List of Caulfield Grammar School people

This is a list of notable past students and staff of Caulfield Grammar School and/or Malvern Memorial Grammar School (amalgamated with Caulfield in 1961). Alumni of the school are known as "Caulfield Grammarians" and are supported by the Caulfield Grammarians' Association.[1]

N.B. Years of attendance in brackets.[2]
All persons listed were students, unless otherwise indicated. MMGS = Student of Malvern Memorial Grammar School.

A

B

Sir John Clifford Valentine Behan
  • William Macmahon Ball AC (1916–17) – psychologist; diplomat; broadcaster[6]
  • Harley Balic – AFL footballer Fremantle Dockers and Melbourne Demons
  • Ernest Judd Barnett (Staff 1888–1896) – Second owner and principal of Caulfield Grammar School
  • Donald Barrett (1923–35) – Member House of Assembly of Papua and New Guinea (1964–?)
  • Russell Basser (1972–77) – Medical researcher; water polo player at the 1984 Summer Olympics[7]
  • Sir John Clifford Valentine Behan (1894–95) – first Victorian Rhodes Scholar; warden, Trinity College of the University of Melbourne[8]
  • Gabriel Bergmoser (2007–2009) – Author, host of podcast Movie Maintenance, 2015 winner of the Sir Peter Ustinov Television Scriptwriting Award.
  • Samuel Billigheimer (Staff 1944–1963) – linguist, philosopher, and Rabbi.[9]
  • Hamish Blake (1994–96) – member of comedic duo Hamish & Andy[7]
  • Colonel Thomas Alfred Milton (Mick) Boulter QC (1928–32 MMGS) – Solicitor, Barrister, Queens Counsel (1966), Judge of the District Court of NSW (1973–83), President North Shore Historical Society (1968–83), Chairman of the Donbank Museum Trust (1977–83), AIF (1940–46), CMF (1946–62) Colonel, GOC1 (Int) Lt.Col Eastern Command (1959–61),recipient of the Military Medal, for Bravery in the Field (1942).[10]
  • Hugh Boyd DSO (1900–?) – VFL footballer with University.
  • Sir Allen Stanley Brown (1924–26) – Australian Commissioner, British Phosphate Commission and Christmas Island Phosphate Commission (1970–76); Australian Ambassador to Japan (1965–70); Deputy High Commissioner to the U.K. (1959–65); and Secretary of the Prime Minister's Department (1949–59).[11]
  • Horace Plessay Brown (1928–33) – statistician, economist[12]
  • Jordan Brown (Australian soccer) (2009-2014) - Melbourne Victory soccer player
  • Tomas Bugg (2009-2011) – AFL footballer GWS and Melbourne[13]
  • Martyn Arnold Buntine (1904–?) – Australian rules footballer who played for the St Kilda Football Club, educationalist.
  • Walter Murray Buntine (Staff 1896–1931) – third owner and principal of Caulfield Grammar School[14]

C

D

  • Edward Alfred Daley CBE (Mil.) KStJ (1915–19) – Royal Australian Air Force doctor[19]
  • Paul Greig Dane (christened Albert Greig Dane) (1896–1898) – horseman, medical officer, neurologist, hypnotist, psychiatrist.[20]
  • Joseph Henry Davies (Staff 1881–1888) – Founder, owner, and principal of Caulfield Grammar School
  • J. L. Davis (1901–06) – athlete who set a world record time for the 440 yards hurdles in 1906.[21]
  • Brett Deledio (2005) – AFL footballer[22]

E

F

G

  • Chris Gahan (1947–57) – Mayor of Stonnington[7]
  • Richard Horace Maconchie "Dick" Gibbs MC (1908–1911), VFL footballer, medical student, soldier, died in action in World War I.[32]
  • Herbert Marcus Glasscock (1916-1918) VFL Footballer.
  • Brendon Goddard (2001–03) – AFL footballer[33]
  • Nick Goldsbrough-Reardon (1999–04) – Australian Institute of Sport Scholarship Holder. Australian National Volleyball Team Player (2005–2010).
  • David Godsell (1938–47) – architect[34]
  • Robert Cuthbert Grieve VC (1899–1957) – World War I veteran; Victoria Cross recipient[35]
  • Philip Lewis Griffiths KC (1894–?) – jurist[36]
  • John Colohan Griffin (1928–36) – artist; cartographer; architect[37]
  • Geoff Grover (1949–1960) – Australian Rules Footballer with St Kilda and Port Melbourne (VFA State Representative, ANFC Carnival 1966)

H

  • Hugh Percival Hall (1908–1915) — lawyer, artist, photographer.[38]
  • Mick Harvey (1969–75) – musician, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds[15]
  • Michael Hirshorn OAM – company director, former CEO of Cochlear Limited[39]
  • Edward George Honey (1895–?) – journalist; suggested the idea of a moment of silence to remember the World War I Armistice Treaty.[40]
  • Rhys Evan Hopkins (1920–27) – architect[41]
  • Mack Horton (2000–14) – swimmer and 2016 Summer Olympics gold medalist
  • John Martin Hull (Staff) — Theologian; editor British Journal of Religious Education.
  • Herbert Humphreys Hunter (1896–99) – VFL footballer, dentist, killed in action at Gallipoli Cove on 8 May 1915.
  • Roger Hogg (1973-78) - Jazz Artist

I

J

K

L

M

N

  • Stephen Newport (1981–?) – AFL footballer with Melbourne and St Kilda
  • John Elwell Newton (1962–1964) – District Court of Queensland judge[63]
  • Stephen Newton AO (Staff 1993–2011) – principal of Caulfield Grammar School[64]
  • Nikolai Nikolaeff (1996–2000) – Australian actor currently starring in Sea Patrol

O

  • Jenna O'Hea (2005–06) – professional basketball player[65]
  • James Ryan O'Neill (born Leigh Anthony Bridgart in 1947), convicted murderer and suspected serial killer

P

Q

R

S

Andrew Strauss

T

U

V

  • Jessica Van Der Venne (1998–2003)

W

X

Y

Z

See also

References

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  2. All years of attendance pre-2006 sourced from Penrose, Outside the Square (Staff and Student Listings CD), 2006.
  3. Caulfield Grammarians Football Club (2005). CGS AFL Players Archived 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 16 November 2005.
  4. Journalist Alan Ashbolt dies at 83
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  6. National Library of Australia (2007). Guide to the Papers of William Macmahon Ball: Biographical Note. Retrieved 24 December 2007.
  7. Penrose, Helen (2006). Outside the Square: 125 Years of Caulfield Grammar School. Melbourne University Publishing. ISBN 0-522-85319-6.
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  9. Apple, R., "Dr Billigheimer in Australia", Lecture delivered to Australian Jewish Historical Society, Sydney, on 25 February 2008; Apple, R., "The German rabbinate abroad – Australia", Lecture delivered to The German Rabbinate Abroad: Transferring German-Jewish Modernity into the World? Conference, Munich, 2009.
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