Megan Anderson (fighter)W
Megan Anderson (fighter)

Megan Anderson is an Australian mixed martial artist who fights in the Ultimate Fighting Championship and is the former Invicta FC Featherweight champion.

Charles BarnesW
Charles Barnes

Charles Edward "Ceb" Barnes was an Australian politician. He was a member of the Country Party and served in the House of Representatives from 1958 to 1972. He was a long-serving government minister as Minister for Territories (1963–1968) and External Territories (1968–1972), holding office under five prime ministers.

Archie BarwickW
Archie Barwick

George BraundW
George Braund

George Frederick Braund was an Australian soldier and politician.

Bernard CallinanW
Bernard Callinan

Sir Bernard James Callinan, was an Australian soldier, civil engineer, businessman, and sport administrator.

Collier CudmoreW
Collier Cudmore

Sir Collier Robert Cudmore was an Australian lawyer, politician and Olympic rower who won the gold medal in the 1908 Summer Olympics for Great Britain.

Frank Fox (author)W
Frank Fox (author)

Sir Frank James Fox was an Australian-born journalist, soldier, author and campaigner, who lived in Britain from 1909.

Dan FrawleyW
Dan Frawley

Dan Frawley (1882–1967) was a pioneer Australian rugby league footballer, a national representative player. He played his career as a wing with the Eastern Suburbs club in Sydney and is considered one of the nation's finest footballers of the 20th century. A fast and agile wing, with an ability to effortlessly change direction, Frawley was at club and representative levels generally positioned on the outside of rugby league Immortal Dally Messenger, creating a formidable combination. He was a noted speedster who, on the 1908–09 Kangaroo tour of Great Britain, was acclaimed as the "100 yards champion" of the squad.

Paul GildingW
Paul Gilding

Paul Gilding is an Australian environmentalist, consultant, and author. Gilding, a former executive director of Greenpeace International, and a Fellow at University of Cambridge's Institute for Sustainability Leadership, is the author of The Great Disruption: Why the Climate Crisis Will Bring On the End of Shopping and the Birth of a New World (2011). In 2012, Gilding delivered a presentation on the thesis of his book at the 2012 TED conference titled The Earth is Full, which earned him press attention. He lives in southern Tasmania with his wife and children.

Eric Fairweather HarrisonW
Eric Fairweather Harrison

Eric Fairweather Harrison was an Australian soldier and politician.

Jack IversonW
Jack Iverson

John Brian Iverson, known as Jack Iverson, was an Australian cricketer who played in five Test matches from 1950 to 1951. He was known for his unique "bent finger" grip, with which he briefly perplexed batsmen across Australia as well as the touring English cricket team. His five Tests were all against England, in the 1950–51 series, but was forced to retire to look after his ailing father's business; he "could have the world's best batsmen at his mercy, if he could spare the time".

John Jennings (Australian politician)W
John Jennings (Australian politician)

John Thomas Jennings, was an Australian politician. Born in Melbourne, he attended state schools before becoming a retailer of dental supplies. He underwent military service from 1899 to 1901 and served in South Africa during the Second Boer War with the Victorian Mounted Rifles. In 1931, he was elected to the Australian House of Representatives as the United Australia Party member for South Sydney in New South Wales. South Sydney was abolished in 1934 and replaced with Watson; Jennings contested Watson and won. He held the seat until 1940, when he was defeated by Labor candidate Max Falstein. Jennings died in 1968.

David KilcullenW
David Kilcullen

David John Kilcullen FRGS is an Australian author, strategist, and counterinsurgency expert who is currently the non-executive Chairman of Caerus Associates, a strategy and design consulting firm that he founded. He is a professor at Arizona State University and at University of New South Wales, Canberra.

George Furner LangleyW
George Furner Langley

Brigadier George Furner Langley, was an Australian soldier who served in both the First and Second World Wars. He was also an educationist, and the headmaster of a number of high schools in Victoria.

Edward LarkinW
Edward Larkin

Edward Rennix "Teddy" Larkin was an Australian parliamentarian and a national representative rugby union player. Larkin was the member for Willoughby in the New South Wales Legislative Assembly from December 1913 until his death. He served in the First AIF, and was killed in action on the first day of the Gallipoli Campaign. He was one of only two serving members of any Australian parliament to fall in World War I — the other, who fell at Gallipoli on 4 May 1915, was George Braund, also a New South Wales MLA.

Sydney MiddletonW
Sydney Middleton

Sydney Albert 'Syd' Middleton DSO, OBE was an Australian Army officer and national representative rugby union player and rower. He won a gold medal in rugby at the 1908 Summer Olympics and competed in rowing at the 1912 Summer Olympics.

Hubert MurrayW
Hubert Murray

Sir John Hubert Plunkett Murray was a judge and Lieutenant-Governor of Papua from 1908 until his death at Samarai.

Reg Pollard (general)W
Reg Pollard (general)

Lieutenant General Sir Reginald George Pollard, was a senior commander in the Australian Army. He served as Chief of the General Staff from 1960 to 1963.

Charles Fyshe RobertsW
Charles Fyshe Roberts

Colonel Charles Fyshe Roberts, was Under-Secretary of Defence in colonial New South Wales.

John RyrieW
John Ryrie

John Augustus George "Jack" Ryrie was a two-time Australian national champion rower who represented for Australasia at the 1912 Summer Olympics.

Percival SavageW
Percival Savage

Major Percival James Savage, DSO, MBE was an Australian soldier, farmer and agricultural administrator. He was a World War I veteran, fighting as an ANZAC in Gallipoli, the Somme, Pozières, Passchendaele and Amiens. He rose rapidly through the ranks, becoming a Major at the age of 21. He was mentioned in dispatches three times. He was awarded a DSO on 14 December 1916 by King George V.

Len Smith (rugby)W
Len Smith (rugby)

Len Smith (1918–2000) was an Australian representative rugby union and rugby league footballer who played in the 1930s and 1940s. He captained the Kangaroos in two Tests 1948 and was controversially omitted from the 1948-49 Kangaroo tour of Great Britain.

Duncan ThompsonW
Duncan Thompson

Duncan Fulton Thompson MBE was an Australian rugby league footballer, coach and administrator. He saw active service in the WWI, was named amongst the nation's finest footballers of the 20th century, and is regarded as the father of modern coaching.

Jim TruscottW
Jim Truscott

James “Jim” Francis Truscott OAM is a former Australian SAS officer, and now businessman.

Wallach brothersW
Wallach brothers

The Wallach brothers were a family of eight boys born to Henry and Mary Wallach of Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia toward the end of the 19th century. Six of the brothers all saw active service in World War I. The fourth and eighth brothers, Clarrie and Neville were both top-grade rugby union players before the War. They both saw action at Gallipoli, were promoted on the Western Front as Captains, were both recipients of the Military Cross and each fell within a week of each other in France in fighting at the time of the Second Battle of Villers-Bretonneux.

Pat Walsh (rugby)W
Pat Walsh (rugby)

Patrick Bernard "Nimmo" Walsh was a pioneer Australian representative rugby union and rugby league footballer, a dual-code international, who saw active duty with the Australian Imperial Force in the first World War. He represented the Wallabies in three Tests in 1904 and the Kangaroos in three Tests on the first tour of Great Britain in 1908–09.

Thomas WorsnopW
Thomas Worsnop

Thomas Worsnop was an Australian colonial militia, historian, local government official and town clerk. Worsnop was born in Wortley, Yorkshire, England and died in North Adelaide, South Australia.