List of Old Boys of St Joseph's College, Hunters Hill
For other schools of the same name, see Saint Joseph's College (disambiguation).
This is a List of notable Old Boys of St Joseph's College, Hunters Hill, they being notable former students - known as "Old Boys" of the Roman Catholic Church school, St Joseph's College in Hunters Hill, New South Wales, Australia.
[Year in brackets] is the last year of school attendance. (Years in parentheses) are years lived or the year of noted sporting or other achievement.
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Academia
- Professor Roger Morris (born 1946), Head of Molecular Neurobiology at King's College London and Head of the Department of Chemistry since 2005.[1]
- Professor James Franklin [1970], (born 1953), historian and philosopher at UNSW.
- Professor John Hartigan, Eugene Higgins Emeritus Professor of statistics at Yale University.[2]
- Professor Barry Quinn, statistician at Macquarie University.[3]
Clergy
- Matthew Joseph Brodie (1864–1943), second Bishop of Christchurch, New Zealand (1915–1943), first Catholic bishop who was a New Zealander by birth.
- Monsignor Cornelius James Duffy (1903–86), D.D., Chancellor of the Sydney Archdiocese and Diocesan archivist.[4]
- Most Rev Geoffrey James Robinson (born 1937), Auxiliary Bishop of Sydney 1984-2004, Titular Bishop of Rusuca.
- Most Rev Philip Edward Wilson (born 1950), D.D. J.C.L., Archbishop of Adelaide.
Media, entertainment and the arts
- Frank Marien (1890–1936), Editor-in-chief of Smith's Weekly.
- Jimmy Sharman jnr (1912–2006), boxing promoter.
- John Olsen, AO, OBE (born 1928) artist.
- Denis Kevans (1939–2005), left-wing poet, songwriter and folk singer.
- Brian Castro (born 1950), award winning novelist & essayist.[5]
- Jack Waterford (born 1952), former editor-in-chief of the Canberra Times'.
- Peter Thompson (born 1952), ABC broadcaster & Adjunct Professor, Macquarie Uni, Dept of International Communication.
- Paul Field [1978], (born 1961), singer The Cockroaches and manager The Wiggles.
- John Field [1979], (born 1962), guitarist The Cockroaches and songwriter.
- Anthony Field [1980], (born 1963), guitarist and singer The Cockroaches and The Wiggles.
- Tony Henry [1980], (born 1963), drummer of the '80s pop band The Cockroaches.
- Tom Gleeson [1991], (born 1974), comedian, actor and radio personality.
- Jackson Mullane, (born 1987), Australian Gladiator character "Outlaw" and State representative rugby winger.
- Christian McEwan radio presenter c913FM.[6]
Military
- Brigadier Sir Eugene Gorman (1891–1973), KBE, MC, QC military officer and barrister.
- Air Marshal, Sir John McCauley (1899–1989Kn), KBE, CB, RAAF commander
Law
- Eric Stanislaus Miller (1903–86) Member NSW Bar, QC.[7]
- Sir William Prentice (1917-2004), Justice Supreme Court of Papua New Guinea 1969-79; Chief Justice of Papua New Guinea 1978-79.[8]
- Justice Peter Aloysius McInerney (1927-2014), Justice Supreme Court of New South Wales 1985-99.[9]
- Sir William Deane AC KBE (born 1931), former Governor-General and former Justice of the High Court of Australia.
- Hon. Chief Justice Murray Gleeson AC (born 1938), former Chief Justice of Australia - High Court of Australia; former Chief Justice of New South Wales - Supreme Court of New South Wales; former President - NSW Bar Asscn.
- John Daniel Cummins, Member NSW Bar 1961-2001; QC 1980-2001; disbarred 2001 [10]
- John Marsden (1942–2006), President of the Law Society of NSW.
- David Freeman, Judge District Court, NSW 1986-2011; Acting Supreme Court Judge and Alternate Chair of State Parole Authority since 2011[11]
- Kevin Coorey, Judge District Court, NSW since 1999.[12]
Politics & public service
- Hon Kevin Cairns (1929–1984), Lib, MHR seat of Lilley in Queensland 1963-80; Federal Cabinet Minister 1971-72.
- Jack Doohan OBE (1920–2007), National Party member of the New South Wales Legislative Council 1978-91.
- Frank Downing (1907–1978), ALP MLA for Ryde, 1953–1968.
- Bill Heffernan (born 1943), Lib Senator for New South Wales since 1996.
- Harry Jensen (1913–1998), Lord Mayor of Sydney 1956-65, ALP MLA for Wyong & Munmorah, 1965-1981 and NSW Cabinet Minister 1976-81.
- Laurie McGinty MBE (1921–1991), Mayor of Willoughby 1960-67, Lib MLA for Willoughby 1968-1978 and NSW Cabinet Minister 1973-76.
- Sir Jack Keith Murray KBE (1889–1979); Professor of Agriculture Uni of Qld 1927-45; AIF Captain in World War I; AMF Lieut-Colonel in World War II; Administrator of the Territory of Papua and New Guinea 1945–52.[13]
- Norm Ryan (1912–1997), ALP MLA for Marrickville, 1953-73.
- Alan Woods AC (1930–1990), Secretary of the Department of Defence 1986–88[14]
Science & medicine
- Dr Sylvester Minogue (1900–73) psychiatrist, credited with establishing the first Alcoholics Anonymous group in Australia in 1945.[15]
- Dr Mark Shanahan (1932-2008), chairman of St Vincent's Hospital, Sydney cardiothoracic unit and pioneer heart transplant surgeon.[16]
- Dr Robert Frater (born 1937) AO, CSIRO fellow and internationally renowned researcher in radioastronomy instrumentation, optical astronomy and electroacoustics.[17]
- Dr Victor Warren Fazio (1940-2015) Pioneering colorectal surgeon [18]
- Dr Chris Clarke (born 1943), Consultant Thoracic Physician, past President of the Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand.[19]
- Dr Tony Bookallil (1941-2013), the Hunter region’s first neurosurgeon from 1975 ; the sole brain & spine specialist practicing on the NSW north coast until 1988.[20]
Business
- Sir Henry Francis Chow (born 1935) OBE Kt, Papua New Guinea business magnate (Toboi Shipbuilding Company; the Lae Biscuit Co).[21]
Sport
Administration
- John O'Neill, Chief Executive of Australian Rugby Union and former Head of Football Federation Australia.
Athletics
- Patrick Dwyer, silver medalist 4 × 400 m Relay Athens 2004, competitor Sydney 2000 & 1998 Commonwealth Games.
Cricket
- Stan McCabe, Australian Test Cricketer 39 Tests (1930–38).
Paralympics
- Evan O'Hanlon [2006], (born 1988) OAM, 5 x time gold-medal winning paralympic sprinter.
Rowing
- Bill Dixon [1929] & Clyde Elias [1933] Olympians at Berlin 1936. (Elias Men's VIII; Dixon Men's 2X.)
- Phil Cayzer gold medalist Men's VIII at Auckland 1950 & bronze medalist at Helsinki 1952.
- Bob Tinning gold medalist Men's VIII at Auckland 1950 & bronze medalist at Helsinki 1952.
- Alf Duval, silver medalist 1968 Mexico Olympics, Men's VIII.
- Joe Fazio [1960], (1942-2011) silver medalist 1968 Mexico Olympics, Men's VIII.
- Terry O'Hanlon [1972], coxswain 1975 World Championships (M2+) & 1977 World Championships, Men's VIII.[22]
- Paul Rowe, finalist 1975 World Championships (LW 1X).[23]
- Michael Crowley, 1975 World Championships (M2+).[23]
- Francis Hegerty [2000], silver medalist Beijing 2008, Men's 4-.
- Spencer Turrin, 2013-15 World Championships and representative Rio 2016. Men's 2-.
Rugby league
National representatives
- Harry Caples, Kangaroo five-eighth, (1921–1922).
- Arch Crippin, Kangaroo winger, (1936).
- Jack Beaton, Kangaroo versatile back, (1936–1938).
- Ben Kennedy, Kangaroo lock-forward, (2000–2006).
First grade
- Mick Aldous, Canberra Raiders centre (1984–85) and French Rugby League national coach.
- Justin Dooley, Wests Magpies & Sydney Roosters (1990-2001).
- Jarrod Saffy, St George Dragons & Wests Magpies forward (2006–10) and Melbourne Rebels RU lock (2011-2013).
- Darcy Lussick, Parramatta Eels & Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles forward (2012-).
Rugby union
Wallabies
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Other nations' representatives
- Michael Lipman,[34] 10 Test appearances for England (2004–2008).
- Steve Devine,[35] 10 Test appearances New Zealand(2002–2003).
- Pat Duignan,[36] 2 RWC appearances for Ireland (1998).
International rugby sevens
- Pat McCutcheon, Australian Rugby Sevens (2010-)
- Nick Edwards, USA Rugby Sevens captain (2009-) [37][38]
State/Provincial
- Peter Playford, NSW Waratahs and Australian Sevens three-quarter 2007-09.
- Afusipa Taumoepeau, Melbourne Rebels ACT Brumbies centre 2008-10.
- Jeremy Tilse, NSW Waratahs prop 2007.
- Cameron Treloar, Queensland Reds lock 2006-07.
- Drew Hickey, NSW Waratahs flanker 2000-02.
- Matthew Carraro, NSW Waratahs centre/wing 2008-09. 2014-
- Damien Fitzpatrick, NSW Waratahs hooker 2009-13.
Other
- Daniel Alessi, professional footballer for the Western Sydney Wanderers.
- Samuel McGregor [2001], Olympic water polo representative at Athens 2004.
See also
- List of non-government schools in New South Wales
- List of boarding schools
- Athletic Association of the Great Public Schools of New South Wales
References
- ↑ King's College faculty
- ↑ Yale faculty Hartigan
- ↑ Macquarie faculty Quinn
- ↑ Con Duffy SMH obit
- ↑ "Biographical details". Biographical and contact information. Brian Castro. Retrieved 2008-02-24.
- ↑ c913FM profile
- ↑ Eric Miller at ADB
- ↑ SydUni Law obit Prentice
- ↑ McInerney obit SMH
- ↑ Cummins bankruptcy
- ↑ .Freeman appointment
- ↑ SydLaw auumni Coorey
- ↑ Murray at ADB
- ↑ Waterford, Jack (15 January 1990). "Obituary: Alan John Woods, AO: A new age manager with a sense of tradition". The Canberra Times. p. 2.
- ↑ Mellor, Lise. "Minogue, Sylvester John". http://sydney.edu.au/. University Of Sydney. Retrieved 1 January 2015. External link in
|website=
(help) - ↑ Shanahan SMH obit.
- ↑ Frater Encyc of Aust Science
- ↑ Fazio obit
- ↑
- ↑ Bookallil obit Herald
- ↑ Chow biog
- ↑ 1977 Men's VIII Guerin-Foster
- 1 2 1975 M2+ Guerin-Foster
- ↑ Howell p32
- ↑ Howell p51
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 Howell pp226
- ↑ Bill White at ARU
- ↑ Malone at ARU
- ↑ Heinrich at ARU
- ↑ James McInerney ARU
- ↑ Mick Murray ARU
- ↑ Sheehan at ESPN
- ↑ Burgess at ESPN
- ↑ Lipman at Scrum.com
- ↑ Devine at Scrum.com
- ↑ Duignan at scrum.com
- ↑ Nick Edwards profile
- ↑ Edwards as Captain
Published sources
- Howell, Max (2006) Born to Lead - Wallaby Test Captains (2005) Celebrity Books, New Zealand
- Whiticker, Alan & Hudson, Glen (2006) The Encyclopedia of Rugby League Players, Gavin Allen Publishing, Sydney
- Oh brother! Medich family split: http://www.smh.com.au/national/oh-brother-medich-family-split-20090911-fkq3.html
Further reading
- Naughtin, M. 1981. A Century of Striving: St Joseph's College, Hunter's Hill, 1881-1981. Macarthur Press, Sydney. ISBN 0-9595559-6-X.
External links
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