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Old Reds

This is a list of "Old Reds", former students of the Uniting Church school Prince Alfred College in Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.

Rhodes scholars

The Rhodes Scholarship is a postgraduate scholarship for study at Oxford University. As of 2023, PAC has educated 20 Rhodes Scholars throughout its 154 year history. Recipients who attended PAC include:

Academia and education

Business and agriculture

Clergy

Entertainment and the arts

Exploration

Judiciary, civic leadership and public service

Politics

Federal

  • Cory Bernardi (1969–), Senator for South Australia from 2006 to 2020, member of the Legislative Council 2026 - present, leader of One Nation South Australia.
  • Gordon Bilney (1939–2012), Labor member of the House of Representatives, Minister for Defence Science and Personnel from 1990 to 1993, Minister for Development Cooperation and Pacific Island Affairs from 1993 to 1996, OECD official, High Commissioner to the West Indies
  • Grant Chapman (1949–), Member for Division of Kingston (1975–1983) and Senator for South Australia (1988–2008)
  • John Chapman (1879–1931), Country Party senator for South Australia
  • David Combe (1943–2019), National Secretary of the Australian Labor Party from 1973 to 1981.
  • David Fawcett (1963–), Liberal Senator for South Australia, former assistant minister for defence
  • Joel Moses Gabb (1882–1951), Labor then independent member of the House of Representatives
  • Clive Hannaford (1903–1967), Liberal and independent senator for South Australia from 1950 to 1967.
  • Charles Robert Kelly (1912–1997), politician, farmer and columnist, Nationals MP 1958–77, minister of works, minister of the navy
  • Sir Philip Albert Martin McBride (1892–1982), member of the House of Representatives (1931–43; 1946–58), minister of defence 1950–58
  • Horace Keyworth Nock (1879–1958), Country Party member of House of Representatives
  • Rex Pearson (1905–1961), Liberal senator for South Australia
  • Nick Xenophon (1959–), Senator for South Australia from 2008 to 2017.
  • Sir Harold Young (1923–2006), senator for South Australia, President of the Senate from 1981 to 1983.

State

  • Sir John Lavington Bonython (1875–1960), editor of The Advertiser, Lord Mayor of Adelaide (1927–1930)
  • Francis Cotton (1857–1942), founding member of the NSW Labor Party, unionist, later Free Trade politician
  • John Lancelot Cowan, Member for the District of Southern Districts (1949–1959) in the South Australian Legislative Council
  • Fraser Ellis (1992–), Independent member of the House of Assembly
  • Edward Allan Farquhar (1871–1935), Councillor, Alderman and Chair of Finance on the Port Adelaide City Council
  • Charles Glover (1870–1936), first Lord Mayor of the City of Adelaide (1919)
  • Hermann Robert (1874–1964), member of the Legislative Council, two-time SA attorney-general, minister for industry
  • Sir Shirley Williams Jeffries (1886–1963), SA attorney-general, minister of education, and minister of industry and employment.
  • George Richards Laffer (1866–1933), minister and Speaker of the House of Assembly
  • Nick McBride, independent member of the Legislative Assembly
  • Sir Alexander Lyell McEwin (1897–1988), member of SA parliament 1934–1975, chief secretary, minister for mines, minister for health
  • Major-General Sir Newton Moore KCMG (1870–1936), eighth Premier of Western Australia, World War I general, member of the UK House of Commons
  • Sir Frank Tennyson Perry (1887–1965), member of the legislative council, industrialist, wartime public servant.
  • Robert Thomson Robinson (1867–1926), WA attorney-general, minister for mines, minister for industry
  • Crawford Vaughan (1874–1947), Premier of South Australia 1915–17
  • John Howard Vaughan (1879–1955), union leader and Attorney-General of South Australia
  • Sir Frederick William Young (1876–1948), member of the South Australian House of Assembly 1902–05 and 1909–15, commissioner of crown lands and immigration in 1912–14, South Australian agent-general in London 1915–18, member of the House of Commons 1918–22.

Medical, mathematics, natural and social sciences

Military

  • Ronald Hubert Cox (1914–1992), air force officer and city inspector
  • Major General Steve Gower AO (1940–), Director of the Australian War Memorial 1996–2011
  • Ronald Beresford Lees (1910–1991), air force officer
  • Major-General Sir Newton Moore KCMG (1870–1936), eighth Premier of Western Australia, World War I general, member of the UK House of Commons 1918–23, 1924–34.
  • John Alexander Raws, journalist and WW1 diarist, killed in action 23 August 1916 at Pozieres – no known grave
  • Lieutenant Leonard Taplin, DFC, World War fighter ace, pioneer aerial photographer and aerial cartographer
  • Captain Hugo Vivian Hope Throssell, VC (1884–1933), soldier, farmer
  • William Charles Nightingale Waite (1880–1973), soldier and auctioneer

Sports

Cricket

Australian rules football

Association football

Rowing

  • Dr. Matthew Bolt (1986–), former Australian Under 23 Rower, stroke of the 2011 Bronze medal winning South Australian Kings Cup crew, member of 2012 Bronze medal winning Kings Cup crew, former Captain of Adelaide University Boat Club
  • Alexander Hill (1993–), Current Australian Rowing Team member, Olympic Silver Medallist (Rio 2016) M4–, World Cup Medallist, Australian Under 23 Rower, 2011/2012 Bronze medal winning Kings Cup crew member, former Under 19 World Champion
  • Brian Richardson (1947–2024), former Olympic Rower, Montreal 1976 and Moscow 1980

Noted members of staff

Headmasters

Teachers

Governors

Foundation council

Founders and early figures

References

External links