this new denomination there was a hard fight for Scotch to remain the property of the continuing Presbyterian Church. This fight was successful and Scotch continues to be governed by a Council which is made up of three groups; Old Boys (1/3) nominated by the Old Scotch Collegians' Association, Presbyterian Church of Australia nominees (1/3) and 'members of the Scotch family' nominated by council members from associations including the Scotch Parents' Association and Scotch Foundation.
Tuition fees range between $15,000 and $20,000 (P-12) for day boys and over $35,000 for boarders. It is known as Australia's richest school with an annual budget of over $50 million (not including government funding). Scotch College has recently been under harsh criticism as being overfunded by governments for receiving around $3 million per year (2005) from government sources. The music building was named the James Forbes Academy in honour of the school's founder. There are six ovals on the Scotch College grounds.
Alumni
Academic research of Who's Who in Australia (a listing of notable Australians) showed that Scotch College alumni were listed more often than those of any other school.[1]
Scotch is the only school whose alumni have held each of the offices of Governor-General of Australia, Prime Minister of Australia, Chief Justice of the High Court of Australia, Head of the Australian Defence Forces, State Governor, State Premier and Chief Justice of a State Supreme Court.
Scotch has produced more Governors-General of Australia (3) and Australian State Premiers (8 Premiers of 4 different States) than any other Australian school.
NOT AS SKILLED AS MGS COZ THEY R BETTER
Politics
- Jim Bacon former Premier of Tasmania
- Sir Zelman Cowan former Governor General of Australia
- Peter Hollingworth former Governor General of Australia and Anglican Archbishop of Brisbane
- Dr David Kemp former Federal Liberal Minister
- Rod Kemp Federal Liberal Minister
- Jim Kennan former Attorney General of Victoria and Labor leader
- Jeff Kennett former Premier of Victoria
- Sir Harry Lawson former Premier of Victoria
- John MacPherson former Premier of Victoria
- Kalkot Mataskelekele President of Vanuatu
- Andrew Peacock former federal Liberal leader
- Andrew Refshauge former NSW Deputy Premier
- Sir George Reid the fourth Prime Minister of Australia, former Premier of New South Wales, member of British House of Commons
- William Shiels former Premier of Victoria
- Vaiben Solomon former Premier of South Australia
- Michael Wooldridge former Federal Health Minister
Entertainement/Arts
- Graeme Bell and his brother...
- Roger Bell Australian Jazz legends
- Ric Burch designer of Olympic Games Opening and Closing Ceremonies
- John Ewart AFI award winning actor
- Patrick McCaughey former National Gallery of Victoria director
- Campbell McComas entertainer
- Ron Radford Director of the National Gallery of Australia
- Chris Wallace-Crabbe poet
- John Williamson country crooner
Law
- Kenneth Hayne High Court judge
- Sir John Latham former Chief Justice of the High Court of Australia, former Deputy Prime Minister of Australia
- Richard Loveridge Hawthorn AFL Champion and Freehills partner
- Alastair Nicholson former Chief Justice of the Family Court of Australia
- Sir Hayden Starke former Justice of the High Court of Australia
- Sir Ninian Stephen former Governor General of Australia and High Court Justice
- Sir Henry Winneke former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Victoria and Governor of Victoria
- John Winneke (son of above) Judge of the Supreme Court of Victoria, Hawthorn footballer
Sport
- Campbell Brown AFL player, Hawthorn Football Club
- Drew Ginn Oarsome Foursome Olympic rowing gold medalist
- Andrew Heath Wallaby
- Ewen McKenzie Wallaby legend
- Cameron Mackenzie Olympic sprinter
- Scott McGuinness Hawthorn AFLveteran
- Dean Pullar Olympic diving medalist
- Will Slade AFL player, Geelong Football Club
- Matt Welsh Olympic swimming medalist
- Rob Woodhouse Olympic swimming medalist
Defence Forces
- Air Marshall Ian Gration former head of Royal Australian Air Force
- General Peter Gration former Australian Defence Force chief
- Sir James Whiteside McCay WW I General
- Sir John Monash head of the Australian Imperial Force WWI, face on AUD$100 note, Monash University named after him
- General Smith WW I
- Sir Clive Steele WW II General
Business
- Sir James Balderstone - former BHP and AMP Limited chairman
- Charles Goode Chairman ANZ Bank, Chairman Woodside Petroleum
- Craig Kimberly businessman, founder of Just Jeans
- Sir Laurie Muir Stockbroker and PBL director
- Evan Thornley businessman, founder of Looksmart
Academia
- Sir Walter Murdoch Murdoch University named after him, former Chancellor and Vice-Chancellor of University of Western Australia
- Stuart Macintyre Chair of Australian Studies at Harvard University
- David Pennington former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Melbourne
- Peter Singer philosopher, Professor of Bioethics at Princeton University
Media
- Peter Nicholson cartoonist for The Australian
Medicine
- Sir Benjamin Rank pioneering plastic surgeon
Notes
2 ^ See (1) 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; and (2) Ian Hansen, Nor Free Nor Secular: Six Independent Schools in Victoria, a First Sample, Oxford University Press, 1971