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List of Old Boys of Shore

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This is a list of former students of the Anglican Church school, the Sydney Church of England Grammar School (also known as Shore School) in North Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

Academia, education, medicine and science

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Rhodes Scholars

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1909 – Howard Bullock

1920 – Vernon Haddon Treatt

1935 – Keith Noel Everal Bradfield

1937 – Ian George Esplin

Name:John Raymond Burrell Year of attendance: unknown Birth date: 21 Aug 1914 Death date: 28 Aug 1991 Description:John Raymond burrell an attendant of Shore school, He joined the Australian army force for world war 2: Rats of Tobruk and earned the rank of captain, he won the Military Cross award for his “Outstanding coolness, bravery and devotion”. John Raymond Burrell was the school Captain of his year at school and a school house was named after him in 2002, the ‘Burrell’ house.

1940 – Basil Holmes Travers

1941 – Eric Brian Jeffcoat Smith

1946 – William Winslow Woodward

1948 – Louis Walter Davies

1952 – Frederick Rawdon Dalrymple

1960 – Malcolm John Swinburn

1964 – John Dyson Heydon

1971 – Richard John Lee

1973 – Ian Alfred Pollard

1975 – Peter Edward King

1982 – Graham Ross Dallas Jones

1995 – Evan Denis Fountain[1]

Academia

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Education

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  • Evan Mander-Jones – representative of Australia to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization's biennial conference in Paris in 1952, Leading Pioneer of technical schools[5]
  • Harold Lusk – former Headmaster of King's College, Auckland
  • Basil Holmes Travers – former Headmaster of Shore and Cricketer

Medicine

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  • [[Professor Ian Constable]AO] – Founder of the [[Lions Eye Institute Perth]
  • Sir Lorimer Dods LVO – founder of the Children's Medical Research Institute[6][7]
  • Professor Anthony Gill AM – researcher, doctor, author
  • Maurice Sando – anaesthetist[8]
  • Leslie St Vincent Welch – Chief Medical Officer of the Queensland Department of Public Instruction, visited rural schools to aid with an eye disease (sandy blight) that infected 20% of all pupils in the communities[9]

Science and engineering

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Industry

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Finance and banking

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Media and advertising

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Retail and services

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Other

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Entertainment, media, and the arts

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Politics, public service, and the law

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Lawyers and judges

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Public servants

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Politicians

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Religion

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Sport

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Australian rules football

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Cricket

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Rowing

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Rugby

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Tennis

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Other

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See also

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References

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  5. ^ Blencowe, M., "Evan Mander-Jones (1902–1975)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 25 March 2022
  6. ^ Awards pmc.gov.au
  7. ^ Awards pmc.gov.au
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