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Archibald Glenn
Sir Archibald Glenn OBE (born 24 May 1911) is an Australian industrialist and founding Chancellor of La Trobe University
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David Derham
Sir David Plumley Derham KBE CMG (1920-1985) was an Australian jurist and university administrator. He was an expert in Australian constitutional law. In 1963, he became the Foundation Dean of Monash University Law School, which is now called the David Derham School of Law in his honour.
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David Penington
David Geoffrey Penington AC (born 4 February 1930) is an Australian doctor, academic, Vice-Chancellor and director.
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Drew Ginn
Drew Cameron Ginn, OAM, (born 20 November 1974, educated at Scotch College, Melbourne) is an Australian rower and triple Olympic gold medallist.
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Gerald Patterson
Gerald Leighton Patterson MC (17 December 1895 – 13 June 1967) was an Australian male tennis player. He was born in Melbourne, educated at Scotch College Melbourne and died in Melbourne in 13 June 1967. He was the co-World No. 1 player for 1919 along with Bill Johnston.
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H. M. Knight
Sir Harold Murray Knight KBE DSC is an Australian economist. He was the 3rd Governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia from 1975 to 1982.
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Harry Lawson
For the motor industry pioneer please see Harry John Lawson
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Hayden Starke
Sir Hayden Erskine Starke KCMG (22February 1871 – 1958), an Australian judge, was a justice of the High Court of Australia.
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James Balderstone
Sir James Schofield Balderstone AC (born 2 May 1921) is a prominent Australian director of public companies. He resides in Melbourne.
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Jeff Kennett
Jeffrey Gibb Kennett AC (born 2 March 1948), a former Australian politician, was the Premier of Victoria between 1992 and 1999. He is currently the President of Hawthorn Football Club. He was the founding Chairman, and now a Director, of beyondblue, a national depression initiative.
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Jim Bacon
James Alexander Bacon, AC (15 May 1950 – 20 June 2004) was Premier of Tasmania from 1998 to 2004.
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John Cain II
John Cain (born 26 April 1931), Australian Labor Party politician, was the 41st Premier of Victoria, holding office from 1982 to 1990.
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Kenneth Hayne
Kenneth Madison Hayne AC (born 5 June 1945) is a Judge of the High Court of Australia which is the highest court in the Australian court hierarchy.
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Kenneth Wheare
Sir Kenneth Clinton Wheare CMG (1907–1979) was an Australian academic, who spent most of his career at Oxford University in England. He was an expert on the history of the constitutions of the British Commonwealth.
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Lindsay Tasman Ride
Sir Lindsay Tasman Ride CBE, Hon RAM (Chinese: 賴廉士) (10 October 1898 – 17 October 1977), was an Australian physiologist and soldier who became the 5th Vice Chancellor of the University of Hong Kong.
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Mark Peel
Mark Andrew Peel (born October 17, 1959), historian and academic, is Professor of Modern Cultural and Social History and Head of History at the University of Liverpool. He was formerly a Professor and Head of the School of Historical Studies in the Faculty of Arts at Monash University in Australia. He is the author of Good Times, Hard Times: The Past and the Future in Elizabeth (Melbourne University Press, 1995, Shortlisted for The Age Non-Fiction Book of the Year Award); A Little History of Australia (Melbourne University Press, 1997); and The Lowest Rung: Voices of Australian Poverty (Cambridge University Press, 2003, Shortlisted for the Victorian Premier's Literary Awards). He holds degrees from Flinders University (BA (Hons), 1980 and MA, 1983), Johns Hopkins University (MA, 1985) and Melbourne University (PhD, 1993) and was appointed a full Professor in 2007. He was elected as a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia in 2008 and became a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society in 2010.
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Peter Darvall
Professor Peter Darvall AO was the Vice-Chancellor and President of Monash University from 2002 until August 2003. Prior to this, he had a distinguished career in civil engineering and was at Monash for 33 years. He was educated at Scotch College Melbourne.
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Peter Hollingworth
Peter John Hollingworth AC, OBE (born 10 April 1935) is an Australian Anglican bishop. He served as the Archbishop of Brisbane for 11 years before becoming the 23rd Governor-General of Australia from 2001 until 2003.
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Scottish people
The Scottish people (Scots Gaelic: Albannaich), or Scots, are a nation and ethnic group native to Scotland. Historically they emerged from an amalgamation of the Celtic Picts (east) and the Gaels (west), incorporating neighbouring Britons as well as Germanic peoples such as the Anglo-Saxons and the Norse.
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Sir George Paton
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Sir John Latham
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Vaiben Solomon
Vaiben Louis Solomon (13 May 1853 - 20 October 1908) was the 21st Premier of South Australia and a member of the first Australian Commonwealth parliament.
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Walter Murdoch
Emeritus Professor Sir Walter Logie Forbes Murdoch, KCMG (1874-1970) was a prominent Australian academic and essayist famous for his intelligence, wit, and humanity. He was a Founding Professor of English and former Chancellor of University of Western Australia in Perth. Murdoch University, also in Perth is named after him. There is a walk dedicated to him on South Wing Level 2 of the Murdoch campus library.
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William Shiels
William Shiels (3 December 1848 – 17 December 1904), Australian colonial politician, was the 16th Premier of Victoria. Shiels was born in Ireland of a Presbyterian family and arrived in Melbourne as a child in 1853. He was educated at Scotch College and the University of Melbourne, where he graduated in law and arts, gaining a masters degree in law in 1885. He was called to the Melbourne bar in 1872 and was also active in public life, being a noted campaigner for divorce law reform.
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{{Infobox country
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Melbourne (, locally also ) is the capital and most populous city in the state of Victoria, and the second most populous city in Australia. The Melbourne City Centre (also known as the "Central Business District" or "CBD") is the hub of the greater geographical area (or "metropolitan area") and the Census statistical division—of which "Melbourne" is the common name. As of June 2009, the greater geographical area had an approximate population of 4.00 million. Inhabitants of Melbourne are called Melburnians.
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Monash University (or Monash), is a public university based in Melbourne, Victoria. It was founded in 1958 and is the second oldest university in the state. Monash is a member of Australia's Group of Eight and the ASAIHL. In 2010, it was ranked 61st in the world by QS World University Rankings, dropping back sixteen places from its position of 45th in the 2009 THE-QS World University Rankings
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Victoria is the second most populous state in Australia. Geographically the smallest mainland state, Victoria is bordered by New South Wales to the north, South Australia to the west, and Tasmania to the south, across Bass Strait. Victoria is the most densely populated state, and has a highly centralised population, with almost 75% of Victorians living in Melbourne, the state capital and largest city. Approximately 30,000 Indigenous Australians are estimated to have lived in the area, before European settlement in Victoria began in the 1830s. The discovery of gold in 1851 at Ballarat and Warrandyte transformed it into a leading industrial and commercial centre.
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The Yarra River, originally Birrarung, is a river in east-central Victoria, Australia. The lower stretches of the river is where the city of Melbourne was established in 1835 and today Greater Melbourne dominates and influences the landscape of its lower reaches. From its source in the Yarra Ranges, it flows 242 km west through the Yarra Valley which opens out into plains as it winds its way through Greater Melbourne before emptying into Hobsons Bay in northernmost Port Phillip.
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Name | Scotch College |
---|---|
Motto | ("For God, for Country, and for Learning") |
Established | 1851 |
Type | Independent, Single-sex, Day and Boarding |
Denomination | Presbyterian |
Headmaster | I. T. Batty |
Chairman | D. A. Crawford |
Founder | Rev. James Forbes |
City | Hawthorn |
State | Victoria |
Country | Australia |
Coordinates | |
Enrolment | ~1,850 (P–12) |
Colours | Cardinal, Gold and Blue |
Homepage | www.scotch.vic.edu.au |
Houses | Bond, Davidson, Eggleston, Field, Fleming, Forbes, Gilray, Lawson, Littlejohn, Monash, Morrison, Selby-Smith }} |
Scotch College, Melbourne is an independent, Presbyterian, day and boarding school for boys, located in Hawthorn, an inner-eastern suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Studies over the years have found that Scotch had more alumni mentioned in Who's Who in Australia (a listing of notable Australians) than any other school.
In 2010 The Age reported that Scotch College "has educated more of Australia's most honoured and influential citizens than any other school in the nation", based on research that revealed its alumni had received more top Order of Australia honours than any other school.
The College was established in 1851 as "The Melbourne Academy", in a house in Spring Street, Melbourne, by Reverend James Forbes, of the Free Presbyterian Church of Victoria. It is the oldest extant secondary school in Victoria and celebrated its sesquicentenary in 2001.
Scotch is a founding member of the Associated Public Schools of Victoria (APS), and is affiliated with the International Coalition of Boys' Schools, the Junior School Heads Association of Australia (JSHAA), the Australian Boarding Schools' Association (ABSA), the Association of Independent Schools of Victoria (AISV), and the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference. The School is also a member of the G20 Schools Group.
History
Scotch College is the oldest surviving secondary school in Victoria. Its foundation was due to the initiative of the Reverend James Forbes, who was the first settled minister of the Presbyterian Church in the State. It is 'the outcome of the old Scottish ideal of education', in which church and school were inextricably connected. The School opened on 6 October 1851, under the name of the Melbourne Academy in a small house in Spring Street, with Mr Robert Lawson, a Scot from Edinburgh University, as the first Principal. The house was soon outgrown, as was a larger one in the same street and the Church applied to the government for a grant of land. Two acres were reserved for the school on Eastern Hill and substantial new buildings were erected there in 1853. The cost was met partly by a government grant and partly from funds raised by the friends of the school.
Mr Lawson resigned in 1856, but not before he had laid the firm foundations for future development. Under his successor, Alexander Morrison, the school grew and prospered; Morrison had been Rector of Hamilton Academy and remained at Scotch for forty six years. W S Littlejohn, who took over the school in 1904, served for twenty nine years and his successor, C M Gilray, for nineteen. So, when the school became the first in Victoria to celebrate its centenary, Dr Gilray was only the fourth Principal – a record perhaps unequalled by any major public school in the British Commonwealth. These three men have been aptly described in the school history: `Morrison, a stern patriarch and rigid disciplinarian, walking strictly in the paths of the classics taming by force of personality and the strength of his arm and fiery youth of the early colony. Littlejohn, no less strong in discipline, but typical of the broader life which came with the new century, versed in the classics but appreciative of the importance of the sciences and of the place of science in education; and Gilray, who, in a more mature and sophisticated community, preserved in the school the wisdom of classics and the adventureof science, but added the beauty of music, art and drama and the discipline of a fuller life of culture.'
Dr Gilray was succeeded in 1953 by R Selby Smith, an Old Rugbeian who had served in the Royal Navy during the war and was at the time of his appointment Deputy Director of Education for Warwickshire. During his headmastership there were still further advances in the cultural aspects of education, especially music. A fine scholastic record was maintained and the building program interrupted by the war was revived. He greatly improved the administrative efficiency of the school, the general care of the boys by masters and the participation of students in the school's religious life. Mr Selby Smith resigned in 1964 to become Professor of Education at Monash University.
C 0 Healey who had been Headmaster of Sydney Grammar School since 1951 succeeded Mr Selby Smith. Mr Healey brought the greatest dedication to his task and was totally involved in every aspect of school life. During the ten and a half years of his headmastership, he awakened a new sense of purpose in all members of the school community. A general science wing, the new dining hall and the new maths/science block are visible signs of his creativity and energy. Tireless in his pursuit of excellence, he left a lasting impact upon the minds and souls of all Scotch Collegians. Gifted with forward vision, he fostered the concept of the 'Scotch Family' and it is to Mr Healey that we owe the inception of the Scotch College Foundation. Mr Healey retired in January 1975.
In the following May, P A V Roff, formerly Headmaster of Scotch College, Adelaide, was installed as the seventh Principal of the College. Mr Philip Roff 's tenure, though a brief seven years, was characterised by an expanding voice for staff in the day to day management of the school, the establishment of a Foundation Office at the School under the direction of a Development Officer and the widening of the House System to provide greater depth in pastoral care. His last few years saw the school in dispute over ownership and, for the Principal and his school community, it was a time of stress. In 1980 the decision was made to incorporate the school and a new Council was appointed, with representatives from the Presbyterian Church, the Old Scotch Collegians' Association and the community at large.
Dr F G Donaldson, a Vice Principal from Wallace High School in Lisburn, Northern Ireland, with a Doctorate of Philosophy in Atomic Physics from Queens University of Belfast, succeeded Mr Roff in 1983. Under his Principalship there has been a significant building program which has created outstanding facilities for the education of boys, the development of ICT for administrative and educational purposes and enhanced pastoral care of students.
Mr I Tom Batty, was appointed as the ninth Principal of Scotch and installed into office on Monday 14 July 2008. Prior to his appointment he was Housemaster of Villiers House, Eton College in the UK.
Name
The School was originally called "The Melbourne Academy", after its location, when it opened in 1851. In its early years it was also known as
Coat-of-arms and motto
The School's coat-of-arms (shown above, right) features the following elements:The motto of the School, shown in Scottish heraldic style in a scroll above the cost-of-arms, is Latin: "Deo Patriae Litteris". It literally means "God, Country, Learning", or transliterated means "For God, for Country, and for Learning".
Principals
Dr. F. G. Donaldson AM retired as Principal at the conclusion of 2007, having completed 25 years as Principal and was succeeded by I. T. Batty who commenced his term in 2008. Mr Batty is only the ninth Principal in the school's 160 year history.!Period | !Details |
1851 – 1856 | Mr. Robert Lawson |
1857 – 1903 | |
1904 – 1933 | |
1934 – 1953 | Dr. Colin MacDonald Gilray OBE MC |
1953 – 1964 | Prof. Richard Selby Smith OBE |
1965 – 1974 | Mr. Colin Oswald Healey OBE TD |
1975 – 1982 | Mr. Philip Anthony Vere Roff |
1983 – 2007 | Dr. Francis Gordon Donaldson AM |
2008 – Present | Mr. Ian Thomas Batty |
Governance and denominational affiliation
Scotch is an incorporated body governed by a Council made up of three groups; 1/3 Old Boys nominated by the Old Scotch Collegians' Association, 1/3 Presbyterian Church of Victoria nominees and 1/3 "members of the Scotch Family" nominated by Council from members of associations including the Scotch Parents' Association and Scotch Foundation.Chairmen of the Council have included Sir Arthur Robinson, Sir Archibald Glenn, Sir James Balderstone and David Crawford.
At the formation of the Uniting Church in Australia in 1977, Scotch was allocated to the Presbyterian Church of Australia by the Property Commission of the Presbyterian Church, which included an even number of representatives from the Uniting Church and the continuing Presbyterian Church as well as independent commissioners. At the time the Scotch Council unsuccessfully appealed this decision.
Campuses
Hawthorn - The school has a single boarding, sporting and academic campus of in suburban Hawthorn. Sporting facilities include ovals and soccer/rugby fields, two synthetic grass hockey/soccer fields, tennis courts, an indoor swimming pool, an indoor diving pool, three gymnasiums, two weights rooms, three squash courts and a rock climbing tower. As the school is situated on the banks of the Yarra River, the school has rowing and boating facilities located within its grounds. Healesville - The school has of forest with a lodge in the hills at Healesville east of Melbourne, used for Scout and Cadet camps. Phillip Island - The school has an absolute-beach-front residential seaside property at Cowes on Phillip Island, which is the site of a one-week orientation camp for Year 7 students and other camps. Mansfield - The school has a lodge for the use of boarders in the hills outside of Mansfield, 130 km northeast of Melbourne.
Boarding
Scotch has been a boarding school since its foundation. Today the School caters for 160 boarders of whom around 70% are drawn from around Australia and 30% are from overseas. The boarding precinct is on "The Hill" which overlooks the Senior School at the main Hawthorn campus. There are three boarding houses: School House, McMeckan House and Arthur Robinson House. Both School House and McMeckan House were built as the gift of Anthony Mackie, and his brother and sisters, in memory of their uncle Captain James McMeckan. Arthur Robinson House is named after a Chairman of the School Council, Sir Arthur Robinson.
Curriculum
Scotch students study towards the Victorian Certificate of Education (VCE), which is the main secondary student assessment program in Victoria which ranks students with an Australian Tertiary Admission Rank (ATAR) for university entrance purposes.
Extra-curricular activities
Some extra-curricular groups and activities at Scotch are: Army Cadet Corps - The Scotch College Cadet Corps was established in 1884, and holds an annual Tattoo. Cadets have weekly activities at the school and participate in camps and bivouacs. Pipe Band - The Scotch College Pipes and Drums Band was established in 1946 and is one of the oldest school pipe bands in Australia. It wears the Gordon tartan, and competes at national and international competitions and highland festivals. It performs at school and public events including in the annual ANZAC Day March to the Shrine of Remembrance. It is the current national champion in the Juvenile grade. Military Band - The Military Band performs at school, and in public including in the annual ANZAC Day March to the Shrine of Remembrance and on overseas tours. All members of the band are also members of the Australian Army Cadet Corps. Ist Hawthorn (Scotch College) Scout Group - Scotch has its own Scout Group, established in 1926, that is part of Scouts Australia. The Scout Group meets regularly each Thursday at the school and participate in off-campus activities such as camps. Debating - Scotch regularly participates in debating, competing in the Debaters Association of Victoria Schools Competition. Each season, the school hosts the Hawthorn region of the Schools Competition. In 2008 the First Debating Team were the State A Grade runners-up, while the school was also runner up in the State British Parliamentary Debating Competition. Scotch debaters have recently toured the United Kingdom participating in inter-school debating tournaments. In 2010, Scotch won the A Grade (Year 12), B Grade (Year 11) and C Grade (Year 10) State Grand Finals in the DAV (Debater's Association of Victoria) Debating Competition.
Sport
Scotch College competes in the Associated Public Schools of Victoria (APS) league in Athletics, Badminton, Basketball, Cricket, Cross Country, Australian Rules Football, Hockey, Rowing, Rugby, Soccer, Squash, Swimming and Diving, Table Tennis, Tennis, Volleyball and Water Polo. In 2006, the school jointly won the APS Australian Rules Premiership, the First VIII Rowing (Head of the River), and the VSRU Open Grade Rugby. It was the fifth time in six years that Scotch had won the Rugby first XV's. It won a fifth consecutive Head of the River in 2008. In 2010 the first eight convincingly won the Head of the River. As well as claiming the Victorian State title the 2010 First eight was the first interstate school to win the NSW State Championship title in both the Schoolboy 8+ and Mens Under 21 8+ as well as claiming Australian Championship title in the 8 which lays claim to being the most successful Australian schoolboy crew in history. It has won the Head of the River event more than any other competing school.In addition to the APS competition, Scotch competes in a number of competitions with specific schools, including: Cordner-Eggleston Cup - This Cup is contested each year by the first football teams of Scotch and Melbourne Grammar School. It commemorates the first recorded game of Australian Rules Football, which was played between the two schools on 7 August 1858, which scotch won and is today commemorated by a statue depicting the game outside the Melbourne Cricket Ground. The Batty Shield - This Shield is contested between the first cricket teams of Scotch and Eton College. The Shield was inaugurated in 2008 after a number of cricket tours between the schools, and is named after the current Principal of Scotch who was previously a Housemaster at Eton. The Tait Cup - This Cup is contested between the first cricket teams of Scotch and Geelong Grammar School and commemorates the links between the schools back to their first cricket match in 1855. The John Roe Shield - This Shield is contested between the first soccer teams of Scotch and Saint Peter's College, Adelaide.
Alumni
Alumni of Scotch College are known as Old Boys or Old Collegians, and automatically become members of the School's alumni association, the Old Scotch Collegians' Association (OSCA).
Studies over the years have found that Scotch College had more alumni mentioned in Who's Who in Australia (a listing of notable Australians) than any other school, and its alumni had received more top Order of Australia honours than any other school.
Alumni of Scotch College include
Images of Hawthorn campus
See also
References
External links
Further reading
Category:Associated Public Schools of Victoria Category:Educational institutions established in 1851 Category:Presbyterian schools in Australia Category:Schools in Melbourne Category:Boarding schools in Victoria (Australia) Category:Private schools in Victoria (Australia) Category:Member schools of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference Category:Boys' schools in Australia Category:Junior School Heads Association of Australia Member Schools Category:1851 establishments in Australia
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