Alumni of Scotch College are known as Old Boys or Old Collegians, and automatically become members of the schools
alumni association, the Old Scotch Collegians Association (OSCA).[1]
Scotch College has had more alumni mentioned in Who's Who in Australia (a listing of notable Australians) than any other school,[2][3][4] and its alumni have received more top (Companion)
Order of Australia honours than any other school.[5] Although knighthoods are no longer bestowed in Australia, at least 71 Scotch College alumni have been knighted.[6]
Robert Bell Hamilton – renowned Victorian architect, Member for Toorak in Parliament of Victoria and Mornington Shire Council President
Norman Charles Harris – engineer, later lieutenant colonel, Victorian Railways Chairman of Commissioners, honoured by the naming of Melbourne Suburban blue electric
'Harris Train'
^"Membership". About OSCA. Scotch College. Archived from
the original on 29 August 2007. Retrieved 26 March 2008.
^Walker, Frank (22 July 2001).
"The ties that bind". Sunday Life. The Sun-Herald. p. 16. Retrieved 12 September 2007.
^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
^Ian Hansen, Nor Free Nor Secular: Six Independent Schools in Victoria, a First Sample, Oxford University Press, 1971
Alumni of Scotch College are known as Old Boys or Old Collegians, and automatically become members of the schools
alumni association, the Old Scotch Collegians Association (OSCA).[1]
Scotch College has had more alumni mentioned in Who's Who in Australia (a listing of notable Australians) than any other school,[2][3][4] and its alumni have received more top (Companion)
Order of Australia honours than any other school.[5] Although knighthoods are no longer bestowed in Australia, at least 71 Scotch College alumni have been knighted.[6]
Robert Bell Hamilton – renowned Victorian architect, Member for Toorak in Parliament of Victoria and Mornington Shire Council President
Norman Charles Harris – engineer, later lieutenant colonel, Victorian Railways Chairman of Commissioners, honoured by the naming of Melbourne Suburban blue electric
'Harris Train'
^"Membership". About OSCA. Scotch College. Archived from
the original on 29 August 2007. Retrieved 26 March 2008.
^Walker, Frank (22 July 2001).
"The ties that bind". Sunday Life. The Sun-Herald. p. 16. Retrieved 12 September 2007.
^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
^Ian Hansen, Nor Free Nor Secular: Six Independent Schools in Victoria, a First Sample, Oxford University Press, 1971