List of Old Boys of St Aloysius' College

Former students of the Catholic school, St Aloysius' College in Milsons Point, New South Wales, Australia, are known as "Old Boys".

Academia, medicine and science

 * Dr Stephen Hicks – research fellow in Neuroscience and Visual Prosthetics, Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Oxford
 * Professor Jacques Miller  (1931– ) –  distinguished research scientist
 * Sir Gustav Nossal (1931– ) –  distinguished research scientist; former director of the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research (1965–1996); 2000 Australian of the Year

Business



 * Danny Kennedy – environmentalist, clean-tech entrepreneur and founder of Sungevity
 * Andrew Low – corporate adviser, and CEO of RedBridge Grant Samuel
 * David Murray –  former chairman of the Australian Government Future Fund and a former CEO of the Commonwealth Bank

Clergy

 * Right Reverend Joseph Dwyer – Bishop of Wagga Wagga 1918–1939 (also attended St Patrick's College, Goulburn)
 * Bishop Gregory Homeming – Bishop of Lismore
 * Peter L'Estrange – Rector of Newman College (University of Melbourne) 1991–2006 and Master of Campion Hall, Oxford since 2006
 * Archbishop Eris O'Brien – Auxiliary Bishop of Sydney 1948–1951, Archbishop of Canberra and Goulburn 1953–1966
 * Bishop William Wright – Bishop of Maitland-Newcastle

Crime

 * Simon Anquetil – Tax fraud


 * David Rankin – Child abuse

Media, entertainment and the arts

 * Christopher Brennan – poet and scholar (also attended Saint Ignatius' College, Riverview)
 * Don Burke – television presenter, television producer, author and horticulturalist
 * Danny Clayton – television presenter and media personality, best known for his work as a Channel V Australia VJ
 * Martin Cooke – baritone with the Bavarian State Opera
 * Alex Cubis – actor and lawyer
 * John Bede Dalley – journalist and writer (also attended St Augustine's Abbey school and Beaumont College)
 * Anh Do – comedian, painter and actor (Footy Legends, Thank God You're Here, SBS series Kick, runner-up on Dancing with the Stars (Series 7), Dancing with the Deals)
 * Khoa Do – 2005 Young Australian of the Year, screenwriter and director of Footy Legends
 * Sir Charles Mackerras – conductor and brother of Alistair and Malcolm (also attended Sydney Grammar School)
 * Julian Morrow – journalist, comedian and writer, best known for The Chaser, CNNNN, The Chaser's War on Everything
 * Melvyn Morrow – a playwright whose musical scores included Shout! The Legend of The Wild One and Dusty - The Musical; English teacher
 * Matthew Reilly – author whose novels include Ice Station, Area 7, Scarecrow, Hover Car Racer, Seven Ancient Wonders and Contest
 * Cyril Ritchard – Broadway actor
 * Justin Smith – actor who starred in Billy Elliot the Musical in Australia
 * Adam Spencer – mathematician, comedian and radio host
 * Tom Switzer – editor of the Australian version of The Spectator; research associate at the United States Studies Centre, University of Sydney
 * Tom Williams – television presenter (The Great Outdoors); reporter and star of Dancing With the Stars
 * Stephen Burton – Circus Australia, Joint artistic co-ordinator
 * Paul Dyer (conductor) – Musician, conductor and artistic director

Politics, public service and the law



 * Tony Abbott –  former Australian Prime Minister, a former member of the Australian House of Representatives who represented Warringah for the Liberal Party, and a former minister in the Howard government; (left after graduation from the junior school to attend Saint Ignatius' College, Riverview)
 * Sir Maurice Byers – Solicitor-General of Australia during the Australian constitutional crisis of 1975
 * Joseph Farrar Coates –  Member of the New South Wales Legislative Council and a minister in the Lang and Stevens governments (1921–1943)
 * Francis Joseph Finnan –  Member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly representing Hawkesbury and Darlinghurst for Labor; later a public servant
 * Nick Greiner –  former chairman of Infrastructure NSW; 37th Premier of New South Wales (1988–1992); Member of the Legislative Assembly representing Ku-ring-gai for the Liberal Party (1980–1992) (also attended Saint Ignatius' College, Riverview)
 * Joe Hockey –  current Australian Ambassador to the United States; former Member of the Australian House of Representatives, representing North Sydney for the Liberal Party; former minister in the Howard Government; served as Treasurer of Australia in the Abbott Government
 * Francis Keane – public servant and magistrate
 * John Ormond Kennedy – Member of Victorian Legislative Assembly representing Hawthorn for the Labor Party 2018–2022
 * Michael L'Estrange –  former Secretary of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade; former Australian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom; former Secretary to Cabinet; Rhodes Scholar
 * Malcolm Mackerras –  psephologist and creator of the 'Mackerras Electoral Pendulum'; brother of Charles (also attended Sydney Grammar School)
 * Dick Meagher –  former Speaker, and a former Member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly representing Sydney-Phillip, then Tweed and then Phillip, variously for Labor and as an independent representative between 1895 and 1917; former Lord Mayor of Sydney (1895–1920) (also attended St Stanislaus' College)
 * Jonathan O'Dea –  Member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly representing Davidson for the Liberal Party 2007–2023 (also attended Saint Ignatius' College, Riverview)
 * Simon Rice – Professor Emeritus, University of Sydney Law School
 * Tim Stephens – Professor of International Law, University of Sydney Law School
 * Tim Studdert – NSW Supreme Court Justice
 * John Kearney – NSW Supreme Court Justice
 * Richard Cavanagh – NSW Supreme Court Justice

Sport



 * Bernard Foley – Waratahs and Wallabies rugby player
 * Cecil Healy – winner of individual silver and team gold medals in swimming at the 1912 Olympic Games
 * Ater Majok – basketball player, selected by the Los Angeles Lakers in the 2011 NBA Draft
 * Pat McCabe – Brumbies and Wallabies rugby player
 * Dr Herbert Moran – Wallabies captain (1908) (also attended St. Joseph's College, Hunters Hill)
 * Tom Kingston – Waratahs and Rebels rugby player
 * Austin Punch – First Class cricketer, NSW and Tasmania
 * Brian Dunn – Sprinter, Australian 100 yards record holder 1939
 * James Hughes – Wallabies rugby player
 * Les Austin – Wallabies rugby player
 * Danny Carroll – Wallabies rugby player
 * Edward Mandible – Wallabies rugby player
 * Gordon Rorke – Australian Test cricketer
 * Jack O'Connor (Australian cricketer) – Australian Test cricketer
 * J.J. Ferris – Australian Test cricketer
 * Keith Gleeson – Rugby player – Ireland, Leinster, Waratahs, Australian Barbarians, Australia Under-19s, Australia Under-21s