This is a list of Old Melburnians, who are notable former students of Melbourne Grammar School in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Alumni of Melbourne Grammar are known as Old Melburnians (abbreviated to OM, followed by the year of graduation), and automatically become members of the school's alumni association, the Old Melburnians' Society.[1]
Notable alumni include one Governor-General, three Prime Ministers, four State Premiers, three Lord Mayors, three Australians of the Year, two Victoria Cross recipients, ten Supreme Court Justices, fourteen AFL premiership players, forty-two Olympians, four Australian Open champions, and many prominent scientists and entertainers.
Sport
see also: Old Melburnians Football Club
- James Aitken
- Jack Atkins
- Dick Atkinson
- Simon Beaumont
- Toby Bedford
- Sam Berry
- Arthur Best
- Lewis Blackmore
- Rohan Brown
- Murray Clapham
- Dylan Clarke
- Ryan Clarke
- Jack Cockbill
- John Conway – captain of Carlton and cricketer
- Peter Cooper
- David Cordner
- Don Cordner[5] – Brownlow Medallist, 2-time Premiership winner, captain of Melbourne, and doctor
- Harry Cordner
- Simon Crawshay
- David Cuningham
- Percy Damman
- Johnny Dando
- Simon Deacon
- Bill Denehy
- Frank Dossetor
- Harcourt Dowsley – AFL player and cricketer
- Nathan Drummond
- Kyle Dunkley
- Charlie Edwards
- Shaun Edwards
- Xavier Ellis – Premiership player for Hawthorn
- Ken Forge
- Simon Fraser – AFL player and Olympic rower
- Corrie Gardner – first Premiership winner for Melbourne and Olympic hurdler
- Eric Gardner
- Mark Gardner
- Ed Garlick
- David Gaunson
- Dave Gibson
- Audley Gillespie-Jones
- Hugh Goddard
- John Goold – 2-time Premiership winner for Carlton
- Steven Greene
- Stuart Griffiths
- Housie Grounds
- Herbert Guthrie – AFL player and cricketer
- Jack Hawkins
- Tom Hawkins – 5× All Australian, 3× premiership player, Coleman medallist, All-Australian captain
- Michael Hawkins
- Robb Hawkins
- Will Hayes
- Wilfrid Heron
- Maurie Herring – Premiership winner for Melbourne
- Herb Hunter – champion athlete, dentist and AFL player
- Alex Keath – AFL player and cricketer
- Graham Kerr
- John Kerr
- Bruce Lang
- Ed Langdon – Premiership winner for Melbourne
- Mark Langdon
- Tom Langdon
- Chris Langford – 4-time Premiership winner, Hawthorn Football Club captain and AFL commissioner
- Ron Larking
- Ben Long
- Ned Long
- Steven May – Melbourne premiership full-back, Indigenous all-star, 2× All-Australian
- Ken McKaige
- Peter McLean – 2-time Premiership winner for Melbourne and Carlton
- Ian McMullin
- Zach Merrett – Captain of Essendon, 3× best-and-fairest winner, 2× All-Australian
- Luke Mitchell
- Derek Mollison – AFL player and military officer
- Jeremy Nichols
- George O'Mullane – AFL player and cricketer
- Jackson Paine
- Leslie Rainey – AFL player, tennis player and cricketer
- Fletcher Roberts – Premiership winner for Western Bulldogs
- Brian Roet – Premiership winner for Melbourne
- Ken Rollason
- Ron Rutherford
- Ryley Sanders
- Cyril Seelenmeyer
- Jack Shelley
- Joe Shelley
- Peter V. Smith
- Charlie Spargo – Premiership player
- Jim Sprigg
- Cyril Steele
- Ian Synman – Premiership player and prominent Jewish player
- Matt Thomas
- Andrew Thompson
- John Tilbrook
- Bonnie Toogood – AFLW Premiership winner for Western Bulldogs
- Athol Tymms – AFL player and doctor
- Ed Vickers-Willis
- Francis Vine – Premiership winner and captain of Melbourne
- Jack P. Walker – VFL player and soldier
- Josh Ward
- Fred Warry
- Russ Watson – AFL player, cricketer and athlete
- Mal Williams – AFL player and soldier
- Andrew Witts
- Barney Wood – AFL player, cricketer, motorsports driver and soldier
- Mike Woods
Athletics
Basketball
Cricket
Field hockey
Golf
Rowing
Rugby
Sailing
Snowsports
- Cam Bolton – Olympic snowboarder
- Anton Grimus – Olympic freestyle skier
- Sir Wilfrid Kent Hughes – first Australian overseas skier
- Piers Jalland – Olympic tobogganist, colloquially known as “The beast of Buller”
Soccer
Tennis