1950 in Australia
Encyclopedia
See also:
1949 in Australia
1949 in Australia
-Incumbents:*Monarch – King George VI*Governor-General – William McKell*Prime Minister – Ben Chifley , then Robert Menzies-State Governors:*Governor of New South Wales – Sir John Northcott*Governor of Queensland – Sir John Lavarack...

,
other events of 1950,
1951 in Australia
1951 in Australia
See also:1950 in Australia,other events of 1951,1952 in Australia and theTimeline of Australian history.-Incumbents:*Monarch – King George VI*Governor-General – William McKell*Prime Minister – Robert Menzies-State Premiers:...

 and the
Timeline of Australian history
Timeline of Australian history
This is a timeline of Australian history.-BC:*c. 68,000–40,000 BC: Aboriginal tribes are thought to have arrived in Australia.*c. 13,000 BC: Land bridges between mainland Australia and Tasmania are flooded. Tasmanian Aboriginal people become isolated for the next 12,000 – 13,000 years.*c...

.

Incumbents

  • Monarch
    Monarchy in Australia
    The Monarchy of Australia is a form of government in which a hereditary monarch is the sovereign of Australia. The monarchy is a constitutional one modelled on the Westminster style of parliamentary government, incorporating features unique to the Constitution of Australia.The present monarch is...

     – King George VI
    George VI of the United Kingdom
    George VI was King of the United Kingdom and the Dominions of the British Commonwealth from 11 December 1936 until his death...

  • Governor-General
    Governor-General of Australia
    The Governor-General of the Commonwealth of Australia is the representative in Australia at federal/national level of the Australian monarch . He or she exercises the supreme executive power of the Commonwealth...

     – William McKell
    William McKell
    Sir William John McKell GCMG , Australian politician, was Premier of New South Wales from 1941 to 1947, and was the 12th Governor-General of Australia. He was also the oldest Governor General of Australia, at 93 when he died....

  • Prime Minister
    Prime Minister of Australia
    The Prime Minister of the Commonwealth of Australia is the highest minister of the Crown, leader of the Cabinet and Head of Her Majesty's Australian Government, holding office on commission from the Governor-General of Australia. The office of Prime Minister is, in practice, the most powerful...

     – Robert Menzies
    Robert Menzies
    Sir Robert Gordon Menzies, , Australian politician, was the 12th and longest-serving Prime Minister of Australia....


State Premiers

  • Premier of New South Wales – James McGirr
    James McGirr
    James McGirr was the Labor Premier of New South Wales from 6 February 1947 to 3 April 1952.A Catholic, McGirr was the seventh son of John Patrick McGirr, farmer and Irish immigrant, and Mary McGirr, whose maiden name was O'Sullivan. Born in Parkes, New South Wales, he grew up on a dairy farm near...

  • Premier of Queensland – Ned Hanlon
  • Premier of South Australia – Thomas Playford IV
    Thomas Playford IV
    Sir Thomas Playford, GCMG was a South Australian politician. He served continuously as Premier of South Australia from 5 November 1938 to 10 March 1965, the longest term of any elected government leader in the history of Australia. His tenure as premier was marked by a period of population and...

  • Premier of Tasmania – Robert Cosgrove
    Robert Cosgrove
    Sir Robert Cosgrove KCMG was an Australian politician, trade unionist, and twice Premier of Tasmania from 18 December 1939 to 18 December 1947 and 25 February 1948 to 26 August 1958....

  • Premier of Victoria – Thomas Hollway
    Thomas Hollway
    Thomas Tuke "Tom" Hollway was the 36th Premier of Victoria, holding office from 1947 to 1950, and again for a short period in 1952....

     (until 27 June), then John McDonald
    John McDonald (Australian politician)
    John James McDonald , Australian politician, was a Member of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly from 1911 to 1914....

  • Premier of Western Australia
    Premier of Western Australia
    The Premier of Western Australia is the head of the executive government in the Australian State of Western Australia. The Premier has similar functions in Western Australia to those performed by the Prime Minister of Australia at the national level, subject to the different Constitutions...

     – Ross McLarty
    Ross McLarty
    Sir Duncan Ross McLarty KBE MM was the 17th Premier of Western Australia.-Early life:McLarty was born in Pinjarra, Western Australia, the youngest of seven children of Edward McLarty, a farmer and grazier and member of the Western Australian Legislative Council, and his wife Mary Jane, née Campbell...


State Governors

  • Governor of New South Wales – Sir John Northcott
    John Northcott
    Lieutenant General Sir John Northcott KCMG, KCVO, CB was an Australian Army general who served as Chief of the General Staff during World War II, and commanded the British Commonwealth Occupation Force in the Occupation of Japan...

  • Governor of Queensland – Sir John Lavarack
    John Lavarack
    Lieutenant General Sir John Dudley Lavarack KCMG, KCVO, KBE, CB, DSO was an Australian soldier who was Governor of Queensland from 1 October 1946 to 4 December 1957, the first Australian-born governor of that state....

  • Governor of South Australia – Sir Charles Norrie
    Charles Norrie, 1st Baron Norrie
    Lieutenant-General Charles Willoughby Moke Norrie, 1st Baron Norrie GCMG, GCVO, CB, DSO, MC & Bar was a British Army general during World War II, following which he served terms as Governor of South Australia and the eighth Governor-General of New Zealand.-Army career:After education at Eton and...

  • Governor of Tasmania – Sir Hugh Binney
    Hugh Binney
    Admiral Sir Thomas Hugh Binney, KCB, KCMG, DSO was a British naval officer and administrator who was Governor of Tasmania from 1945 to 1953.-Early life:...

  • Governor of Victoria – Sir Dallas Brooks
    Dallas Brooks
    Brooks made his first-class debut for the Royal Navy against Cambridge University in 1919 as a right-handed batsman who bowled right-arm medium. The same season Brooks made his debut for Hampshire against Surrey in the County Championship...

  • Governor of Western Australia
    Governor of Western Australia
    The Governor of Western Australia is the representative in Western Australia of Australia's Monarch, Queen Elizabeth II. The Governor performs important constitutional, ceremonial and community functions, including:* presiding over the Executive Council;...

     – Sir James Mitchell
    James Mitchell (Australian politician)
    Sir James Mitchell GCMG was the 13th Premier of Western Australia, serving on two occasions, the Lieutenant-Governor of Western Australia for 15 years and the 22nd Governor of Western Australia....


Events

  • 25 January – The Tank Landing Ship HMAS Tarakan
    HMAS Tarakan (L-3017)
    HMAS Tarakan was a Mark III Tank Landing Ship, or LST, that served in the Royal Navy and Royal Australian Navy .The ship was laid down on 7 April 1944 for the RN by R. and W...

     explodes at Garden Island
    Garden Island, New South Wales
    Garden Island is an inner-city locality of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. It is located to the north-east of the Sydney central business district, north of the suburb of Potts Point....

     in Sydney
    Sydney
    Sydney is the most populous city in Australia and the state capital of New South Wales. Sydney is located on Australia's south-east coast of the Tasman Sea. As of June 2010, the greater metropolitan area had an approximate population of 4.6 million people...

    , killing 8 people.
  • 8 February – Petrol rationing
    Rationing
    Rationing is the controlled distribution of scarce resources, goods, or services. Rationing controls the size of the ration, one's allotted portion of the resources being distributed on a particular day or at a particular time.- In economics :...

     ends, nearly ten years after it was introduced during World War II
    World War II
    World War II, or the Second World War , was a global conflict lasting from 1939 to 1945, involving most of the world's nations—including all of the great powers—eventually forming two opposing military alliances: the Allies and the Axis...

    .
  • 6 May – A state election
    Tasmanian state election, 1950
    Elections for the House of Assembly were held in the Australian state of Tasmania on 6 May 1950.The Labor Party, led by Premier Robert Cosgrove, was seeking another term in office against the opposition Liberal Party, who had replaced Neil Campbell with Rex Townley as leader in February...

     is held in Tasmania
    Tasmania
    Tasmania is an Australian island and state. It is south of the continent, separated by Bass Strait. The state includes the island of Tasmania—the 26th largest island in the world—and the surrounding islands. The state has a population of 507,626 , of whom almost half reside in the greater Hobart...

    . The result is a hung parliament
    Hung parliament
    In a two-party parliamentary system of government, a hung parliament occurs when neither major political party has an absolute majority of seats in the parliament . It is also less commonly known as a balanced parliament or a legislature under no overall control...

    , but Robert Cosgrove
    Robert Cosgrove
    Sir Robert Cosgrove KCMG was an Australian politician, trade unionist, and twice Premier of Tasmania from 18 December 1939 to 18 December 1947 and 25 February 1948 to 26 August 1958....

    's Labor Party
    Australian Labor Party
    The Australian Labor Party is an Australian political party. It has been the governing party of the Commonwealth of Australia since the 2007 federal election. Julia Gillard is the party's federal parliamentary leader and Prime Minister of Australia...

     remains in power with independent support.
  • 13 May – A state election is held in Victoria
    Victoria (Australia)
    Victoria is the second most populous state in Australia. Geographically the smallest mainland state, Victoria is bordered by New South Wales, South Australia, and Tasmania on Boundary Islet to the north, west and south respectively....

    .
  • 23 June – The Parliament of Australia
    Parliament of Australia
    The Parliament of Australia, also known as the Commonwealth Parliament or Federal Parliament, is the legislative branch of the government of Australia. It is bicameral, largely modelled in the Westminster tradition, but with some influences from the United States Congress...

     passes the Communist Party Dissolution Bill, effectively banning the operation of the Communist Party of Australia
    Communist Party of Australia
    The Communist Party of Australia was founded in 1920 and dissolved in 1991; it was succeeded by the Socialist Party of Australia, which then renamed itself, becoming the current Communist Party of Australia. The CPA achieved its greatest political strength in the 1940s and faced an attempted...

    .
  • 26 June – Australian National Airways
    Australian National Airways
    Australian National Airways was Australia's predominant carrier from the mid-1930s to the early 1950s.-The Holyman Airways Period:On 19 March 1932 Flinders Island Airways began a regular aerial service using the Desoutter Mk.II VH-UEE Miss Launceston between Launceston, Tasmania and Flinders...

     Skymaster
    Douglas DC-4
    The Douglas DC-4 is a four-engined propeller-driven airliner developed by the Douglas Aircraft Company. It served during World War II, in the Berlin Airlift and into the 1960s in a military role...

     VH-ANA Amana crashes near Perth, Western Australia
    Perth, Western Australia
    Perth is the capital and largest city of the Australian state of Western Australia and the fourth most populous city in Australia. The Perth metropolitan area has an estimated population of almost 1,700,000....

    , killing 28. One passenger survived (ANA Skymaster Amana crash
    ANA Skymaster Amana crash
    The ANA Skymaster Amana crash was an aircraft crash which occurred near Perth, Western Australia on 26 June 1950. At 9:50pm, a Douglas DC-4 Skymaster aircraft named Amana, operated by Australian National Airways, departed Guildford aerodrome in Perth, Western Australia, heading for Adelaide...

    )
  • 26 July – The government announces that Australia will send troops to fight in the Korean War
    Korean War
    The Korean War was a conventional war between South Korea, supported by the United Nations, and North Korea, supported by the People's Republic of China , with military material aid from the Soviet Union...

    . The first Australian forces land in Korea on 17 September.
  • 28 October – The Smith's Weekly newspaper, founded in 1919, is published for the last time.
  • New South Wales
    New South Wales
    New South Wales is a state of :Australia, located in the east of the country. It is bordered by Queensland, Victoria and South Australia to the north, south and west respectively. To the east, the state is bordered by the Tasman Sea, which forms part of the Pacific Ocean. New South Wales...

     and Queensland
    Queensland
    Queensland is a state of Australia, occupying the north-eastern section of the mainland continent. It is bordered by the Northern Territory, South Australia and New South Wales to the west, south-west and south respectively. To the east, Queensland is bordered by the Coral Sea and Pacific Ocean...

     receive extraordinary annual rainfall.

Unknown dates

  • William Dargie
    William Dargie
    Sir William Alexander Dargie CBE was an Australian painter, known especially for his portrait paintings. He holds the record for the most Archibald Prize wins; eight. He was an official Australian War Artist during World War II.- Biography :William Dargie was born in Footscray, Victoria, the first...

     wins the Archibald Prize
    Archibald Prize
    The Archibald Prize is regarded as the most important portraiture prize in Australia. It was first awarded in 1921 after a bequest from J. F. Archibald, the editor of The Bulletin who died in 1919...

     with his portrait of Sir Leslie McConnan
  • The novel Power Without Glory
    Power Without Glory
    Power Without Glory is a 1950 novel written by Australian writer Frank Hardy. It was later adapted into a mini-series by the Australian Broadcasting Commission .- Publication :...

    by Frank Hardy
    Frank Hardy
    Francis Joseph Hardy, or Frank, was an Australian left-wing novelist and writer best known for his controversial novel Power Without Glory. He also was a political activist bringing the plight of Aboriginal Australians to international attention with the publication of his book, The Unlucky...

     is published.
  • The Ballet Corroboree, by John Antill
    John Antill
    John Henry Antill, CMG, OBE was an Australian composer best known for his ballet Corroboree.-Biography:Antill was born in Sydney in 1904, and was educated and trained in music at Trinity Grammar School, Sydney and St Andrew's Cathedral School. Upon leaving school in 1920 he became apprenticed to...

    , is first performed

Sport

  • General
    • Australia wins 34 gold medals at the 4th British Empire Games
      1950 British Empire Games
      The 1950 British Empire Games was the fourth edition of what is now called the Commonwealth Games. It was held in Auckland, New Zealand between the 4th and 11th of February 1950, after a 12-year gap from the 3rd edition of the games...

      , held in Auckland
      Auckland
      The Auckland metropolitan area , in the North Island of New Zealand, is the largest and most populous urban area in the country with residents, percent of the country's population. Auckland also has the largest Polynesian population of any city in the world...

      , New Zealand
      New Zealand
      New Zealand is an island country in the south-western Pacific Ocean comprising two main landmasses and numerous smaller islands. The country is situated some east of Australia across the Tasman Sea, and roughly south of the Pacific island nations of New Caledonia, Fiji, and Tonga...


  • Cricket
    • New South Wales
      New South Wales Blues
      The New South Wales cricket team are an Australian first class cricket team based in Sydney, New South Wales...

       wins the Sheffield Shield
      Pura Cup
      The Sheffield Shield is the domestic cricket competition of Australia. The tournament is contested between teams from the six states of Australia. Prior to the Shield being established, a number of intercolonial matches were played. The Shield, donated by Lord Sheffield, was first contested during...


  • Cycling
    • Sid Patterson
      Sid Patterson
      Sid Patterson was a world champion amateur and professional track cyclist from Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. While a teenager, Patterson won every Victorian and Australian title between 1,000 metres and ten miles...

       wins the world amateur pursuit cycling title in Belgium

  • Football
    • Brisbane Rugby League premiership: Easts
      Easts Tigers
      The Eastern Suburbs Tigers are a rugby league club based at Langlands Park, which is in the suburb of Coorparoo in Brisbane, Australia. They competed in the Brisbane Rugby League from 1934 to 1996. From 1996 they have competed in the Queensland Cup. Their jersey is traditionally an all gold jersey...

       defeated Wests
      Wests Panthers
      The Western Suburbs Panthers, often simply referred to as Wests, are a rugby league club from Brisbane, Australia. The Club is the oldest in the QRL and despite absences from the top grade in recent years and several name changes the club continued to operate...

       14-10
    • New South Wales Rugby League premiership
      New South Wales Rugby League premiership
      The New South Wales Rugby League premiership was the first rugby league football club competition established in Australia. Run by the New South Wales Rugby League from 1908 until 1994, the premiership was the state's and later the country's elite rugby league competition...

      : South Sydney
      South Sydney Rabbitohs
      The South Sydney Rabbitohs are an Australian professional rugby league football team based in Redfern, a suburb of South-central Sydney, New South Wales. They participate in the National Rugby League premiership and are one of nine existing teams from the state capital...

       defeated Western Suburbs
      Western Suburbs Magpies
      The Western Suburbs Magpies are an Australian rugby league football club based in the western suburbs of Sydney, New South Wales. Formed in 1908, Wests, as they are commonly referred to, were one of the nine foundation clubs of the first New South Wales Rugby League competition in Australia...

       21-15
    • South Australian National Football League premiership: won by Norwood
      Norwood Football Club
      Norwood Football Club, nicknamed, Redlegs, is an Australian rules football club belonging to the South Australian National Football League in the state of South Australia...

    • Victorian Football League premiership: Essendon
      Essendon Football Club
      The Essendon Football Club, nicknamed The Bombers, is an Australian rules football club which plays in the Australian Football League...

       defeated North Melbourne
      North Melbourne Football Club
      The North Melbourne Football Club, nicknamed The Kangaroos, is the fourth oldest Australian rules football club in the Australian Football League and is one of the oldest sporting clubs in Australia and the world...

       92-54

  • Golf
    • Australian Open
      Australian Open (golf)
      The Australian Open is one of the principal annual golf tournaments on the PGA Tour of Australasia, and also the OneAsia Tour since its formation in 2009. The event was first played in 1904 and takes place toward the end of each year...

      : won by Norman Von Nida
      Norman Von Nida
      Norman Guy Von Nida was an Australian professional golfer.Von Nida was born in Strathfield and grew up in Brisbane. He turned professional in 1933, after attracting attention by winning the Queensland Amateur aged just 18...

    • Australian PGA Championship
      Australian PGA Championship
      The Australian PGA Championship, formerly known as the Cadbury Schweppes Australian PGA Championship, is a golf tournament on the PGA Tour of Australasia. It is the home tournament of the Australian PGA and dates back to 1905...

      : won by Norman Von Nida

  • Horse Racing
    • Grey Boots wins the Caulfield Cup
      Caulfield Cup
      The Caulfield Cup, one of Australia's richest Thoroughbred horse races and the richest of its type in the world is held annually by the Melbourne Racing Club. The race is a handicap like the Melbourne Cup, which means that horses that compete in the Caulfield Cup are capable of running on the...

    • Alister wins the Cox Plate
      Cox Plate
      The W.S. Cox Plate is an Australian Group 1 Thoroughbred horse race held in Melbourne every October by the Moonee Valley Racing Club to honour W.S. Cox, the club's founder. For three-year-olds and over, the race is considered to be the Weight for Age championship of Australasia...

    • Comic Court
      Comic Court
      Comic Court was a most versatile post-war Australian bred Thoroughbred racehorse who set race records at distances of 6 furlongs and 2 miles...

      wins the Melbourne Cup
      Melbourne Cup
      The Melbourne Cup is Australia's major Thoroughbred horse race. Marketed as "the race that stops a nation", it is a 3,200 metre race for three-year-olds and over. It is the richest "two-mile" handicap in the world, and one of the richest turf races...


  • Motor Racing
    • The Australian Grand Prix
      Australian Grand Prix
      The Australian Grand Prix is a motor race held annually and is held to be the pinnacle of motor racing in Australia. The Grand Prix is the oldest surviving motor racing competition held in Australia having been held 76 times since it was first run at Phillip Island in 1928. Since 1985 the race has...

       was held at Nuriootpa
      Nuriootpa, South Australia
      Nuriootpa is the major commercial centre in the Barossa Valley in South Australia, about an hour's drive north of the capital, Adelaide, and 77 kilometres by rail...

       and won by Doug Whiteford
      Doug Whiteford
      Doug Whiteford was an Australian racing driver.Whiteford was best known as a competitor in the Australian Grand Prix which he won three times in four years. He was fondly remember for his Talbot-Lago T26 Formula One car which he used to win his second and third Grands Prix. His third win was at the...

       driving a Ford
      Ford Motor Company
      Ford Motor Company is an American multinational automaker based in Dearborn, Michigan, a suburb of Detroit. The automaker was founded by Henry Ford and incorporated on June 16, 1903. In addition to the Ford and Lincoln brands, Ford also owns a small stake in Mazda in Japan and Aston Martin in the UK...


  • Tennis
    • Australian Open men's singles: Frank Sedgman
      Frank Sedgman
      Frank Arthur Sedgman, born 29 October 1927, in Mont Albert, a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, was a tennis player who was arguably the world No.1 in 1952. In his 1979 autobiography Jack Kramer, the long-time tennis promoter and great player himself, included Sedgman in his list of the 21...

       defeats Ken McGregor
      Ken McGregor
      Kenneth Bruce McGregor was a former tennis player from Australia who won the Men's Singles title at the Australian Championships in 1952. He and his longtime doubles partner, Frank Sedgman, are generally considered to be one of the greatest men's doubles teams of all time...

       6-3 6-4 4-6 6-1
    • Australian Open women's singles: Louise Brough
      Louise Brough
      Althea Louise Brough Clapp was a World No. 1 American female tennis player.-Biography:She was born in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma but moved to Beverly Hills, California when she was four years old. She was taught by Dick Skeen and had a classic forehand and backhand and a paralyzing American twist...

       defeats Doris Hart
      Doris Hart
      Doris Hart is a former World No. 1 American female tennis player.As a child, she suffered from osteomyelitis, which resulted in a permanently impaired right leg...

       6-4 3-6 6-4
    • Davis Cup
      Davis Cup
      The Davis Cup is the premier international team event in men's tennis. It is run by the International Tennis Federation and is contested between teams of players from competing countries in a knock-out format. The competition began in 1900 as a challenge between Britain and the United States. By...

      : Australia
      Australia Davis Cup team
      The Australian Davis Cup team is the second most successful team ever to compete in the Davis Cup, winning the coveted title on 23 separate occasions, second behind the United States with 32....

       defeats the United States 4-1 in the 1950 Davis Cup
      1950 Davis Cup
      The 1950 Davis Cup was the 39th edition of the most important tournament between national teams in men's tennis. 26 teams would enter the competition, 22 in the Europe Zone, and 4 in the Americas Zone....

       final
    • US Open: John Bromwich
      John Bromwich
      John Edward Bromwich was a male tennis player from Australia who, along with his countryman Vivian McGrath, was one of the first great players to use a two-handed forehand....

       and Frank Sedgman
      Frank Sedgman
      Frank Arthur Sedgman, born 29 October 1927, in Mont Albert, a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, was a tennis player who was arguably the world No.1 in 1952. In his 1979 autobiography Jack Kramer, the long-time tennis promoter and great player himself, included Sedgman in his list of the 21...

       win the Men's Doubles
    • Wimbledon
      The Championships, Wimbledon
      The Championships, Wimbledon, or simply Wimbledon , is the oldest tennis tournament in the world, considered by many to be the most prestigious. It has been held at the All England Club in Wimbledon, London since 1877. It is one of the four Grand Slam tennis tournaments, the other three Majors...

      : John Bromwich
      John Bromwich
      John Edward Bromwich was a male tennis player from Australia who, along with his countryman Vivian McGrath, was one of the first great players to use a two-handed forehand....

       and Adrian Quist
      Adrian Quist
      Adrian Karl Quist was an Australian male tennis player.-Biography:Adrian Quist was born in Medindie, South Australia. The tennis legend grew up in Adelaide and once played Harry Hopman, however he lost, only because he gave Hopman a head start...

       win the Men's Doubles

  • Yachting
    • Margaret Rintoul takes line honours and Nerida wins on handicap in the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race
      Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race
      The Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race is hosted by the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia, starting in Sydney, Australia on Boxing Day and finishing in Hobart. The race distance is approximately...


Births

  • 1 January – Wayne Bennett, rugby league footballer and coach
  • 11 February – John Cobb, politician
  • 14 February – Phil Dent
    Phil Dent
    Phillip "Phil" Dent, born on 14 February 1950, in Sydney, Australia, is a former professional tennis player. Dent's high water mark as a pro singles player was reaching the Australian Open final in 1974, which he lost to Jimmy Connors 7–6, 6–4, 4–6, 6–3...

    , tennis player
  • 16 February – Malcolm Blight
    Malcolm Blight
    Malcolm Jack Blight AM is a former champion Australian rules football player and coach, and current television commentator. During the 1970s and 1980s Blight played for the Woodville Football Club in the South Australian National Football League and the North Melbourne Football Club in the...

    , Australian Rules football player
  • 20 February – Gary Manuel
    Gary Manuel
    Gary Manuel is a former football forward. He was a member of the 1974 World Cup squad in West Germany and represented Australia six times in total for one goal between 1969 and 1975. Manuel played for Prague and Pan Hellenic in NSW and represented the state on several occasions.-See also:...

    , football (soccer) player
  • 1 March – Estelle Blackburn
    Estelle Blackburn
    Estelle Blackburn is a journalist who has played a crucial role in the review of some controversial criminal cases in Western Australia.-Early life:...

    , journalist
  • 11 March – Sam Kekovich
    Sam Kekovich
    Sam Kekovich is an Australian media personality, sports commentator and former Australian rules football player.He is well known for his controversial behaviour, both on and off the field, and most recently for his series of satirical advertisements as the spokesman for Meat and Livestock...

    , Australian Rules football player
  • 18 March – Larry Perkins
    Larry Perkins
    Larry Clifton Perkins is a former racing driver and V8 Supercar team owner from Australia.-Career:...

    , ATCC/V8 Supercars racing driver
  • 30 March – Warren Snowdon
    Warren Snowdon
    Warren Edward Snowdon is an Australian politician. He is an Australian Labor Party member of the Australian House of Representatives. He represented the Division of Northern Territory from July 1987 to March 1996, and from October 1998 to November 2001.Since November 2001 he has represented the...

    , politician
  • 10 April – Mick Dodson
    Mick Dodson
    Professor Michael James "Mick" Dodson, AM is an indigenous Australian leader, a member of the Yawuru peoples in the Broome area of the southern Kimberley region of Western Australia. His brother is Patrick Dodson, also a noted Aboriginal leader.Following his parents' death, he boarded at Monivae...

    , indigenous leader
  • 15 April – Peter Cochrane
    Peter Cochrane (historian)
    Dr Peter Cochrane is an Australian historian and writer. In 2007, his book Colonial Ambition: Foundations of Australian Democracy shared the inaugural Prime Minister's Prize for Australian History with Les Carlyon's The Great War....

    , historian
  • 29 April – Phillip Noyce
    Phillip Noyce
    Phillip Noyce is an Australian film director.-Life and career:Noyce was born in Griffith, New South Wales, attended Barker College, Sydney, and began making short films at the age of 18, starting with Better to Reign in Hell, using his friends as the cast...

    , film director
  • 11 May – Gary Foley
    Gary Foley
    Gary Foley is an Australian Aboriginal Gumbainggir activist, academic, writer and actor . He is best known for his role in establishing the Aboriginal Tent Embassy in Canberra in 1972 and for establishing an Aboriginal Legal Service in Redfern in the 1970s...

    , indigenous activist
  • 15 May – Jim Bacon
    Jim Bacon
    James Alexander Bacon, AC was Premier of Tasmania from 1998 to 2004.-Early life:Bacon was born in Melbourne; his father Frank, a doctor, died when Jim was twelve, leaving him to be raised by his mother Joan. He was educated at Scotch College and later at Monash University, but he did not graduate....

    , Premier of Tasmania (2001–2004, d. 2004)
  • 26 May – Paul Omodei
    Paul Omodei
    Paul Domenic Omodei , Australian politician, was the leader of the Liberal Party and Leader of the Opposition in Western Australia from 24 March 2006 until 17 January 2008....

    , WA politician
  • 29 May – Lesley Hunt
    Lesley Hunt
    Lesley Hunt is a former tennis player from Perth, Western Australia.Particularly noted as a junior player, in 1964 at the age of 14 she won a rare double in the Western Australian Women's open, taking both the Open and Junior titles. She won the Australian junior championship in 1967 and 1968...

    , tennis player
  • 31 May – Warren Entsch
    Warren Entsch
    Warren George Entsch is an Australian politician currently serving as a Liberal member of the Australian House of Representatives representing the Division of Leichhardt in Queensland...

    , politician
  • 13 June - Belinda Bauer, actress
  • 15 July – Colin Barnett
    Colin Barnett
    Colin James Barnett , Australian politician, is the leader of the Western Australian Liberal Party, the 29th and current Premier of Western Australia since the 2008 election and served as the Treasurer of Western Australia in 2010. He was sworn into office by Governor Ken Michael on 23 September 2008...

    , WA politician
  • 15 July – Alan Hurst
    Alan Hurst (cricketer)
    Alan George Hurst is a former Australian cricketer who played in twelve Tests and eight ODIs between 1975 and 1979...

    , cricketer
  • 15 July – Peter Reith
    Peter Reith
    Peter Keaston Reith, , former Australian politician, was a Deputy Leader of the Liberal Party and then a senior Cabinet minister in the first two terms of the Howard Government.-Early life:...

    , politician
  • 17 July – Nick Bolkus
    Nick Bolkus
    Nick Bolkus is a former Australian Labor Party politician. He was a member of the Senate from July 1981 to 2005, representing the state of South Australia.-Early career:...

    , politician
  • 21 July – Allan Maher
    Allan Maher
    Allan Maher is a former Australian football goalkeeper, who was part of Australia's squad for the 1974 FIFA World Cup. Maher also participated in subsequent World Cup qualifying campaigns...

    , football (soccer) goalkeeper
  • 8 August – Philip Salom
    Philip Salom
    Philip Salom is a contemporary Australian poet and novelist.-Biography:Growing up on a farm in Brunswick Junction in the South West region of Western Australia. Salom had an isolated childhood before boarding at Bunbury during his high school years...

    , poet and novelist
  • 16 August – Jeff Thomson
    Jeff Thomson
    Jeffrey Robert Thomson is a former Australian cricketer. Known as "Thommo", he was one of the fastest bowlers ever to play Test cricket and was the opening partner of fellow fast bowler Dennis Lillee; their combination was one of the most fearsome in Test cricket history...

    , cricketer
  • 6 September – Robyn Davidson
    Robyn Davidson
    Robyn Davidson is an Australian writer best known for her book Tracks, about a 1,700-mile trek across the deserts of west Australia using camels. Her career of travelling and writing about her travels has spanned over 30 years....

    , writer
  • 11 September – Bruce Doull
    Bruce Doull
    Bruce Doull is a former Australian rules football player who played for the Carlton Football Club....

    , Australian Rules football player
  • 27 September – John Marsden
    John Marsden (writer)
    John Marsden is an Australian writer, teacher and school principal. Marsden has had his books translated into nine languages including Swedish, Norwegian, French, German, Dutch, Danish, Italian and Spanish....

    , writer
  • 14 October – Kate Grenville
    Kate Grenville
    Kate Grenville is one of Australia's best-known authors. She's published nine novels, a collection of short stories, and four books about the writing process....

    , novelist
  • 30 October - Tim Sheens
    Tim Sheens
    Tim Sheens is an Australian professional rugby league football coach and former player. He currently coaches the Wests Tigers of the National Rugby League and in 2009 was appointed coach of the Australian national team, the Kangaroos...

    , rugby league footballer and coach
  • 2 November – Graeme Murphy
    Graeme Murphy
    Graeme Murphy is an Australian dance choreographer. Together with his fellow dancer Janet Vernon, he has guided Sydney Dance Company to become one of Australia's most successful and well-known dance companies....

    , choreographer
  • 7 November – John Lang
    John Lang (rugby league)
    John Lang is an Australian former rugby league football coach and player. A Queensland State of Origin and Australian international representative hooker, he played his club football in Brisbane with the Eastern Suburbs Tigers and in Sydney with the Eastern Suburbs Roosters...

    , rugby league footballer and coach
  • 25 November – Alexis Wright
    Alexis Wright
    Alexis Wright is an Indigenous Australian writer best known for winning the Miles Franklin Award for her 2006 novel Carpentaria....

    , writer
  • 1 December – Ross Hannaford
    Ross Hannaford
    Ross Andrew Hannaford is an Australian musician. He is often referred to by his nickname "Hanna". Widely regarded as one of the country's finest rock guitarists, he is best known for his long collaboration with singer-songwriter Ross Wilson, which began as teenagers, and with whom he formed the...

    , guitarist (Daddy Cool)
  • 10 December – Robert Cusack
    Robert Cusack
    Robert Cusack was an Australian butterfly and freestyle swimmer of the 1960s and 1970s, who won a bronze medal in the 4x100m freestyle relay at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics....

    , swimmer
  • 12 December – Louis Nowra
    Louis Nowra
    Louis Nowra is an Australian writer, playwright, screenwriter and librettist.He is best known as one of Australia's leading playwrights...

    , writer and playwright
  • 18 December – Gillian Armstrong
    Gillian Armstrong
    Gillian May Armstrong is an award-winning Australian director of feature films and documentaries.- Career :Born in Melbourne, Victoria, Gillian Armstrong grew up in the eastern suburb of Mitcham. She graduated from Swinburne Technical College in 1968 where she studied theatrical costume design and...

    , film director
  • 22 December – Nick Enright
    Nick Enright
    -Life:He was drama captain of St Ignatius' College, Riverview in 1964, where, like Gerard Windsor and Justin Fleming, he was taught by Melvyn Morrow. At that school, he won the 1sts Debating Premiership in both 1966 and 1967....

    , playwright, director

Deaths

  • 2 January – James Dooley
    James Dooley (Australian politician)
    James Thomas Dooley served twice, briefly, as Premier of New South Wales during the early 1920s.-Early years:...

     (b. 1877), Premier of New South Wales (1921–1922)
  • 20 January – Ray Duggan
    Ray Duggan
    Raymond 'Ray' Duggan was an international Speedway first rode in the UK with the New Cross Lambs...

     (b. 1913), speedway motorcycle racer
  • 25 January – Chummy Fleming
    Chummy Fleming
    John William 'Chummy' Fleming was a pioneer unionist, agitator for the unemployed, and anarchist in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia....

     (b. 1863), trade unionist
  • 23 February – Henry Willis
    Henry Willis (Australian politician)
    Henry Willis was an Australian politician, born in Port Adelaide, South Australia to English mariner John Willis and Jane, née Emmerson. Having been locally educated, Willis worked at his father's tannery, and in 1884 became a committee member of the South Australian Literary Societies' Union...

     (b. 1860), politician
  • 28 February – Ted Theodore
    Ted Theodore
    Edward Granville Theodore was an Australian politician. He was Premier of Queensland 1919–25, a federal politician representing a New South Wales seat 1927–31, and Federal Treasurer 1929–30.-Early life:...

     (b. 1884), Premier of Queensland (1919–1925)
  • 19 March – Harry Wright
    Harry Wright (Australian footballer)
    Harry Lovegrove Wright was an Australian rules footballer who played with Essendon during the years following the formation of the Victorian Football League ....

     (b. 1870), Australian rules footballer (Essendon
    Essendon Football Club
    The Essendon Football Club, nicknamed The Bombers, is an Australian rules football club which plays in the Australian Football League...

    )
  • 14 April – Sir Albert Dunstan
    Albert Dunstan
    Sir Albert Arthur Dunstan, KCMG was an Australian politician. A member of the Country Party , Dunstan was the 33rd Premier of Victoria. His term as Premier was the second-longest in the state's history, behind Sir Henry Bolte...

     (b. 1882), Premier of Victoria (1935–1943, 1943–1945)
  • 6 May – Lancelot De Mole
    Lancelot De Mole
    Lancelot Eldin De Mole CBE, was an Australian engineer and inventor. He suggested the idea of what would become the tank to the British authorities before the First World War but his idea was not taken up at the time and the tank was brought to fruition later by others.-Life:De Mole was born in...

     (b. 1880), engineer and inventor
  • 15 May – Jack Hickey (b. 1887), dual-code rugby international
  • 11 June – Ernest Henshaw
    Ernest Henshaw
    Ernest Percival Henshaw was an Australian Labor Party politician who became a Member of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly....

     (b. 1870), WA politician
  • 20 June – Claude Jennings
    Claude Jennings
    Claude Barrows Jennings, born 5 June 1884, in St Kilda, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, and died 20 June 1950 in Adelaide, South Australia, was a cricketer who played for South Australia, Queensland and Australia....

     (b. 1884), cricketer
  • 14 July – Bill Howell (b. 1869), cricketer
  • 31 July – George Wise
    George Wise
    George Henry Wise was an Australian politician and solicitor.Wise was born in Melbourne and educated at Scotch College from five years of age to he matriculated in 1868. He became an articled clerk and was admitted to the bar in September 1874 and set up his own practice in 1877 in Sale...

     (b. 1853), politician and solicitor
  • 6 August – Edwin Corboy
    Edwin Corboy
    Edwin Wilkie "Ted" Corboy was an Australian politician. From 1918 until 2010 Corboy held the record as the youngest ever Australian Member of Parliament.-Early life:...

     (b. 1896), politician
  • 8 August – Fergus McMaster
    Fergus McMaster
    Sir Fergus McMaster is an Australian businessman, commonly known as one of the founders of the airline company, QANTAS. McMaster was born in Morinish, a town close to the city of Rockhampton, in Queensland...

     (b. 1879), co-founder of Qantas
  • 3 September – Michael Durack
    Michael Durack
    Michael Patrick Durack, was a pastoralist, and Western Australian pioneer. He was the son of Patrick Durack and Mary Costello, both Irish-Australians....

     (b. 1865), pastoralist and WA pioneer
  • 22 September – Edward Fowell Martin
    Edward Fowell Martin
    Brigadier General Edward Fowell Martin CB, CMG, DSO was an Australian Army Brigadier General who served in World War I.-Early life and career:...

     (b. 1875), soldier
  • 24 September – Dame Mary Turner Cook (b. 1863), wife of Prime Minister Sir Joseph Cook
  • 6 November – Frank Brennan
    Frank Brennan (Australian politician)
    Francis Brennan was an Australian lawyer and Australian Labor Party politician.Brennan was born at Upper Emu Creek near Bendigo, Victoria and was a younger brother of Tom Brennan, later an assistant minister in the conservative Lyons government. He studied law at the University of Melbourne and...

     (b. 1873), politician
  • 20 November – Erle Cox
    Erle Cox
    Erle Cox was an Australian journalist and science fiction writer.Cox was born at Emerald Hill, Victoria, an 15 August 1873, the second son of Ross Cox, who had emigrated from his native Dublin as a youth during the early gold rush days of the 1850s...

     (b. 1873), journalist and science fiction author
  • 16 December – James Fenton
    James Fenton (Australian politician)
    James Edward Fenton CMG was an Australian politician. He is notable for having been appointed a cabinet minister by two governments of different political complexions, but resigning from both governments on matters of principle.Born at Nette Yallock, near Avoca, Victoria, Fenton was educated at a...

     (b. 1864), politician
  • 29 December – Albert Lane
    Albert Lane (Australian politician)
    Albert Lane was an Australian politician. He was born in Windsor, New South Wales, and studied at public schools. He became an accountant and business manager. In 1917 he contested the federal election as the unsuccessful Nationalist candidate for the safe Labor seat of Dalley...

    (b. 1873), politician
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