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List of Old Collegians Of PLC Melbournreport

  • Catherine Anderson – Rhodes Scholar (Academic)

  • Maureen Brunt – Emeritus Professor of Economics, Monash University (Academic)

  • Jeanette Buckham – Educator; Former Principal of the Presbyterian Ladies' College, Goulburn, and Pymble Ladies' College (Academic)

  • Maud Martha Cameron – Headmistress of Firbank Girls' Grammar School (1911–54) and president of the Victorian Association of Headmistresses (1936–37) (Academic)

  • Dymphna Clark (née Lodewyckx) – Language scholar and wife of historian Manning Clark (Academic)

  • Nina Alison Crone OAM – Teacher; Former Headmistress of Melbourne Girls Grammar School; Historian; Linguist; Journalist (Academic)

  • Associate Professor Susan Elliott – Pro Vice-Chancellor at the University of Melbourne (Academic)

  • Mary (Isabel) Flinn – Prominent school teacher and university lecturer (Academic)

  • Julia Teresa Flynn – Educationist; First female school inspector; Namesake of 'Julia Flynn Avenue' in Isaacs, Australian Capital Territory (Academic)

  • Nancy Jobson – Educator; Former headmistress of Southland Girls' High School (Invercargill, New Zealand), Queen Margaret College (Wellington, New Zealand), Fairholme Presbyterian Girls' College (Toowoomba, Queensland), and Pymble Ladies' College (Pymble, New South Wales) (Academic)

  • Dame Leonie Judith Kramer – Former Chancellor of the University of Sydney (Academic)

  • Elizabeth Inglis Lothian – Teacher of Classics; Councillor of the Classical Association of Victoria (Academic)

  • Isabel McBryde AO – Professor Emerita, Australian National University; School Fellow, School of Social Sciences, Faculty of Arts; Independent Researcher (Academic)

  • Joan Montgomery AM. OBE – Educator; former principal of Clyde School, Woodend and Presbyterian Ladies' College, Melbourne (Academic)

  • Helen Gwynneth Palmer – Educationist, Socialist and Writer (Academic)

  • Rosemary Teele – Rhodes Scholar (Academic)

  • Marjorie Jean Tipping MBE – Freelance Author, Art Historian, Consultant and Lecturer on Early Victorian and Tasmanian History and Oriental and Colonial Art History (Academic)

  • Fiona Balfour – Chief Information Officer of Telstra (2006–07), and Qantas Airways (2001–06) (Business)

  • Susan Margaret Campbell – Training and Consulting (Treasury and Financial); Director of the Heritage Building Society, Principal of Argyll Pty Ltd, Senior Lecturer at RMIT (1994–98), Treasurer of Sussan Corp. (1990–93) (Business)

  • Dur-e Najaf Dara OAM – Restaurateur; Owner and Operator of EQ Cafebar (Melbourne); Partner/Menu Design of Nudel Bar (Melbourne); Partner of the Tea Corporation; Recipient of the Centenary Medal 2003 (also attended Methodist Girls' School, Singapore) (Business)

  • Jane Harvey – Director of Medibank Private; Director of IOOF Holdings (Business)

  • Rosemary Jessamyn Howell – Proprietor, Strategic Action Pty Ltd (formerly Rosemary Howell Business Services); Director National Board of Directors, Quality in Law Inc. (Business)

  • Patricia Kailis AM, OBE – Governing Director and Co-Founder of the M G Kailis Group of Companies (Business)

  • Kerrie Kelly – Executive Director and Chief Executive Officer of the Insurance Council of Australia Limited (also attended Walford Anglican School for Girls) (Business)

  • Emily Madder – Company Secretary and General Counsel of Siemens Limited (Business)

  • Karen Mahlab – Managing Director of the Mahlab Group; Founder of Pro Bono Australia (Business)

  • Jill Christine Monk – Director of Tassal Group Limited (Business)

  • Annie Cohen – Charity worker (Community)

  • Gladys Maeva Cumpston – Community worker, prize winning gardener and Braille transcriber (Community)

  • Henrietta Jessie Shaw Daley – Community worker; Founder of the ACT branch of the National Council of Women (Community)

  • Dame Phyllis Frost – Welfare worker and philanthropist, known for her commitment to unpopular causes. (Community)

  • Jessie McLaren – Australian missionary in Korea, book collector, teacher and translator (Community)

  • Lady Eliza Fraser Morrison – Charity worker; Chairman of the Victorian Red Cross home hospitals committee; Assistant commissioner of the Australian Red Cross Society in England; Appointed C.B.E. and Edward K.C.M.G (Community)

  • Eleanor Harriett (Nell) Rivett – Missionary and principal of the Women's Christian College, Chennai, India (Community)

  • Philadelphia Nina Robertson – Red Cross administrator (Community)

  • Helen Macpherson Schutt – Philanthropist (Community)

  • Lady Alice Maud Sewell – First woman to win the Wyselaskie scholarship in classical and comparative philology and logic; Founder of the Lyceum Club, Melbourne; Awarded the Coronation medal (Community)

  • Hilda Stevenson DBE – philanthropist and community worker (Community)

  • Jean Marion Tom AO – Community worker; Recipient Centenary Medal 2003, ANZAC of the Year Award RSL 1999 (Community)

  • Rita May Wilson – Community worker (Community)

  • Christine Dorothy Brunton – Actress (Entertainment, media and the arts)

  • Felicity Cockram – Executive Producer, Producer, Business and Script Consultant; former CEO Australian Film Institute (Entertainment, media and the arts)

  • Enid Derham – Poet (Entertainment, media and the arts)

  • Lauris Margaret Elms – Opera Singer (Entertainment, media and the arts)

  • Louise Berta Mosson Hanson Dyer – Patron of the arts and music publisher (Entertainment, media and the arts)

  • Helen Mitchell – Soprano, who would be known as Dame Nellie Melba (Entertainment, media and the arts)

  • Helen Morse – Australian actress and costume designer (Entertainment, media and the arts)

  • Ida Rentoul Outhwaite – Artist (Entertainment, media and the arts)

  • Janet Gertrude (Nettie) Palmer – Writer and critic (Entertainment, media and the arts)

  • Ada May Plante – Artist (Entertainment, media and the arts)

  • Ethel Florence Lindesay Richardson – Author, published as Henry Handel Richardson (Entertainment, media and the arts)

  • Irene Frances Taylor – Journalist and feminist (Entertainment, media and the arts)

  • Violet Helen Evangeline Teague – Artist (Entertainment, media and the arts)

  • Tamsin West – Actress best known for her role as Linda in Round the Twist (Entertainment, media and the arts)

  • Helen Casey – Current Slushee Queen (Entertainment, media and the arts)

  • Lilian Helen Alexander – Pioneering medical practitioner (Medicine and science)

  • Constance Ellis – First Victorian woman to become a doctor of medicine (Medicine and science)

  • Ethel Godfrey – Victoria's first female dentist (Medicine and science)

  • Ethel Gray – Nursing sister and army matron (Medicine and science)

  • Robyn Guymer – Associate Professor, Department of Ophthalmology, University of Melbourne; Head, Macular Research Unit, Centre for Eye Research Australia; Consultant, Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital (Medicine and science)

  • Ida Gertrude Margaret Halley – Medical officer and Feminist; One of the first female medical students at the University of Melbourne (Medicine and science)

  • Dr Margaret Hilda Harper – Pioneering paediatrician, daughter of former PLC principal Rev. Dr Andrew Harper (Medicine and science)

  • Mary Jermyn Heseltine – One of the first Australian doctors to study exfoliative cytology; Established the first gynaecological cytology unit in Australia at King George V Hospital (Medicine and science)

  • Dame Annie Jean Macnamara – Medical scientist (Medicine and science)

  • Elizabeth Robyn Mason – Director of the Australasian Medical Publishing Company Pty Ltd (also attended The Friends' School, Hobart) (Medicine and science)

  • Winifred Barbara Meredith – Pioneering medical practitioner specialising in child and infant care (Medicine and science)

  • Joan Janet Brown Refshauge – Pioneering medical practitioner and medical administrator (Medicine and science)

  • Alice Ross-King – Civilian and Army nurse (Medicine and science)

  • Anna "Nan" Schofield – One of the first Australian Army nurses to serve in the Middle East during World War II; Author (Medicine and science)

  • Dr Eleanor Margrethe (Rita) Stang – Pioneering medical practitioner (Medicine and science)

  • Alison Mary Street AO – Head, Haemostasis and Haemophilia Units, The Alfred Hospital, Melbourne; Honorary Clinical Associate Professor, Department of Pathology and Immunology and Department of Medicine, Monash University, Alfred Hospital (Medicine and science)

  • Rose Ethel Janet White-Haney – Botanist (Medicine and science)

  • Barbara Skeete Workman – Professor of Geriatric Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, Monash University and Southern Health at Kingston Centre Campus (Medicine and science)

  • Jennifer Mary Acton – Senior Deputy President, Australian Industrial Relations Commission (AIRC) (Politics, public service and the law)

  • Sally Capp — Lord Mayor of Melbourne (Politics, public service and the law)

  • Catherine Deakin – Sister of Alfred Deakin (Politics, public service and the law)

  • Joan Rose Dwyer OAM – Former Chairman Equal Opportunity Board (Vic); Member, Mental Health Review Tribunal (Vic) (Politics, public service and the law)

  • Norma Clare Ford – Lawyer; Consultant; Member Immigration Review Tribunal, Migration Review Tribunal, Refugee Review Tribunal, Firearms Appeal Committee (Politics, public service and the law)

  • Elizabeth Moulton Eggleston – Academic lawyer and activist (Politics, public service and the law)

  • Vida Goldstein – Suffragette and first woman to stand for election to the Federal Parliament of Australia (Politics, public service and the law)

  • Flos Greig – First woman admitted to the Victorian Bar (Politics, public service and the law)

  • Rosemary Claire Hunter – Professor of Law at the University of Kent; formerly Professor of Law at Griffith University, Dean of the Faculty of Law, Director of the Socio-Legal Research Centre (Politics, public service and the law)

  • Fiona Krautil – Director of the Equal Opportunity for Women in the Workplace Agency (Politics, public service and the law)

  • Eleanor May Moore – Pacifist (Politics, public service and the law)

  • Alice Frances Mabel Moss – Campaigner for women's rights (Politics, public service and the law)

  • Hon. Justice Marcia Ann Neave AO- Judge, Court of Appeal, Supreme Court of Victoria; Chairwoman of the Victorian Law Reform Commission (Politics, public service and the law)

  • Senator Jocelyn Newman – Former Senator for Tasmania (Politics, public service and the law)

  • Kelly O'Dwyer – Federal member for the seat of Higgins. (Politics, public service and the law)

  • Marion Phillips – Politician, first Australian woman to win a seat in a national parliament (Politics, public service and the law)

  • Kim Rubenstein – Professor and Director, Centre for International and Public Law, ANU College of Law, Australian National University (Politics, public service and the law)

  • Judge Meryl Elizabeth Sexton – Judge, County Court of Victoria (Politics, public service and the law)

  • Jillian Skinner – Politician, elected as a member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly; Currently Deputy Leader of the Opposition, Shadow Minister for Health, Shadow Minister for Science and Medical Research, and Shadow Minister for Arts (Politics, public service and the law)

  • Christian Brynhild Ochiltree Jollie Smith – Solicitor, second woman to be admitted as a solicitor in New South Wales, first female taxi driver in Melbourne (Politics, public service and the law)

  • Natasha Sim - Solicitor (employment law) and published artist (Politics, public service and the law)

  • Margaret Ruth Redpath AO – Former Acting Precentor, St Paul's Cathedral, Melbourne, and ground-breaking surgeon. (Religion)

  • Sir. Marco J Hurtado Espinosa AO - Knight of Magistral Grace, Sovereign Military Order of Malta. (Religion)

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About This Tool

Located in Croydon, just 8 km from the center of Sydney, Sydney Presbyterian Women’s College is a private girls’ school for children from kindergarten through grade 12. Plc Women’s College accepts students from all backgrounds and religions around the world.

PLC attaches great importance to students ‘achievement and sound development. Students who graduate here are able to apply to higher-level schools with honors and choose their preferred majors. The random tool collected 96 outstanding graduates from the school. With the generator tool, you can also see what these alumni are good at, including academia, business, public society, entertainment, medicine, science, politics, law, and more. This school is more suitable for quiet and introverted women, of course, welcome friends from all over the world.

Click the "Display All Items" button and you will get a list of Old Collegians of PLC Melbourne.

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