•
Lyn Ashley – actress •
Natarsha Belling – journalist and newsreader •
Kerrie Biddell – an Australian jazz and
session singer, as well as a pianist and vocal teacher. •
Grace Boelke – one of the first female graduates in medicine from the
University of Sydney • Kerry Bray – awarded OAM in 2020 for 40 years of organising community running. •
Kathleen Commins (1909–2003) was an Australian journalist, the first female editor of Australia's oldest literary journal,
Hermes (in 1931). Commins joined the
Sydney Morning Herald in 1934 and became the first female sports writer in Australia, then became the first female executive at the
Sydney Morning Herald, as Assistant to the Chief of Staff from 1948 to 1969. •
Melinda Gainsford-Taylor – Australian athlete and Olympian •
Alexandra Hargreaves – rugby player •
Deni Hines – singer and actress •
Winnie Kiap – Papua New Guinea High Commissioner to the United Kingdom •
Karen Krantzcke (deceased) – tennis player – ranked seventh in women's tennis singles in 1970. The
WTA named an award – The Karen Krantzke Sportsmanship Award in her honour. •
Neta Maughan – an Australian piano teacher, was appointed a
Member of the Order of Australia in 2010 "For service to music education as a teacher of piano, voice and music theory, to professional organisations, and as a mentor of young performers". • Professor Anne Mijch – responsible for opening the first AIDS clinic in Melbourne. Awarded
OAM in 1998 for service to medicine, particularly in the treatment and care given to patients suffering from infectious diseases including HIV/AIDS. •
Marjorie O'Neill – Member of the
New South Wales Parliament for
Coogee • Colleen Pyne – awarded OAM in 1999 for services to education, and to the establishment of the North Australia Research Unit • Patricia Rolfe – journalist and foreign correspondent for the ''
Women's Weekly'' •
Gemma Sisia – humanitarian who established the
School of St Jude in Tanzania in 2002, which "provides free, high-quality education to over 1,800 of the poorest Tanzanian children while boarding more than 1,400 students." • Kate Wild – investigative journalist and author,
Walkley Award and
Logie winner •
Lara Worthington – philanthropist and businesswoman • Nichola Constant – Chief Commissioner of the
Industrial Relations Commission of New South Wales == See also ==