2022 BGS Impact Report

Page 10

2022 Impact Report

Our Vision

Brisbane Grammar School aspires to be the best school for boys in Australia.

Our Purpose

Brisbane Grammar School educates boys within an innovative learning culture that nurtures their intellectual, physical, and emotional wellbeing to become global citizens who contribute to their communities.

Our Values

• Learning • Leadership

• Endeavour • Respect

• Community

Our Motto

nil sine labore

nothing without work

Message from Anthony Micallef

Headmaster

It is my pleasure to share with you the 2022 Impact Report.

The following pages will provide you with an overview of the generosity of the Brisbane Grammar School community.

I am always humbled by the giving spirit which defines the BGS community. This propensity to give is evident in the initiatives, programs and organisations supported by our students, staff, parents, Old Boys and volunteers. That altruism promotes social connectedness and binds people together.

This year resulted in generous support for the Bursary Fund, which enables means-tested places for students and the STEAM Precinct, which is set to be completed in late 2023.

The second BGS Giving Day, held on 25 August 2022, was a resounding success. An unprecedented $1.5 million was raised by 306 donors in support of ongoing endeavours at the School. I would like to extend special

thanks to Dave and Sophia Johnson who committed $250,000 to the STEAM Precinct, they like many within this community recognise the value of providing best-in-class facilities for our teachers and students to explore new opportunities in education. Read their story on page 10.

As we adopt modern philanthropic practices and honour those who have given to the STEAM Precinct by naming spaces in the building, we look back at those who generously gave to the Lilley Centre during our last capital fundraising campaign, in 2010. Join us in fond remembrance of Sir John Pidgeon on page 18.

As always, this year’s report acknowledges our alumni’s impact outside the school community. It is a delight to see Old Boys and current students involved in common causes.

Page 14 highlights the School’s involvement in Guide Dogs Queensland. The charity has

benefited from the support of Old Boy Richard Anderson ‘63 for more than four decades and is a favourite with students in the Public Purpose Program, many of whom serve as guide dog ambassadors.

The School’s contribution is spread across many causes and industries. Old Boy John Macdonald ‘99 is preserving Brisbane’s architectural history and challenging the ways people think about workspaces in the process. Learn more on page 12.

Every year, BGS welcomes new families. Watching how quickly they become an integral part of the BGS fabric is a joy. After their youngest son joined BGS last year, Hanh Luu and Anthony Yap are an excellent example of newcomers embracing the community and giving spirit of the School. Meet their family on page 8.

I thank you for your continuing support of BGS students and the entire BGS community.

4 BRISBANE GRAMMAR SCHOOL

Message from Stephen Bizzell

Trustee

Since joining the Board of Trustees of the Brisbane Grammar School in 2020 and becoming the Chair of the Community Relations Committee, I have seen the ongoing importance of volunteer support, in addition to philanthropic support, at the School. It has been pleasing to see the continuing commitment from students, parents, staff, and Old Boys to giving back to the BGS community.

BGS has a number of independent associations run by volunteers who tirelessly support the School and who make a significant contribution to the educational and wellbeing outcomes of our boys, both during their time at the School and for the rest of their lives.

The BGS Parents and Friends’ Association, through the BGS P&F Auxiliary, runs the commercial operations of the Tuckshop and the Grammar Shop. Both are staffed

by hundreds of volunteers who donate their time to serve our boys and the BGS community.

In a time when most schools outsource the running of their cafeterias and clothing stores to external commercial parties, it is great to see the tradition continues at BGS, where these operations continue to be volunteer led, adding significantly to the strong community of the School.

The P&F Auxiliary also makes a significant financial contribution to the School with the surpluses from these well run operations being used to support capital projects, such as the Lilley Centre and the STEAM Precinct, as well as to support students on a needs basis by donating to the Bursary Fund. The P&F Auxiliary is run by a committee made up of executive and year level representatives, of whom all are volunteers.

The BGS Parents and Friends’ (P&F)

Association is comprised of a number of groups that support educational, cultural and sporting cocurricular activities at BGS. The P&F has a committee comprised of presidents from these support groups and an executive committee, of which all members are volunteers who help support the boys in their cocurricular interests.

The Old Boys’ Association also has a committee run by Old Boy volunteers. The group’s purpose is to engage, connect and help students once they leave the School. They organise events for young and notso-young Old Boys, and provide mentoring, networking, reunions and casual catchups as part of the School’s promise to provide connectivity for students during their time at BGS and beyond.

All three associations have the single purpose of providing the best possible experience to students and parents during

6 BRISBANE GRAMMAR SCHOOL

their time at BGS and throughout their life, long after they pass through the school gates for the final time. They also support the School in achieving the best educational outcomes for the boys.

This year, in particular, I am happy to report that stronger bonds and collaboration between these associations have led to more inclusive community events, where all feel welcome.

Both philanthropy and volunteering make a big impact on students, staff

and the broader BGS community. The boys learn valuable lessons about the importance of giving back and making a positive impact in their community when they see various parent volunteers around the School and can utilise facilities that have been made possible by generous philanthropic contributions.

It is also heartening to see this spirit of philanthropy – which our community has long been known for – being carried forward by the latest generation of BGS men through their

work undertaken through various Public Purpose initiatives, which support programs in the broader community. Their commitment to making a positive contribution, and their creativity and grit in getting the job done is remarkable.

In conclusion, I would like to take this opportunity to thank all our donors and our volunteers who equally contribute to the betterment of our School. I look forward to your continuing support of our boys and our community.

7 IMPACT REPORT 2022

Dispensing Wisdom On Giving Back

BGS parents Hanh Luu and Anthony Yap were just 23 years old when they opened their first pharmacy together. The couple opened Good Price Pharmacy, in 2001. Today, they own more than 50 stores across six states and manage more than 800 employees.

Making extraordinary differences to people’s healthcare and giving back to the community is at the heart of why they started their business.

“We hope to promote a sense of community and social responsibility, which can inspire others to support their own communities,” they said.

“We have the pleasure of donating to fantastic organisations in areas, such as medicine, domestic violence, sports, education and our local community.

“Philanthropy is vital as these charities often struggle to secure funding and resources, which can limit their ability to make a positive impact.”

Brisbane Grammar School’s community spirit and commitment to creating a positive change was a drawcard when choosing a school for their son Zachary Yap, who joined the Year 7 cohort last year.

Part of a new generation of BGS families, they embody the School’s core values of Learning, Leadership, Respect, Endeavour and Community.

“Contribution to education can provide valuable resources that align with the BGS vision of nurturing global citizens who contribute to their communities.

“This sets the standard for our children and their friends to make a positive impact in the future.”

The family has made a positive impact at BGS, having generously donated to the STEAM Precinct. The $70 million dollar project will usher

in a new era of education, combining the disciplines of Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Mathematics.

The couple is impressed by the amount of support other parents provide to the School.

“Through Zachary’s participation in sports, bands, choirs, musicals, and debating, we have met an amazing cohort of parents who generously devote their time and resources in effort to make each activity the best it can be.”

Year 8 student Zachary has signed up as a Youth Ambassador for Guide Dogs Australia, proving he is eager to help good causes too.

Inspiring their two sons to make a difference isn’t something the couple takes lightly.

“As parents, we have tried to educate them on the reality that many people are less fortunate and may require support to overcome their challenges,” they said.

“Zachary has accompanied us on various occasions where we have volunteered or donated to those in need, such as the homeless and children in hospitals.”

8 BRISBANE GRAMMAR SCHOOL

Leaving a Legacy Of Paying It Forward

A promise to care is not your typical mantra connected to a construction company, but BGS parents Dave and Sophia Johnson make compassion their mission in both business and life.

“We believe the true meaning of life is giving to others.”

In 2015, the couple established Eastern States Engineering, which is in the business of demountable steel structures. The company is rapidly growing, with operations in Brisbane, Perth and Adelaide.

The company’s mission statement ‘we promise to care’ has not been chosen at random; the acronym CARE (Connection, Accountability, Respect and Excellence) truly represents what the Johnsons stand for.

As a way of celebrating their professional wins, they support a range of charitable organisations.

“We choose worthy causes as they cross our path,” they said.

“A worthy cause, to us, is our church, school and anything that helps disadvantaged people.”

Their son Daylin Johnson is in Year 9 at Brisbane Grammar School and is a rising star of the Fencing Program. Investing in his and other students’ future is a cause close to their heart.

At Giving Day 2022, the family donated to name a collaboration pod in one of the STEAM towers. Daylin chose the flooring design of the biology pod, which represents DNA sequencing. The Precinct is currently taking shape at the western end of the School, but as Headmaster Anthony Micallef says, “there is more to STEAM than just the remodelling of the campus.”

The $70 million project will be transformational in how education

is delivered at BGS, through the emergence of digital technology, artificial intelligence and DNA mapping, just to name a few.

The generosity and philanthropic culture at the School impressed the Johnsons when they first joined the BGS community.

“You only get out of life what you put into it…become involved as much as your time allows.”

“We were inspired, especially by the Old Boys who carry on the tradition of giving back to the School for future generations.”

Leaving behind a legacy of paying it forward speaks to the Johnsons.

“One day your grandchildren may attend the same school, and they will benefit directly from your involvement in philanthropy.”

10 BRISBANE GRAMMAR SCHOOL
We believe the true meaning of life is giving to others, whether it is time, knowledge, money or kindness.

Cultivating Community Spirit Through Great Space

Growing up, Brisbane Grammar

School Old Boy John Macdonald ‘99 learned the importance of a close-knit community and family ties by osmosis — his family established a clothing alteration business in Queen Street, in 1934.

Macdonald worked for his father, BGS Old Boy George Macdonald ‘66, for many years, and strong family values have followed him into adulthood and into opening businesses of his own.

After gaining experience in London, Barcelona and Paris for many years, Macdonald returned to Brisbane with creative ambitions of his own and opened Lightspace, a boutique event venue and coworking warehouse.

Many developers and entrepreneurs would have viewed an old smash repair garage, hidden in the corner of the Fortitude Valley near train tracks, as a rundown eyesore. When the building became available in the mid-2000s, however, Macdonald saw an opportunity to bring something new to Brisbane while preserving historical charm.

Seated in the cocktail area of Lightspace, surrounded by a small

jungle of potted plants, Macdonald explained: “Restoring and bringing new life to character-rich buildings is fundamental — it is an important part of Brisbane’s story that deserves to be appreciated.”

Established in 2009 and the first of its kind in Brisbane, Lightspace is an architecturally transformed space available to hire for weddings and events, as well as coworking and private office space.

“There wasn’t really anything like this in Brisbane when we first started — we took a leap and thankfully it worked.

“Everyone who has hosted events with us has made their own special mark on the space.”

Following the success of Lightspace, Macdonald opened Prospect Studios in 2015, which is another plant-rich, converted 1960s warehouse.

The two coworking spaces are now home to creatives, designers and small business owners.

In 2018, Macdonald and his partner in life and business, Danielle White, revived another heritage-listed building in The Valley, which turned 100 this

year. Tucked behind James Street, Loyal Hope of the Valley is the smaller sister wedding and events venue.

This year, the couple and their team will host 300 events of which 100 will be weddings. They expect about 25,000 people to pass through their doors.

Staying true to his roots of valuing tight-knit relationships in business, John credits his success to his team and Danielle, who was named as one of Brisbane’s leading wedding and events planners.

Keen to keep things local, the couple and their two sons — who Macdonald hopes will go to BGS in a few years — live in a heritage-listed cottage, just a short stroll from both Lightspace and Prospect Studios.

“When we started 14 years ago, there was nothing here — no neighbours, only warehouses.”

Now, the couple’s home and businesses are surrounded by a thriving hub of creative activity — very much their natural habitat.

There wasn’t really anything like this in Brisbane when we first started – we took a leap and thankfully it worked.
12 BRISBANE GRAMMAR SCHOOL

Canine Connections Making a Difference

BGS Old Boy Richard Anderson OAM ‘63 has dedicated more than four decades to changing the lives of blind and visually impaired people through the help of guide dogs.

When Anderson joined the Board of Guide Dogs Queensland in 1980 and began serving as President in 1990, he never expected his involvement with the charity to be a lifelong passion.

Anderson, who is a former member of the Board of Trustees of Brisbane Grammar School, was awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia for services to Guide Dogs for the Blind Association of Queensland and the Queensland Art Gallery Foundation, in 1997.

“I don’t think it ever occurred to me that I was entering into a commitment that would last 40 years,” Anderson said.

Once

you stumble into something you find enjoyment in, there is no reason to stop.

“Then again, I don’t think that thought would have stopped me.

“Once you stumble into something you find enjoyment in, there is no reason to stop.”

His ambition to provide blind and visually impaired people with more freedom and independence has helped the organisation expand, despite the rising costs of living, increasing demands and dwindling resources associated with running a charity.

Demand is high, Anderson said, with around 300,000 Australians living with vision impairment of which 90,000 are classified as legally blind.

Guide dogs cost $50,000 to raise and two years to train. The charity is run by volunteers, and 85 per cent of its funding comes from donations.

“The working life of a guide dog is between eight and 10 years, so some people have to be matched with up to six replacement dogs throughout their lifetime.”

When Anderson first worked at the charity, fundraising was done at an individual state level; however, the service provider itself, Guide Dogs Australia, was based in Melbourne.

“It was a flawed system because it meant costs were higher than they needed to be, and services were not readily available in states outside Victoria.”

Anderson and his team pushed for Queensland to become the first state to separate from the national organisation in a bid to make the service more accessible to people outside of Victoria. In the early 1990s, Guide Dogs Queensland purchased land to build its own breeding and training centre at Bald Hills. At the time, around 50 dogs per year trained at the facility – this has jumped to some 150 dogs per year.

Anderson pointed out many other members of the BGS community provide crucial support to Guide Dogs Queensland. Past parents Guy and Wendy Mauger have been strong supporters for many years. They volunteer as puppy walkers, which is an instrumental phase in guide dog training.

A fight for hope

“Guide dogs has been one of the boys’ favourite causes,” said Crystal Thompson, the Director of the Public Purpose Program.

Last year, through bake sales, spider stalls and an excursion to the training centre at Bald Hills, Brisbane Grammar School students raised more than $16,000 to train a puppy who they named Hope.

Much to their delight, Hope paid a visit to the School as part of the students’ continued campaign to pay for her education.

The students hosted around 90 guests for a Dining in the Dark event –one of the charity’s biggest fundraisers –where guests are challenged to eat their meals while blindfolded to simulate the experience of low vision.

Anderson, who has a son who attended BGS and two daughters, is delighted his old alma mater continues to be involved in the cause closest to his heart.

“It is important for young people to get involved,” he said.

“My three children were all involved as volunteers when they were still in school and have continued their association in one way or another.

“I’m hoping organisations like ours can maintain the charitable ethos.

“These services can truly be life changing.”

17 IMPACT REPORT 2022
I’m hoping organisations like ours can maintain the charitable ethos, these services can truly be life changing.

Remembering Sir John Pidgeon

The life of Brisbane building and property developer Sir John Pidgeon is nothing short of a masterclass on leaving a mark.

Sir John and his sister Valmai Pidgeon AM built F.A. Pidgeon and Son into the biggest construction company in Queensland, during the 1980s. The family business was founded by their parents in 1927 and left an unmistakable imprint on Brisbane’s landscape.

Sir John passed away, aged 89, in 2016.

His legacy, however, is not limited to his construction achievements. His philanthropic pursuits have had a significant impact on his chosen beneficiaries, including Brisbane Grammar School, where six of his 14 grandchildren attended (those six being from the Morton and Wikman families).

Sir John contributed $1 million to the construction of the Lilley Centre — a gift with lasting impacts for many generations of BGS students.

Throughout his life, Sir John

supported a range of charitable organisations in the arts, sports, education and much more.

He was awarded Life Membership of Surf Life Saving Australia and earned his Bronze Medallion, in 1943. He served as a chairman of the Salvation Army’s Red Shield Appeal and was also a major contributor to the Queensland Cancer Fund. He also served on many industry bodies and corporate boards.

Sir John was known for his selflessness.

“Many times, I’ve seen ego and greed contribute to the downfall of people and other companies,” Sir John told QUT professor Ray Weekes, in 2009.

“Ego and greed always seem to go together.”

Sir John joined the family business in 1945, starting as a carpentry apprentice after a short stint in the Australian Imperial Force. By the early 1950s, his father passed the reins of the already successful business over to his son.

The company soared under Sir John’s leadership. By the 1990s, an astonishing 30 per cent of Brisbane’s CBD had been built by his company, including iconic landmarks such Waterfront Place, Eagle Street Pier and the Cathedral Square Office precinct.

He was commended for his ability to develop new buildings that aesthetically enriched the city, by adding or preserving green spaces and including revolutionary design features. He held a deep affection for existing architectural landmarks, and he donated generously

to the completion of the façade of St. John’s Cathedral and to the restoration of Brisbane City Hall.

In 1989, Sir John received a knighthood in acknowledgement of his “significant contribution to the construction industry and to the community”. With knighthoods abolished shortly thereafter, he is often referred to as the “Last Knight”. Sir John was one of the inaugural inductees into the Queensland Business Leaders Hall of Fame.

He always acknowledged his sister Valmai Pidgeon AM, who is now 98, as being a major part of the success of the family business. Valmai is also

a significant contributor to education as evidenced by The Valmai Pidgeon Performing Arts Complex, at Brisbane’s Somerville House.

Sir John was also known as a practical person with an extraordinary ability to ignore outside distractions and “a person who made everything seem so simple”.

In his acceptance speech when he was inducted into the Property Council Hall of Fame, Sir John said: “Many people have asked me to nominate my favourite project…I have never been able to single out any one in particular.

“My response has always been: the next one.”

19 IMPACT REPORT 2022

raised at BGS Giving Day 2022

The second Brisbane Grammar School Giving Day exceeded expectations when 306 donors joined forces to raise an astounding $1.5 million.

The donations support the Bursary Fund and the construction of the STEAM Precinct.

We extend a heartfelt thanks to Sophia and Dave Johnson, members of the BGS parent community, for their generous donation of $250,000 to the STEAM Precinct. A collaboration hub in one of the STEAM Precinct towers will be named in their honour.

A special thanks goes to Allan and Lyn Davies who donated $150,000 to bursaries to support Indigenous

students through a collaboration with the Clontarf Foundation.

We were moved by the overwhelming support for the STEAM Precinct. The P&F Auxiliary donated $100,000 and will name the STEAM Cafeteria. Eric and Sarina Lau gave $50,000, as did Old Boy Wren Bligh, who will name one of the senior multidisciplinary classrooms. $25,000 was donated by Anthony Yap and Hanh Luu, Chris Tan and Yin Vun, Boon Kua and Karen Chau, and Norman Ma and Ida Lo to name junior multidisciplinary classrooms.

Donations of $15,000 to name one of the atrium steps proved popular. The first eight namesakes to the atrium steps

were Mark and Lynda Dunglison, Geoff and Cathy Findlay, Kieran and Rachael Dauber, John and Donna Wacker, James and Geraldine Chin-Moody, Richard Wong and Huong Phan, John Lee and Judy Ku, and Reza and Jacqueline Pribadi.

BGS received an anonymous donation of $100,000 to support the STEAM Precinct and a further $60,000 to go towards our needs-based Bursary Fund.

The Board of Trustees of Brisbane Grammar School generously matched donations to the Bursary Fund to the amount of $220,000 and to the amount of $350,000 for the STEAM Precinct.

Thank you to all donors on Giving Day. In total, the Bursary Fund increased by approximately $0.5 million and the Building Fund (to be spent on the STEAM Precinct) increased by $1 million.

$1.5M
20 BRISBANE GRAMMAR SCHOOL

Lifetime Giving

We recognise donors who have supported the School throughout their lifetime. We celebrate individuals who have contributed to the history of Brisbane Grammar School.

Over $500,000

Anonymous

BGS P&F Auxiliary

Bob Bryan AM

Tim and Elaine Crommelin

Simon Fenwick

Matthew McLennan

Sir John Pidgeon*

Howard and Hilary Stack

Stack Family Foundation

Tom Strachan* (Strachan Family)

Over $100,000

David and Sandi Abernethy

Anonymous

BGS Art Support Group

Stephen Bizzell

John Blaiklock*

Andrew Brice

Bill and Valda* Byth

Allan and Lyn Davies

Dalara Foundation

Ian Dickinson AM and Margaret Dickinson

Daryl Holmes OBE and Lisa Holmes

Lesley Huxley AM, Nicholas Heath and Betty Heath

Johnson Family

Rob and Catriona Labrom

Ken MacDonald AM and Marian Gibney

David Malouf AO

Nick Mather

Doug Moffett*

Chris and Di Morton

John Nguyen and Joyce Ho

Matthew Peters and Juanita Pappalardo

Bruce Roberts*

John Story AO and Georgina Story

Peter Thompson

Norman and Iris Vanstone

Richard Vanstone

Chris and Linda Vella

David Weedon AO

Mac and Lucy Woolcock

Over $50,000

Australia and New Zealand Bank

BGS Normanby Blues

Wren Bligh

Laurel Bright

Angus Campbell and Belinda Mellen

Athol Crawford*

Bruce and Anna Davidson

Andrew and Asako Hay

Eric and Sarina Lau

James Lin and Judy Wu

David and Marlene Little

Geoffrey and Jan Moles

Frazer and Rachel Moss

Shaun Munday and Allison McKelvie

David Perel

Warwick* and Anne* Power

Rob and Bec Pullar

John and Ingrid Rorke

Sudarshan and Surinder Saini

Bob and Belinda Sharpless

Will and Louise Siganto

The Siganto Foundation

Chris and Wendy Smith

Richard and Adele Theile

Henry Thorburn

Rod Thorburn

Thorburn Trust

Ben Thynne

Doris Townsend*

Norman Traves*

Geoff and Diane Voller

Keith Woollam*

Matt Yang and Tina Tang

Over $25,000

Anonymous

Jonathan and Yvette Askew

22 BRISBANE GRAMMAR SCHOOL
*Deceased

Paul Barrett

Belinda Barrett

Bemrose Family

BGS Old Boys Association

Dan and Naomi Chambers

Albert and Nancy Chung

Geoff and Shirley Clarke

Graham Davies AM

Doig Family

Clyde and Ada Dunlop

John Fenwick AM and Marye Fenwick

Janine Griffiths

David Hewitt

Brian Hirschfeld

Ross and Kylie Hirst

Ian and Johanna Hodgetts

Duk Hong and Gyoung Mi Kim

Andrew Jenkins*

Alan Jones AO

Richard and Jo Kahler

Piyoosh* and Priti Kotecha

Kua Family

Bruce Lawford and Sue Shadforth

Norman Ma and Ida Lo

David and Loraine McLaren

Anthony and Susan Micallef

Walter Monz*

Morgans

Jamie and Louise Pherous

David and Christine Purvis

Donald Radford*

Matt and Heather Raine

David and Gillian Ritchie

Neville Sandford and Patricia Matthews

Brian Short and Pauline Harvey-Short AM

John Siemon

Peter and Caroline Steadman

Rodney Taylor*

Thyne Reid Foundation

Francis Tomlinson and Beverley Rowbotham AO

Warren Traves

Graham and Judy Turner

Stuart Voller

Scott Wharton and Marina-Portia Anthony

Anthony Yap and Hanh Luu

Great Hall Society

The Great Hall Society was established in 1997 to honour those who have remembered Brisbane Grammar School in their Will.

Anonymous*

Peter Armstrong

Ralph Beckingham OAM*

John Blaiklock *

Bob Bryan AM

Ian Carver *

Lawrence Casey

Ronald Clarkson

John Cotterell

John Cranley

Tim Crommelin

Jack Farr *

Stuart Grassie

Arthur Harris *

Peter Heywood

John Hoare

Peter Jempson*

John Knott

John Leslie AO*

Ronald Lindner

David Little

Stephen Lonie *

Chris Lovelock

Ken MacDonald AM

David Malouf AO

Donald Matheson *

Graham McBryde

Doug Moffett *

Bruce Paulsen*

John Pearn AO RFD

Tim Porter

Donald Radford *

Bruce Roberts *

Howard Stack

Geoff Stevenson

Phip Stewart

John Story AO

Neil Summerson AM

Rod Thorburn

Henry Thorburn

Grenville Thynne

Doris Townsend *

Norman Traves *

Katherine Trent

Jim Truesdale

Geoff Voller

Ian Whittle *

Ronald Wyllie

*Deceased

Building Fund

We recognise donors who have taken a lead in donating to the STEAM Precinct, and those who have helped provide our boarding students with contemporary accommodation and facilities.

STEAM Donors

Keith and Kerry Adam

Junying Ai and Jun Wei

Don Aitchison

Jason Aitchison and Melanie Stutsel

Seia and Rochelle Akhavan

Mark Anderson and Catherine Tichbon

Richard Anderson OAM

Ross Anderson

Megan Andrews

Michael Angelini

Anonymous

Michael and Geetu Anthonisz

Andrew Arkell

Alan Arnold

John Arvier OAM and Louise Arvier

Jonathan and Yvette Askew

David and Anna Bade

Barry Baker

Andrew and Margie Bale

Misbayanti Bandia

Daryl and Nina Barlow

Michael and Marg Batchelor

Phil and Leigh Baxter

Anthony Beal

Robert Beaney

Inma Beaumont

Peter and Cathy Beckingsale

Alasdair and Rebecca Begley

Justin Beirne

Rod Bellamy

Bemrose Family

Jody Bendell

Kerrie Benham

Lee Benjamin

BGS P&F Auxiliary

Nandan and Suruchi Bhende

Siobhan Bickle

Paolo Biscaro and Sam Bilyk

Stephen and Karyn Bizzell

Alastair Black and Sally Chai

Claire Blake

Christopher and Elspeth Blenkin

Wren Bligh

Matt Bolam

Andrew and Karen Bond

John Boo and Jenny Terrado

Rod Borrowdale

Peter and Emma Boutcher

Alan and Amanda Brand

Will Brice

Marcus Bromet

Mark and Tracy Brooke

Reagan Brosnan and Leigh Winston

David Brown

Lachlan and Amy Brown

Nick Brown

Bob Bryan AM

Peter and Nicole Bryant

David and Peta Bunce

Bruce and Amanda Butler

Peter and Carolyn Butler

Angus Campbell and Belinda Mellen

Rebecca Campbell

Clint Cao and Mariah Liu

Andrew and Tori Cardell-Ree

Mike and Maria Carter

Roger Cater

Con and Ellie Cayas

Dan and Naomi Chambers

William Chan

Andrew and Jennifer Chang

Michael Chang and Alice Wang

Edward Chen and Christy Zhao

I-Lin Chen

Jun Chen and Grace Zhu

Michael Chen and Linda Li

Philip Chen

Henry Cheng and Angelar Wang

Jennifer Chien

David Chin and Jacinta Amies

James and Geraldine Chin Moody

Roderick Chua and Cynthia Ong

Brett Clark

David Clark

Andrew and Ros Clarke

Geoff and Shirley Clarke

Matt and Vicki Clarkson

Daryl Clifford

Benjamin Coates

Sam and Sarah Coates

Alex Coleman

Susan Collins

Richard Cooper

Peter and Callie Coroneo

Richard Cosgrove

Matt Coulter

Brendan and Brooke Cowie

John Cranley

Dick Cribb

Tim Crommelin

Sean Crookes and Nicolie Jenkins

Greg Dabelstein

Sean Dalziel

Kieran and Rachael Dauber

Stephanie Daveson

Les Davey

Donald Davies

Mitchell de Groot-Esler

Angela de Gunst

Sandun De Silva and Niro Jayawardena

Phill and Fiona Deacon

Ming Deng and Carly Cao

Ian Dickinson AM and Margaret Dickinson

Louis and Patti Ding

Doig Family

Chad Donnelly

Nigel and Amanda Dore

James and Kelly Douglas

Jon Douglas AM

Cameron Dowling

Marion Dowling

Sacha Drake

Mark and Lynda Dunglison

24 BRISBANE GRAMMAR SCHOOL
*Deceased

Russell Dwyer and Vivia Bora

Lachlan and Serena Dyson

Peter Eccleston and Fay Zhong

Obi Ekeocha

Bruce Elliott

Roger Ellwood

John and Rachel Emery

Peter Fan and Cathy Zhang

Cam Feltham

John Fenwick AM and Marye Fenwick

Simon Fenwick

Lindsay Few

Troy and Claire Fidler

Luke Filei and Qiu Laying

Geoff and Cathy Findlay

Craig and Danyal Fitzgerald

Michael Forrest and Angie Ryan

Amanda Foss

Adam Franklin

David Fraser

Adrian and Michelle Frick

Ken Fung and Jean Ho

Matthew Garraway

Peter Gasteen*

Simon Gatehouse and Lara Kane

Mark and Jacinda Geritz

Rodney Gibson

Bruce Gibson-Wilde OAM and Dorothy

Gibson-Wilde

Roy Giesemann

Greg Gilbert

Ken and Kath Gottliebsen

Robert and Barbara Gottliebsen

Geoff Greenhalgh and Diane Phillips

Brett and Karen Gregor

Nik and Irma Gresshoff

Janine Griffiths

Juliet and Matthew Grigg

Tony Gu and Jenny Wang

Steven Guo and Leily Chen

Catherine Gulhane

Kebrom Habte and Almaz Haile

Richard Hall

Richard Ham

Robert and Marion Hamilton

Adrian Hamra

Peter Harbison

Rodney Harden

Jeffrey Hardy

Ritesh and Kavita Hargovind

Dean Harris

Troy and Kylie Harry

Andrew and Asako Hay

Martin and Patricia Haymes

John and Sandra Hazzard

Carol He

Sabrina He

Nick Heath and LeeAnne Elms

Fletch Heinemann

Eric Hewett

Sam Higgins

David and Monique Hilford

Andrew Hill

Covan Ho

Daryl Holmes OBE

Dave and Miranda Holt

Robyn and Saul Holt

Adam Howarth

Alan Hu

Bo Hu and Vivian Li

Ricky Hu and Qimeng Yu

Peter and Catherine Hudson

Ping Ping Hung

Robert Huo and Ellen Li

Simon and Andrea Hurwood

Jason Hyde

Savindra and Palika Ilangamage

Alex and Ann-Elise Incani

Matt and Jules Irwin

Grahame Jardine-Vidgen

Mark Jempson

Pauline Jiang

Johnson Family

Peter Johnson

Tony Jones and Ann Nguyen Jones

Nick and Katie Jorss

Tom Joyce and Helen Boocock

Llew and Ceri Jury

Ram and Nala Kangatharan

Bipphy Kath and Prashanti Marella

David and Wendy Keir

Mark Kelley

Brendan Kelly

Andrew Kemp

George and Andrea Kennedy

Harold Kennett

Brendan Kerr and Jane Phillips

Cobi Kim and Jackie Koo

Danny Kim and Emily Ha

Yongun Kim and Yuju Lee

Michael and Alicia Klumpes

John Knott

David Ko and Machiko Koganezawa

Akshay and Alka Kothari

Boon Kua and Karen Chau

Haritha Kuppam

Edward and Carol Kwok

Kyle Kwok and Sylina Cheung

Ki Kyoung and Na Lee

Rob and Catriona Labrom

Amanda Lago

Sach and Navi Lashand

Eric and Sarina Lau

Sam Lau and Amanda Lee

Yit Nah Lau

Brian Lee and Wendy Jeong

Dennis and Winny Lee

George Lee and Uni Yang

Jin Hee Lee and Jiyoon Park

John Lee and Judy Ku

Joseph Lee and Michelle Chong

Lawrence Lee and Jennifer Chen

Peter and Sandra Lennox

Chung Lun Leung and Wai Kwan Wong

Benjamin Li

Jingjing Li and Brenda Fan

Vincent and Ayaka Liang

Mauro and Megan Liberatore

Cheng Wei Lin and Pei Ying Chen

Jack Lin and Christine Chu

Peter Lin and Yin Yin Chua

David and Marlene Little

25 IMPACT REPORT 2022
*Deceased

Arthur Liu

Eddie and Karen Liu

Michael Liu

Richard Liu and Ling Lin

Una Liu

John Logan RFD

Jason Lollback

John Lonie

Brendan and Nicole Louie

David and Elizabeth Low

Amy Lu

Bill Lu and Helen Chen

Philip and Lillian Lui

John Luo and Annie Wu

Christopher and Selga Lusink

John and Helen Lynch

Robin and Kim Lyons

Deling Ma and Dongxue Li

Eric Ma and Jackie Hua

Norman Ma and Ida Lo

Fiona Macfarlane

Douglas and Jenny MacGibbon

Allan and Lindy Mackintosh

Patrick Mahoney and Mary Mahoney AO*

Marc and Clare Maguire

Ian Marrinan

David Martin and Grace Zeng

Tony Martinson and Helene Li

John Mason

Donald Matheson*

Richard Maybury and Fiona CampbellMaybury

Iain McBride

Nicole McCarthy

Tim McCarthy and Miranda Crisci

Frank McClatchy

Ross McCormack

Bill McCredie and Kate Ashwood

Paul and Alicia McEniery

Paul McEniery and Karen Seifert

Kim McGrath

Kerry McKeon

Sean McManus and Libby McBride

Paul and Lisa McMaster

Cameron McNeill

Alex Mees and Kylie Barns-Mees

Ravi and Chhaya Mehta

Jurgen Mejan-Fripp and Nancy Wang

Peter Melloy

Tony Meng

Leo and Sally Mewing

Anthony and Susan Micallef

Blake Micallef

Mark Middleton OAM and Susan Middleton

Miles Moody

Cassie Moore

Jonathan Moore

Michael and Rebecca Moore

Bill Morrissey and Kylie Downes

Frazer and Rachel Moss

Balaji Motamarri and Sumi Pillarisetti

Shaun Munday and Allison McKelvie

Vanda Mura

Matthew and Ellen Murphy

Stuart Murray and Kathy Lau

Rachael Myers

Ragu Nadarajah

Masa Nakasato and Isabella Hui

Henry and Tess Nguyen

John Nguyen and Joyce Ho

Uyen Nguyen

Robert Nieh and Christine Chen

Gary and Sarah Nielsen

Peta O’Brien

Tony and Katrina O’Connell

Rory and Stacey O’Shea

Michael and Ify Okonkwo

Ben and Minure Omowaire

Keerthi and Lasanthi Paranavithana

Tony and Wendy Pascoe

Andrew and Carley Patten

Arash Payervand

Luke and Jen Peacock

John Peden

Richard Pegg

Nalin Perera and Thushara Pussella

John and Jessica Pesch

Matthew Peters and Juanita Pappalardo

Damien Petersen and Sharyn Van Alphen

Kylie Petersen

Jamie and Louise Pherous

Simon Poh

Simon and Caroline Prebble

Reza and Jacky Pribadi

John Puttick

Martin Qin

QLD Education Science Techs

Bing Qu

Grace Qiu

Gary and Meryta Quagliotto

Martin and Danielle Quinell

Drew and Georgia Raad

Matt and Heather Raine

Ram Rajasekaran and Ramya Gopinath

Tony Robertson and Jennifer Dietz

Malcolm and Tammy Robinson

Michael Roe

Ian Rose

Graham Rowles

Sudarshan and Surinder Saini

Melinda Samai

Chris and Pamela Sandford

Ian and Paula Sandford

Tony Sangster and Virginia Stirling

Anubhav and Anshu Sarikwal

Bradley and Emma Sartori

Dmitry Saulov and Asta Saulova

Thomas Saunders

Tim and Nina Sayer

Mark Saywell

Lara Schliebs

Kem Schmidt

Lachlan and Susan Schmidt

Mark and Shauna Schulz

Mark Schumann

Anna Maria Sciacca

Sam and Jo Sciacca

Darren Scott and Kirrily Hoole

Peter Scott

Raj and Lakshmi Selvarajan

Kalmin Senaratne

Raymond Sham and Julie Tan

David Shan and Catherine Yang

Mohamed Shanavas and Babitha

Pulikkathody

Scott and Danae Sharry

Jo Shearer-Smith

Gray Shen

Jim Shen and Lena Xiong

John and Danielle Shepherd

Brian Short and Pauline Harvey-Short AM

Greg and Susan Siemon

John Siemon

Ben and Yasmin Silverston

Manas and Jyoti Singh

Nick and Jade Singleton

Bhaskar Siraparapu and Manju Koka

Andrew and Jen Slatter

Henry Smerdon AM

Andrew Smith and Kate Slaughter

Chris and Wendy Smith

Lee and Allyson Smith

Matt Smith

Nicole Smith

Paul and Sam Smith

Tai and Kelly Smith

Tim Solomon

Pradeep Sonwalkar

Angela Sophios

Hugh and Amanda Spalding

Richard Spencer

Jodie Springall and Jane Schouten

Ravi Sriskandarajah and Anna Plunkett

Howard and Hilary Stack

Andrew Staib

Mark Stanton

Kenneth Steele

Rob Stevens and Katherine Semple

Andrew and Aida Stevenson

John Story AO and Georgina Story

Matt and Katrina Strotton

Melanie Stutsel

Qichao Su and Daisy Feng

Nicholas Sullivan

26 BRISBANE GRAMMAR SCHOOL *Deceased

Aly Sultan

Sophia Sun

Rob and Laura Sutton

John Swayne

Corey and Katrina Swift

Darren Swindells

Chris Tan and Yin Vun

Christian and Leah Telford

Andrew and Hue Thai

Peter Thompson

Henry Thorburn

Rod Thorburn

Ben Thynne

James Tierney

Alan Tilse

Nicholas Ting and Emily Tiang

Jackie Trad

Simon and Moko Treacy

Rebecca Tuma

Steve and Anna-Marie Uscinski

Tristan Van Riel and Lisa Honeychurch

Andrew Vann

David Vann OAM

Ross and Fang Vasta

Chris and Linda Vella

Sumedha Vernon

Geoff and Diane Voller

Stuart Voller

John and Donna Wacker

Brett Walker-Davies

Malcolm Wallace

Steve Wallis and Jenny Mackie

Andrew Walsh and Caroline Law-Walsh

Andrew and Sharlene Walsh

Craig and Heather Walter

Alan Wang

Amy Wang

Chris Wang and Alice Li

Michael Wang and Anne Ling

Sharon Wang

Kylie Warlow

Aaron and Leann Webb

Myles Webb and Stephen Mego

Rebecca and Ian Webber

Meighan Wells

Torben and Angie Wentrup

Scott Wharton and Marina-Portia

Anthony

Richard Wheeler

Saminda Wijesooriya Mudiyanselage and Dona Nagasena

Manu and Ima Wickramasekera

Ralph and Lisa Willson

Peter Wong and Anita Lau

Richard Wong and Huong Phan

Michael and Jaime Wood

John Woods and Emma Fynes-Clinton

Dan Worthley and Liza Phillips

Raymond Wu and Emily Mo

Sandra Xia

Di Xiao and Huiqun Liu

Leo Xin and Ivy Qiu

Frank Xu and Yumei Liao

James Yang and Anni Wang

Matt Yang and Tina Tang

Samuel Yang

Chen Yao

Anthony Yap and Hanh Luu

Richard Yee

Jack Yeh and Iris Lee

John Yesberg

Simon and Sally Yong Gee

Dennis Yoon and Amy Kim

Tony and Linda Young

Caty Yu

Chris Yu

Andrew and Kerry Zaghini

Jacqui Zervos

Doug Zhang and Vivian Chen

Shaun Zhang and Nadia Ji

Xingbo Zhang and Wendy Huang

Allan Zhao and Kate Wu

Josh Zheng and Calvina Qu

Ying Zheng and Summer Dong

Ivan Zhong and Fendy Yin

Pengyang Zhu and Xiaoping Yang

Harlin House Donors

Anonymous

Bgs P&F Auxiliary

John Boo

Chris Cooper

Sharon Danzig

Mervyn Eadie

Cameron and Trudie Early

Alec Evans AM and Kay Evans

Andrew Evans

Duncan Evans

David Fraser

Matthew Garraway

Robert and Marion Hamilton

John Knott

Darren and Amanda Lewis

David Liu

John Marriott

Matthew McLennan

Leon Misfeld

Nikolaos Papas

Neil Peacey

Graham Sandeman

Qichao Su and Daisy Feng

*Deceased

Immediate needs 2022

Anonymous

James and Geraldine Chin Moody

Alan Duffield and Sam Betzien

Stuart Fitzpatrick

Michael Forrest and Angie Ryan

David Fraser

Prue Galley

David Hewitt

Peter Heywood

Robert Mahar and Greer Wilson

Matthew Murphy

Susan and Graham Palmer

Matthew Peck

Paula Sandford

Shauna Schulz

Hariet, Inness and Madison Shannon

Neil and Monika Shannon

Kith and Thamara Tennakoon

The Siganto Foundation

Henry Thorburn

Rod Thorburn

Thorburn Trust

Warren Traves

Doris Townsend* (Waraker Estate)

Rumintha Wickramasekera

Janette Wrigley

Indigenous Bursaries

Anonymous

Anne Armour

Anthony Beal

Suzzanne Birch

Laurel Bright

Nigel Brock

Mark and Catherine Brusasco

Bursary Fund

Angus Campbell and Belinda Mellen

Andrew Chang

Ronald Clarkson

Allan and Lyn Davies

Ross Finemore

Michael Forrest and Angie Ryan

Maher Gandhi and Catherine Duffy

Catherine Gulhane

Peter Hastie and Suzanne Sheridan

Bob Holeman

Andrew Hoyling

Alison Kearney

Glenn King and Susan Rowland

Bill Lansbury

Darren Lewis

Mauro and Megan Liberatore

Jason Limpus

Hugh Macintosh and Deb Almering

Philip McNicol and Liz Dann

Madanlal Mohanlal

Angela Mullan

Dan and Shelagh Mullany

Frank and Thea New

Jim and Jill Nicklin

Nikolaos Papas

Bruce Paulsen*

Tony and Nicola Rahman

Michael Rice

Chris and Pamela Sandford

Colin Spencer and Viv Braybrook

Kenneth Steele

Chris Stephens AM

Mike Tardent and Kerry-Anne Powell

Peter Taylor

Duncan Thomson

Dennis Waight

Ron Cochrane Bursary

$57,817

Matthew Adi

Anonymous

Ron Cochrane

Tim and Elaine Crommelin

Bruce and Natasha Davies

Simon Fenwick

Jon Fenwick

Ashley Feuerheerdt

Michael Forrest and Angie Ryan

Petrina Gilmore

Ross and Nicholas Given

Sean Martin

James Morris

Joe Rich

David, Phillip and Tim Shaw

Howard and Hilary Stack

Tom Stack

Thomas Stephens

Harry Theile

Year Group Bursaries

1936 $2,350

Stan Mellick OAM ED*

1939 $20,000

Norman Traves*

1942 $250,000

Doug Moffett*

1943 $204,965

Anonymous

Brian Hirschfeld

Bruce Paulsen*

1944 $249,728

Bill Heron

Bruce Roberts *

1946 Under $999

Roy Giesemann

John Marriott

1952 Under $999

John Nicholson

Richard Pegg

1953 Under $999

Gordon Johnson

John Woodley

1954 $1,850

Peter Jempson*

Ross Thomas AM

David Walters

1955 Under $999

Bruce Gibson-Wilde OAM and Dorothy

Gibson-Wilde OAM

John Woodley

1956 $3,240

Anonymous

Roy Casey

Robert Grice AO

1957 $2,020

Michael Bolton AM

Alec Evans AM and Kay Evans

Ken Webb

28 BRISBANE GRAMMAR SCHOOL

1958 $1,604

John Allpass

Alec Evans AM and Kay Evans

Barry Mayfield

1959 $4,765

Robert Grice AO

Peter Taylor

1960 $138,700

John Gralton

John Knott

David and Marlene Little

David Perel

David and Gillian Ritchie

1961 Under $999

Anonymous

Dave Edwards

Bruce Spender BEM*

Jon Voller

1962 $163,865

Robert Brown

Warren Kinston

Van Richards-Smith

John and Ingrid Rorke

Kem Schmidt

Howard and Hilary Stack

Rod Williams

William Winstone*

1963 $93,030

Michael Crommelin AO

Clyde and Ada Dunlop

John Lonie

John and Robynne Siemon

Chris Stephens AM

John Story AO and Georgina Story

Ian Wilkinson

1964 $1,606

Anonymous

Llewellyn Davies OAM

1965 $21,404

Robert Charlton

Tim and Elaine Crommelin

David Izatt

Ross Jones

1966 $174,200

Don and Philippa Adsett

Anonymous

Wally and Mary Arndt

Ian Dickinson AM and Margaret Dickinson

David Dunlop and Julie Hammer

Stephen Gray

Simon Hamlyn-Harris

Bob and Janet Hunter

Warren Hutton

Max and Lea Hutton

Robert Ingram

Andrew Jenkins *

Alan Jones AO

Ken MacDonald AM and Marian Gibney

Stuart Markwell

John and Judy Mewing

Alexander Morrow *

Philip Neilsen

Ross and Susan Parry

David and Christine Purvis

Tony Verner

Geoff and Diane Voller

Graeme and Dianne Whitelaw

1967 $1,506

Anonymous

Phillip Cameron

Kenneth Steele

John Swayne

1968 $15,650

Keith Early

Stephen Lonie *

Mark and Shauna Schulz

1969 $59,329

David and Sandi Abernethy

Allan and Lyn Davies

Bob and Diane Holeman

Natasha Laukens

Tim and Janet Porter

1970 $1,506

John Arvier OAM and Louise Arvier

Len and Suzanne Gainsford

Stephen Matthews

Michael Pascoe

1971 $13,015

Ian Bragg

John and Susan Humphrey

1972 Under $999

Charles Diehl

David Fraser

Don Markwell

William Young

1973 Under $999

Gary Sully

Rodney Matthews LLB*

1974 Under $999

Adrian Cameron

1975 $1,088

Wayne Matthews

1976 $11,650

Cameron Bell

Peter Hastie

Warwick Horsey

Graeme McAdam

1977 $1,185

Mark and Catherine Brusasco

Daryl Clifford

Peter and Joanne Foreman

1979 $64,448

Andrew Arkell

William Boydell

Stephen Cook

James Henderson

Bill Lansbury

Mark and Angela Martin

Stuart and Catherine Rees

Brett Salisbury

Michael Sullivan

Andrew Wilson and Tracey Lennon

1980 $75,968

Clive Bateman

Jon and Patrice Cafferky

Matt Coulter

Michael Elmer

David and Siobhan Fielding

John Greig

Mal and Amanda Harrison

Michael Hellen

Andrew Henderson

Jonathan Hill

Ian Knights

Cam Lillicrap

Greg Martin

Donald McAllister

Reg Nash

David Phillips

Andrew Powell

Niren and Charu Raj

Graham Thomas

Peter Van De Graaff

1981 $100,000

Daryl Holmes OBE and Lisa Holmes

1982 $203,847

Bruce Baker

Benjamin Bopp

Scott Chapman

Bruce Davidson

Brett and Jane Halliday

29 IMPACT REPORT 2022

Richard and Jo Kahler

Paul Lathouras

Ian Martin

Thomas Martin

James Morris and Caroline Tsen

Frazer and Rachel Moss

David and Cathy Nash

John and Mandy Peden

Christopher Shirley

Robert Sinnamon

Nigel Spork and Natasha Christa

Stephen St Baker

Richard and Adele Theile

Grenville and Kylie Thynne

Warren and Elisabeth Traves

Giles Worthington-Wilmer

1984 $5,445

Stephen Bizzell

Graham Sandeman

1985 $30,020

Brett and Maria Clark

Jamie and Louise Pherous

1987 $197,391

Anonymous

Wren Bligh

Dan and Naomi Chambers

Adrian Cool

Simon Fenwick

Michael Forrest and Angie Ryan

Jamie Forster

Shayne Gilbert

David Goffage

Heather Hamilton

Peter Harbison

Simon and Andrea Hurwood

Aaron Lavell

Stuart McKinnon

Paul Mitchell

Graham and Caroline Ramsay

Ben Sawley

Ian Thompson

Simon Tolhurst

Iain and Andrea Tucker

John Wacker

Sean Weier

1988 $20,278

Dominic and Sarah O’Sullivan

Class of 1988

1990 $1,015

Andrew Moore

1991 $2,299

Anonymous

Linus Chang and Kim Ku

1992 $1,270

Ken Fung

Arthur Liu

1993 $2,070

Anonymous

James Hiller

Michael Liu

1994 Under $999

Anonymous

Greg Di-Losa

1995 $6,356

Omar Chaudari

David Fraser

Matthew Garraway

Scott Wharton

1996 $1,356

Lee Benjamin

Andrew Hoyling

1997 Under $999

Tim Cederman-Haysom

Andrew Sandford

1998 Under $999

Greg Howes

James Bright

2000 $15,728

Anonymous

Inma Beaumont

Jeremy McKenzie

Peter Shaw

Tom Stack

2001 Under $999

Michael Bonning

Ross Geddes

2002 $23,783

James Brotchie

Samuel Izatt

Christopher and Selga Lusink

2003 Under $999

Sam Murphy

2005 Under $999

Anonymous

Duncan Evans

2006 $1,000

Dan Rothnie

2007 $7,125

Julian and Bethany Potten

Mark Somerville

The Charles Vincent McMahon Bursary

2008 $2,660

Alastair Blenkin

Fred Croker

Sam Gardner

Harry Houston

Michael and Annie McMahon

Jack Murday

Tom Schumann

Pat Smith

2009 Under $999

Edward Fleetwood

Colin Kenny and Liz Kenny AO

2010 Under $999

Michael Moloney

2011 Under $999

Anonymous

2012 Under $999

Kate Borger

Santiago Chamon Kovalenko

Alister Harper

2013 Under $999

Anonymous

Matt Renshaw

2014 Under $999

Anonymous

Nikolaos Papas

2015 Under $999

Anonymous

Kate Borger

2016 $78,630

Anonymous

Class of 2016 gift

Scott McQuade

Howard Stack

Peter Thompson

2017 $73,530

Chris and Ginni Anderson

Anonymous

Bruce and Katie Baker

Kate Borger

Rajesh Brijball and Malini Ramsay-Brijball

Bob and Helen Brown

William Cheng and Diane Chiang

Charles and Livia Chin

30 BRISBANE GRAMMAR SCHOOL

Garson Chin

Class of 2017 gift

Nick and Penny Comino

Sarah Cox

Bill Everson

David and Ngaire Groves

Kris and Nilmini Gunawardana

Paul and Meryl Huth

Peter Knee and Carolyn Daunt

O Ick Kwon and Hyun Ok Kim

Rob and Catriona Labrom

Bruce Lawford and Sue Shadforth

Anton Loewenthal and Jenny Strachan

Chengzhi Lu

Adrian and Kylie Manning

Mitch Manning

Michael and Kerri-Ann Martin

Mick and Lyndall McCormack

Anthony and Susan Micallef

Blake Micallef

Kim and Jane Morison

Frazer and Rachel Moss

Alex Nguyen

Mark Osmand

Graham and Caroline Ramsay

Steve Reynolds and Marian Wheeler

Tim and Andrea Ripper

Sam and Jo Sciacca

Howard Stack

Ross Tyrrell

Rastie and Erica Van der Westhuizen

Vipul and Mamta Vyas

Craig and Kirsten Whip

Poppy Wilson

Dapeng Zhang and Lucy Shang

2018 $51,050

Anonymous

John and Sophie Barton

Darren and Natalie Black

Christopher and Margot Blue

Rob and Karen Campbell

John Clift and Nicky Cheng

Alex Coleman

Jeremy Davis

Peter Eccleston and Fay Zhong

Adam and Elisabeth Findlay

John and Julie Fison

Peter and Catherine Hudson

Lawrence and Paula Lau

Michael and Zora Liu

Hamish Macintosh

Hugh Macintosh and Deb Almering

Ron and Kym Martinenko

James Morris and Caroline Tsen

Rohan and Marianne Mortimore

Graham and Julie Murray

Son Ngo and Thuy Nguyen

Jesse and Nikki Nihill

James and Anna Owen

Richard Qiu and Connie Shen

Malcolm and Tammy Robinson

Howard Stack

Teck and Michaelina Tang

Robert and Caroline Ting

Paul and Nerida Trappett

Eddy Tse and Kina Mak

Clayton and Kerri White

David and Mary Wong

2019 $42,007

Jan Andersen and Ling Zheng

Anonymous

Nataly Baker

Tom Bizzell

Lisa Brock

Jon and Patrice Cafferky

Andrew and Tori Cardell-Ree

Robert and Louise Carius

John Cavalerie

Nick and Jane Corbett

Craig and Renee Dawson

Angus Edwards and Trudie Murrell

Ghobad Ensafpour and Tracey Gordon

Michael Forrest and Angie Ryan

Luca Fu and Silvia Peng

Charley Guo and Sandy Chen

Paul and Kathy Henry

Amanda Lago

Roger Lago

Albert Lam and Ciska Boentoro

Jun Kim and Joo Ok Lee

Son Nguyen Ngoc and Ann Nguyen Thi

Michael O’Connor and Bernice Watson

Antonio Pais and Nivea Pereira Pais

Nalin Perera and Thushara Pussella

John and Dominique Richards

Tom and Lisa Shakespeare

Mahmud Taib

Sang Jin Yeo and Jiyoung Hwang

Hongbo Yu and Leiyan Zhao

2020 $92,156

Chris and Ginni Anderson

Anonymous

Alan and Gayle Austin

Blair Bowden and Alison Menzies

Russell and Leanne Bowie

Ian Brown and Anna Burrows

Dan and Naomi Chambers

Berkeley and Sarah Cox

Adrian and Michelle Frick

Eugene and Cindy Fung

Maher Gandhi and Catherine Duffy

Andrew and Asako Hay

Michael Ho and Lillian Tram

Dave and Miranda Holt

Susan Huang

Ahmad Husain and Tawfika Makbul

Santiago Jara Melagrani and Maria Cossia

Jack Kwong

Rob and Catriona Labrom

Huy Dung Le and Dieu Anh Trinh

Dane and Louise Lockyer

Hugh Macintosh and Deb Almering

Hamish Macpherson and Millie Yee

James May

Lachlan and Shannon McCallum

Tim McCarthy and Miranda Crisci

Paul McEniery and Karen Seifert

Cyrus Moeini and Gina Chou

Luke Na

Seongsu Na and Alice Lee

Tony and Katrina O’Connell

John Pan and Mei Hong

Graeme Paull and Helen Armstrong

Sam Penman

Benedikt Pfisterer and Antonia Maier

Majella Pollard

Philip and Holly Richardson

Ken Situ and Annie Luk

Nigel Spork and Natasha Christa

David and Marie-Louise Theile

Keith Thornton and Michelle Reiken

Mayooran Veerasingham and Thushyanthi

Mayooran

Leanne Waldron

Trinity Ward

Rumintha and Celia Wickramasekera

Charlie and Sarah Willmott

Ralph and Lisa Willson

Drew Wolrige

Jason Yang and Sue Zhang

Yingmin Zhong and Wendy Duan

2021 $135,608

Anonymous

Laileen Ahloo

Soe Aung and Vivian Ting

Kesh and Sue Baboolal

Sam Bizzell

Bruce and Amanda Butler

Anthony and Kate Crilly

Greig and Vickie de Zubicaray

Mark and Leta Dempsey

Ian Duncan and Lizzie Coulson

Matthew and Samantha Duncan

Yong Fang and Ying Li

Michael Forrest and Angie Ryan

Ken Goldberg and Anne-Maree Coyne

Yuwei Gong and Wei Shi

Mal and Kathryn Griffin

Jason and Julie Griffiths

31 IMPACT REPORT 2022

Henry Ho and Tammy Liang

Cameron Johnson and Marika Nearhos

Ram and Nala Kangatharan

Min Kim and Mi Sun Jo

Graham Lee and Anita Chang

Shuke Liang and Yan Qin

Frankie Look and Connie Luk

Michael and Rachel Lusis

Greg and Kristine Malone

Gary and Sarah McCarthy-James

Randall McHugh and Stephanie Daveson

James Morris and Caroline Tsen

Son Ngo and Thuy Nguyen

Jo Pace

Davin and Kate Patterson

Meryta Quagliotto

Ramanan Ratnasingam and Nirupa Ramanan

John and Dominique Richards

Tony Robertson and Jennifer Dietz

Dmitry Saulov and Asta Saulova

David and Carmen Shuttleton

David and Alex Spiez

Andrew and Jillian Stallmann

Paul Strooper and Alena Griffiths

Mark and Chrisanthy Stutz

Paul and Nerida Trappett

Sally Trestrail

Damien van Brunschot and Jackie Trad

Terry* and Belinda Vardy

Tuan Vu and Thuy Do

Chris and Carrie Watchirs

Mark and Kylie Wilson

Joseph and Cynthia Wong

2022 $116,298

Anonymous

Peter Aitken and Jo Wong

Phil and Leigh Baxter

Matt and Leanne Caines

Con and Ellie Cayas

Mui Khoon Chang

James Chen and Jessica Wan

Johnny Cheng and Joanna Lee

Jason and Salish Donald

Anne Duncan

Peter and Kirilly Dutton

Sarah Earnshaw

Peter Eccleston and Fay Zhong

Adrian Esler and Alison de Groot

Peter Fan and Cathy Zhang

Annamaria Ferencz

Tony Gu and Jenny Wang

Matthew and Priscilla Hocking

Matthew and Tracey Holmes

Matthew Howes and Susan Hogarth

Karuna Hoole

Matthew and Julia Horton

Simon and Andrea Hurwood

Rob and Michaela Jackson

Benjamin Kang and I-Lin Chen

Nick and Maria Karanicolas

Jon-Paul and Tara Khoo

Akshay and Alka Kothari

Rob and Catriona Labrom

Chung Lun Leung and Wai Kwan Wong

William and Sainian Leves

Douts Li and Grace Qiu

James and Paula Lilley

Paul and Michelle Logan

Sven Lotzvie and Karla Fraser

Cam and Kym Mackay

Hamish Macpherson and Millie Yee

David Martin and Grace Zeng

Mark McCauley and Sasha Hennessey

John and Gillian Miller

Frazer and Rachel Moss

Arnold Ng and Carolina Ling

Glenn and Peta O’Brien

Ben and Florence Ong

John Puttick

Tony and Nicola Rahman

Malcolm and Tammy Robinson

Ed and Monica Roper

Mohamed Shanavas and Babitha

Pulikkathody

Simon and Danielle Siganto

Chris and Wendy Smith

John Sneddon and Vanessa O’Sullivan

Peter and Tina Sprott

Gavin Sun and Sophia Su

Bibo Tan and Lina Ma

Simon Tang and Jing Ge

Steve and Fara Tavakol

Hee Soo and Marisa Teng

Chandra and Amila Tennakoon

Kylie Tolhurst

Simon Tolhurst

Kate Tyszkiewicz

Belinda Vardy

Ralph and Lisa Willson

Chi-Hong and Janet Wong

Michael and Jaime Wood

Frank Xu and Yumei Liao

Pengyang Zhu and Xiaoping Yang

2023 $107,983

Anonymous

Peter and Cathy Beckingsale

Derrick Brown and Rachael Browning

Greg Bryant and Claudia Roy

Xuan Bui and Thi Nguyen

David and Peta Bunce

Ken Cao and Sabrina He

Andrew Cardell-Ree

Victor Chen and Shirley Lin

Charlie and Poppy Choi

Jeff Chou and Connie Ko

Alex Coleman

Megan Corfield

Tung Do and Duyen Tien

Ben and Rachel Driessen

Jacqui and Matt Du Payne

Peter and Kirilly Dutton

Rob and Raechelle Finch

Craig and Danyal Fitzgerald

Harrison Fitzgerald

Angus and Carla Forbes

Simon Gatehouse and Lara Kane

Martin and Danielle Giles

George and Eunice Gware

Darren and Samantha Harris

Troy and Kylie Harry

David and Maria Hirschfeld

Rod and Karyn Huntley

Savindra and Palika Ilangamage

Zak and Subarna Islam

Jill Johnston

Kylie Kaandorp

Phillip and Allison Kay

Steve and Alison Kearney

William and Leanne Keeley

Sumith and Kokila Kodithuwakku

George Lee and Uni Yang

Philip and Lillian Lui

Hugh Macintosh and Deb Almering

Allan and Lindy Mackintosh

Scott McCoy and Louise Franklin

Scott and Susan McLeod

Brian Meade and Rebecca Schull-Meade

Chris and Lorna Meads

Alex Mees

Richie and Michelle Mizutani

Bill Morrissey and Kylie Downes

Shaun Munday and Allison McKelvie

Michael Murphy and Keryn Metcalfe

Mark and Heather Norris

Lasanthi and Keerthi Paranavithana

Nalin Perera and Thushara Pussella

Martin Qin and Emma Zhang

David and Kate Rutter

Filippo Sciacca

Sam and Jo Sciacca

Adam and Belinda Siddle

Andrea and Robert Skerl

Matt and Katrina Strotton

Joshua Taylor and Hee Young In

Nicholas Ting and Emily Tiang

Simon and Moko Treacy

Juan Wang

Michael and Kay Whyte

Miao Zhang

32 BRISBANE GRAMMAR SCHOOL

2024 $83,105

Anonymous

Chandeep Bakshi

Kieron Bigby and Laura Wee

Sharon Brennan

Dennis Chang and Hiromi Yasuda

Craig and Kara Chudleigh

Susie Cooke

Robert and Kitty Deane

Jason and Salish Donald

Gino Du

Samantha Edwards

Bruce Elliott and Helen Bailey

Dimitri Fedorov and Milana Stotland

Alan Fitzpatrick and Lo-An Vu

Michael Forrest and Angie Ryan

Michael Gao and Michelle Sun

Ken and Kath Gottliebsen

Robert Gottliebsen

David and Vicki Gracen

Tom Joyce and Helen Boocock

Ben and Michelle Klaassen

Jin Hee Lee and Jiyoon Park

John and Eun Lee

Mauro and Megan Liberatore

Tony Lin

Sean Martin and Frances McInerney

Mark and Elisa Milner

Simon and Nikki Mortimer

Balaji Motamarri and Sumi Pillarisetti

Matthew and Ellen Murphy

Chris O’Neill and Tabitha Goodreid

Thomas Pincus and Rebecca Armstrong

Simon Poh

Bing Qu and Lucy Wang

Angela Sclavos

Brad and Katrina Scott

Greg and Susan Siemon

Amarjeet and Sandeep Sihota

Andrew Smith and Kate Slaughter

Sam Smith

Jodie Springall and Jane Schouten

Aaron and Leann Webb

John Webb and Megan Keleher

Helen Webster

2025 $55,895

Anonymous

Mark Anderson and Catherine Tichbon

Andrej and Yolanda Babnik

John Boo and Jenny Terrado

Andrew Bottomley

Kylie Bottomley

Paul and Stella Bowker

Reagan Brosnan and Leigh Winston

David and Peta Bunce

Andrew and Ros Clarke

Chris and Carla Clayton

Greg Cook and Yeni Yu

Suey Cooper

Thomas and Anh Do

Mark and Jacinda Geritz

Melissa Goss

Peter and Catherine Hudson

Wayne and Mel Huff

Saso and Katie Ivanovski

Nick and Katie Jorss

Ram and Nala Kangatharan

Jueun Kim

Sebastian Leotta and Naoko Kojima Leotta

Darren and Amanda Lewis

Alice Li

Vincent and Ayaka Liang

Eddie and Karen Liu

Mark and Susan Middleton

Glen and Sarah Millar

Hom Poudel

Gary and Meryta Quagliotto

Kendal and Jackie Redmond

Andrew and Jen Slatter

David and Bronwyn Small

Qichao Su and Daisy Feng

Rob and Jane Swan

Christian and Leah Telford

Rob Turra and Robyn Fraser

Rudy and Sarah Van der Westhuizen

John and Anna Vellacott

John and Donna Wacker

Charles Woodhouse and Sirie Palmos

Ashley Zhou

2026 $70,135

Anonymous

Dhamma Abeysinghe and Sarangi Ratnayake

Sanghoon Ahn and Soyoung Park

Junying Ai and Jun Wei

Damian Amato and Linny Sampson

Ben Anderson

Alasdair and Rebecca Begley

Nandan and Suruchi Bhende

Peter and Carolyn Butler

Jun Chen and Grace Zhu

Ming Deng and Carly Cao

Philip and Susan Collins

Fiona Deacon

Ashwani Garg and Shilpi Gupta

Andrew and Asako Hay

Sharon Hoare

Daylin Johnson

George and Andrea Kennedy

Lawrence Lee and Jennifer Chen

Charles and Leith Lilley

Chi-Wei Liu and Jennifer Chien

Helen Lynch

Libby McBride

Chris and Donna McManus

Paul and Lisa McMaster

Cameron McNeill

Sandy Miller and Fiona McDougall

Masa Nakasato and Isabella Hui

Tony and Katrina O’Connell

Daniella Peters

Damien Petersen and Sharyn Van Alphen

Thomas Pincus and Rebecca Armstrong

Peter Prentis and Ana Pavasovic

Andrew Smith and Kate Slaughter

Max Smith

Sam Smith

Christina Su

Eric Su

Qichao Su and Daisy Feng

Anuj and Laura Timblo

Kylie Warlow

Nirvan Wijesekera and Nel Jayasinghe

Simon and Sally Yong Gee

Cooper Yuan and Shirley Chung

Ivan Zhong and Fendy Yin

2027 $22,380

Anonymous

Alan and Amanda Brand

Philip Chen

David Chin and Jacinta Amies

Scott and Kylee Creighton

Dean and Lisa Harris

David and Monique Hilford

Covan Ho and Joyce Lin

Saul and Robyn Holt

Ross and Catherine Savage

Peter and Eva Scott

Brent and Heidi Stevens

Paul and Lana Szumowski

Rudy and Sarah Van der Westhuizen

Andrew and Elizabeth Warde

Simon and Sally Yong Gee

2028 $12,831

Aron and Jody Bendell

Matt and Vicki Clarkson

Obi and Bimpe Ekeocha

Matthew and Juliet Grigg

Alex and Ann-Elise Incani

Hanyi Jiang

Amanda Lago

John Lee and Judy Ku

Jack Lin

Rob and Andrea McDonald

Paul and Alicia McEniery

John and Kim Quinlan

Jim Shen

Ravi Sriskandarajah and Anna Plunkett

Tristan Van Riel and Lisa Honeychurch

2029 Under $999

Sarah Bender

33 IMPACT REPORT 2022

BGS Deductible Gift Recipient Fund Review

The School has three funds with Deductible Gift Recipient (DGR) status: the Building Fund, the Bursary Fund and the Library Fund.

The Rules for Deductible Gift Recipient Funds

Investment Overview

BGS Funds Review

(25 September 2018) and the BGS Bursary Fund Investment Strategy (6 December 2018) prescribe the governance obligations of the Finance Committee for funds held and invested in the School’s DGR Funds.

The objective of the BGS Bursary Fund is to generate sufficient earnings from its corpus base to fully fund needs-based bursaries, without eroding said corpus, or requiring financial subsidy from the operating cash flow of the School.

At 31 December 2022, the combined funds of the School’s DGR Funds were invested in the Queensland Investment Corporation (‘QIC’) Long Term Diversified Fund, ANZ Bank (for immediate-needs liquidity) and shares as follows:

QIC Long Term Diversified Fund Strategic Asset Allocation

Alternative assets comprises direct real estate, direct infrastructure, private debt, private equity, insurance-linked securities and liquid managed funds.

$1,450 7% $18,493 91% $320 2% Core Investment Profile 31 December 2022 ($000) Shares ANZ Bank (cash) QIC Growth Fund Fixed interest 20% Global equities 50% Alternative assets 30%
34 BRISBANE GRAMMAR SCHOOL

QIC Long Term Diversified Fund Performance

QIC Long Term Diversified Fund (‘QIC Fund’) performance is summarised as follows:

• Positive average earnings of 2.59% for the three years ended 31 December 2022.

• Positive average earnings of 4.2% for the five years ended 31 December 2022

• Positive average earnings of 6.54% for the 10 years ended 31 December 2022.

The QIC Fund seeks to achieve an investment return of the Bloomberg AusBond Bank Bill Index + 3% p.a after expenses but before QIC management fees and tax over rolling five-year periods. The QIC Fund is classified as a medium product risk, reflecting an expectation that the distribution of possible annual returns has a standard deviation of between 5-10%.

Investments in Shares

At 31 December 2022, the following investments in donated shares were held by the DGR Funds:

Application of Funds

DGR Funds were applied as follows throughout the year ended 31 December 2022:

Other $000 Building Fund 1,585 Library Fund 0 Bursary Funds $000 # Students Year Group 46 3 Needs-based 633 33 Indigenous 82 2 Total 761 38
DGR Fund Market Value $ Bursary $240,000 Building (STEAM) $79,975
35 IMPACT REPORT 2022

2022 Fundraising Report

In 2020, Brisbane Grammar School launched a comprehensive campaign to fundraise $10million for the STEAM Precinct and the Bursary Fund.

At the time of writing, the BGS community has contributed $8.5M. We are humbled and grateful for this outstanding result.

In 2022, we received 737 gifts from 542 donors.

Old Boy Bob Bryan has allocated $500,000 towards STEAM in his will. To honor this gift, the School will establish the Bryan Geosciences Centre within the STEAM Precinct.

Dave and Sophia Johnson gave $250,000 to name one of the collaboration spaces within the STEAM Precinct. John Nguyen and Joyce Ho gave $125,000 to name one of the laboratories. An anonymous donor gave $100,000 to the STEAM Precinct and the P&F Auxiliary also gave $100,000 to the STEAM Precinct on Giving Day.

Matt Yang, Shaun Munday and Allison McKelvy, Wren Bligh, Geoff Voller and Eric Lau all gave $50,000 to name some of the senior multidisciplinary classrooms in the STEAM Precinct.

Stuart Voller, Janine Griffiths, Chris Tan and Vin Yun, Boon Kua and Karen Chau, Norman Ma and Ida Lo, Sean Bemrose, Anthony Yap and Hanh Luu, Scott Wharton and Marina Portia, Matt and Heather Raine all gave $25,000 to name some of the junior multidisciplinary classrooms in the STEAM Precinct.

Allan and Lyn Davies donated $150,000 for Indigenous students to attend Brisbane Grammar School through a collaboration with The Clontarf Foundation. An anonymous donor gave $60,000 to the Bursary Fund.

Chris and Wendy Smith kindly gave $15,000 to install fans at the Tuckshop to keep P&F Auxiliary volunteers cool in the warmer months.

I take the opportunity to thank members of the BGS community who helped with fundraising efforts by hosting STEAM Precinct dinners, namely Stephen Bizzell, Howard Stack, Reza Abib, Ian Dickinson, and Terry and Meera Honan.

A special mention to Deputy Headmaster Teaching and Learning

Steve Uscinski who tirelessly spoke about the STEAM Precinct at all the STEAM dinners, and in addition hosted six STEAM events at Suncorp, during the 2022 rugby season.

Thank you to BGS Chairman

John Humphrey and Headmaster

Anthony Micallef for their support and encouragement.

I thank the BGS community for its support, which is transformational to the education of our boys.

36 BRISBANE GRAMMAR SCHOOL
Total Raised 2022 Inma Beaumont Executive Director Community Relations Telephone +61 7 3834 5212 Mobile 0407 996 794 Email inma.beaumont@brisbanegrammar.com Contact Total $2,163,295 STEAM/Infrastructure projects $1,622,589 Other $79,639 Bursaries $461,067
Raziq Qasimi ‘14
To support more boys to reach their potential through the power of education. Visit brisbanegrammar.com/giving DONATE NOW The Power of Education Young men like Raziq Qasimi ‘14 and current Year 12 student Ngailu Thompson have benefited enormously from the Bursary program, finding their way at BGS and beyond. 38 BRISBANE GRAMMAR SCHOOL
Ngailu Thompson

Brisbane Grammar School

Gregory Terrace

Brisbane QLD 4000

T +61 7 3834 5200

E reception@brisbanegrammar.com

W brisbanegrammar.com

CRICOS Provider Number 00489C

Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.