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词条 1938 in Australia
释义

  1. Incumbents

     State Premiers  State Governors 

  2. Events

  3. Arts and literature

  4. Sport

  5. Births

  6. Deaths

  7. See also

  8. References

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2013}}{{Use Australian English|date=February 2012}}{{Unreferenced|date=December 2009}}{{Year in Australia|1938}}

The following lists events that happened during 1938 in Australia.

{{Infobox Australian year
| monarch = George VI
| governor-general = Alexander Hore-Ruthven, 1st Baron Gowrie
| pm =Joseph Lyons
| population = 6,898,541
| australian =
| elections =SA, NSW, QLD
}}

Incumbents

  • Monarch – George VI
  • Governor-General – Alexander Hore-Ruthven, 1st Baron Gowrie
  • Prime Minister – Joseph Lyons
  • Chief Justice – Sir John Latham

State Premiers

  • Premier of New South Wales – Bertram Stevens
  • Premier of Queensland – William Forgan Smith
  • Premier of South Australia – Richard L. Butler (until 5 November), then Thomas Playford IV
  • Premier of Tasmania – Albert Ogilvie
  • Premier of Victoria – Albert Dunstan
  • Premier of Western Australia – John Willcock

State Governors

  • Governor of New South Wales – John Loder, 2nd Baron Wakehurst
  • Governor of Queensland – Sir Leslie Orme Wilson
  • Governor of South Australia – Sir Winston Dugan
  • Governor of Tasmania – Sir Ernest Clark
  • Governor of Victoria – William Vanneck, 5th Baron Huntingfield
  • Governor of Western Australia – none appointed

Events

  • 26 January – Australia officially celebrates its sesquicentennial, the 150th anniversary of European settlement. Unofficially, it is a Day of Mourning for Indigenous Australians.
  • 6 February – Three hundred beachgoers are dragged out to sea when three freak waves strike Bondi Beach in Sydney in an event known as "Black Sunday". A team of eighty surf lifesavers manage to rescue all but five people.
  • 13 February – Nineteen people die when Sydney ferry the Rodney, carrying 150 passengers, capsizes in Sydney Harbour while farewelling US Navy cruiser {{USS|Louisville|CA-28|6}}.
  • 1 April – New monthly newspaper Abo Call begins publication in Sydney, focusing on issues of Aboriginal rights and edited by activist Jack Patten.
  • 11 May – Two jockeys are killed and two are injured in a horse racing accident at Morphettville Racecourse in Adelaide, South Australia.
  • 25 October – Eighteen people die in Australia's worst air disaster when the Douglas DC-2 Kyeema crashes in the Dandenong Ranges in thick fog.
  • 15 November – Waterside workers at Port Kembla, New South Wales refuse to load a consignment of scrap iron destined for Japan, arguing that it would be used for munitions. Attorney-General Robert Menzies attempts to force the loading of the cargo, earning himself the nickname "Pig Iron Bob".
  • 21 December – A direct radio-telephone link is established between Canberra and Washington D.C.
  • 28 December – The Sydney Mail ceases publication.

Arts and literature

{{main|1938 in Australian literature}}
  • 31 March – Xavier Herbert wins the Commonwealth 150th anniversary literary award for his novel Capricornia.
  • 30 December – The Passing of the Aborigines by Daisy Bates is published.

Sport

  • 5 to 12 February – The 1938 British Empire Games are held in Sydney. Australia leads the medal tally at the games, winning 25 gold medals, 19 silver and 22 bronze.
  • 24 September – Carlton defeat Collingwood 15.10 (100) to 13.7 (85) in the grand final, becoming premiers of the 1938 VFL season.
  • 1 November – Catalogue wins the Melbourne Cup.

Births

  • 12 January – Lewis Fiander, actor (died 2016)
  • 12 January – Noel McNamara, crime victims supporter
  • 13 January – Daevid Allen, musician (Soft Machine) (died 2015)
  • 17 January – David Theile, backstroke swimmer
  • 25 February – Herb Elliott, athlete
  • 28 February – Dennis Olsen, pianist, actor and director
  • 1 March – Henry Reynolds, historian
  • 5 March – Mike Walsh, television presenter
  • 25 March – Anthony Carwardine, naval officer
  • 13 April – Col Joye, entertainer
  • 20 April – Betty Cuthbert, athlete (died 2017)
  • 5 June – Roy Higgins, jockey (died 2014)
  • 18 June – Kevin Murray, Australian rules footballer (Fitzroy)
  • 19 June – Ian Smith, actor and screenwriter
  • 20 June – Joan Kirner, Premier of Victoria (1990–1992) (died 2015)
  • 13 July – Ian Macphee, politician, Minister for Immigration
  • 23 July – Bert Newton, entertainer
  • 28 July – Robert Hughes, art critic (died 2012)
  • 9 August – Rodney Laver, tennis player
  • 22 August – Roger Gyles, lawyer and judge
  • 30 August – Murray Gleeson, High Court judge
  • 6 September – Ernie Sigley, entertainer
  • 8 October – Fred Stolle, tennis player
  • 17 October – Les Murray, poet
  • 30 October – Morris Lurie, writer (died 2014)
  • 8 November – Bob Skilton, Australian rules footballer (South Melbourne)
  • 16 November- Ian Booker, Accountant, All Round Good Bloke
  • 26 November – Rodney Jory, physicist
  • 11 December – Reg Livermore, actor, singer and television presenter
  • 21 December – Frank Moorhouse, writer

Deaths

  • 6 January – John Gavin (born 1875), film director
  • 15 January – Paul Raphael Montford (born 1868), sculptor
  • 21 January – Will Dyson (born 1880), cartoonist
  • 31 January – John Barnes (born 1868), politician
  • 16 February – Thomas Molloy (born 1852), WA politician
  • 21 April – Sir Talbot Hobbs (born 1864), architect
  • 11 May – Lawrence Wells (born 1860), explorer
  • 17 May – Nora Clench (born 1867), Canadian violinist
  • 17 June – Ranji Hordern (born 1883), cricketer
  • 19 June – Jack Hides (born 1906), explorer
  • 22 June – C. J. Dennis (born 1876), poet
  • 29 June – Sir Colin Mackenzie (born 1877), anatomist and museum administrator
  • 30 August – Evelyn Marsden (born 1883), survivor of the Titanic
  • 11 September – Sir Philip Whistler Street (born 1863), NSW Supreme Court judge
  • 12 October – Hugh Massie (born 1854), cricketer
  • 25 October – Charles Hawker (born 1884), politician
  • 29 November – John Sandes (born 1863), journalist and author
{{Commons category|1938 in Australia}}

See also

  • List of Australian films of the 1930s

References

{{Years in Australia}}{{Oceania topic|1938 in|countries_only=yes}}{{DEFAULTSORT:1938 In Australia}}

3 : 1938 in Australia|1938 by country|Years of the 20th century in Australia

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