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1951 in Australia

none

1951 in Australia

none

FieldValue
monarchGeorge VI
governor-generalWilliam McKell
pmRobert Menzies
population8,421,775
elections[Federal](1951-australian-federal-election)

The following lists events that happened during 1951 in Australia.

| governor-general = William McKell

Incumbents

[[Robert Menzies
  • Monarch – George VI
  • Governor-General – (Sir) William McKell
  • Prime Minister – Robert Menzies
  • Chief Justice – Sir John Latham

State Premiers

  • Premier of New South Wales – James McGirr
  • Premier of Queensland – Ned Hanlon
  • Premier of South Australia – Thomas Playford IV
  • Premier of Tasmania – Robert Cosgrove
  • Premier of Victoria – John McDonald
  • Premier of Western Australia – Ross McLarty

State Governors

  • Governor of New South Wales – Sir John Northcott
  • Governor of Queensland – Sir John Lavarack
  • Governor of South Australia – Sir Charles Norrie
  • Governor of Tasmania – Sir Hugh Binney (until 8 May), then Sir Ronald Cross, 1st Baronet (from 22 August)
  • Governor of Victoria – Sir Dallas Brooks
  • Governor of Western Australia – Sir James Mitchell (until 1 July), then Sir Charles Gairdner (from 6 November)

Events

Five Latvian girls in the bush near Brisbane, 1951
  • 1 January – The 50th anniversary of Australian federation is celebrated.
  • 19 February – Jean Lee becomes the last woman to be hanged in Australia, when she, Robert Clayton and Norman Andrews are executed in Melbourne for the murder of a 73-year-old man.
  • 1 March – The Bank of Australasia merges with the Union Bank of Australia to form the ANZ Bank.
  • 9 March – The High Court of Australia rules in the case Australian Communist Party v Commonwealth that the Communist Party Dissolution Bill 1950, passed by the parliament to ban the Communist Party of Australia, was unconstitutional.
  • 19 March – The Governor-General, William McKell, issues a double dissolution of parliament for the second time in its history, citing the Senate's referral of the Commonwealth Bank Bill as a "failure to pass" the bill.
  • 12 April – Conscription begins as the first call-up notice is issued under the National Service Act (1951), requiring Australian 18-year-old males to undergo compulsory military training.
  • 28 April – A federal election is held. The Liberal government of Robert Menzies retains power.
  • 8 June – The first lessons of the School of the Air are broadcast from the Royal Flying Doctor Service in Adelaide.
  • 13 June – Labor leader and former Prime Minister Ben Chifley suddenly dies of a heart attack.
  • 20 June – Herbert Vere Evatt succeeds Ben Chifley as leader of the Labor Party.
  • 16 August – The Australian Financial Review is first published.
  • 1 September – The Anzus Treaty, between Australia, New Zealand and the United States, is signed.
  • 9 September – Australia signs the Treaty of San Francisco, formalising peace with Japan.
  • 22 September – A federal referendum is held, proposing to alter the Australian Constitution to allow the banning of the Communist Party. The referendum was not carried.
  • 4 October – Francis McEncroe sells the first Chiko Rolls at the Wagga Wagga agricultural show.
  • 15 October – A De Havilland Dove aircraft crashes near Kalgoorlie killing all 7 on board.
  • 13 November – William McKell is gazetted a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George, becoming the only Governor-General of Australia to be knighted during their term.

Arts and literature

Main article: 1951 in Australian literature

  • Ivor Hele wins the Archibald Prize with his portrait of Laurie Thomas
  • Justin O'Brien wins the inaugural Blake Prize for Religious Art with his work The Virgin Enthroned

Sport

  • Athletics
    • 5 March – Gordon Stanley wins the men's national marathon title, clocking 2:59:44.6 in Hobart.
  • Cricket
    • Victoria wins the Sheffield Shield
    • Australia defeats England 4–1 in The Ashes
  • Football
    • The 1951 French rugby league tour of Australia and New Zealand is conducted
    • Bledisloe Cup: won by the All Blacks
    • Brisbane Rugby League premiership: Souths defeated Easts 20-10
    • New South Wales Rugby League premiership: South Sydney defeated Manly-Warringah 42-14
    • South Australian National Football League premiership: won by Port Adelaide
    • Victorian Football League premiership: Geelong defeated Essendon 81-70
  • Golf
    • Australian Open: won by Peter Thomson
    • Australian PGA Championship: won by Norman Von Nida
  • Horse racing
    • Basha Felika wins the Caulfield Cup
    • Bronton wins the Cox Plate
    • Delta wins the Melbourne Cup
  • Motor racing
    • The Australian Grand Prix was held at Narrogin and won by Warwick Pratley driving a George Reed Special
  • Tennis
    • Australian Open men's singles: Dick Savitt defeats Ken McGregor 6-3 2–6 6-3 6-1
    • Australian Open women's singles: Nancye Wynne Bolton defeats Thelma Coyne Long 6-1 7-5
    • Davis Cup: Australia defeats the United States 3–2 in the 1951 Davis Cup final
    • US Open: Frank Sedgman wins the Men's Singles
    • Wimbledon: Ken McGregor and Frank Sedgman win the Men's Doubles
  • Yachting
    • Margaret Rintoul takes line honours and Struen Marie wins on handicap in the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race

Births

  • 19 January – Charles Blunt, politician
  • 20 January – Clyde Sefton, road cyclist
  • 22 January – Steve J. Spears, actor, singer, and playwright (died 2007)
  • 26 February – Wayne Goss, Premier of Queensland (died 2014)
  • 29 April – Jon Stanhope, Chief Minister of the ACT
  • 29 May – Don Baird, pole vaulter
  • 4 July – John Alexander, tennis player and politician
  • 6 July – Geoffrey Rush, actor
  • 31 July – Evonne Goolagong Cawley, tennis player
  • 6 August – Daryl Somers, television personality
  • 30 August –
    • Danny Clark, track cyclist and road bicycle racer
    • Brad Hazzard, politician
  • 9 September – Alexander Downer, politician
  • 27 September – Geoff Gallop, Premier of Western Australia
  • 9 October – Rod Galt, Australian rules footballer (died 2019)
  • 14 November – Shelley Hancock, politician
  • 1 December – Doug Mulray, radio personality (died 2023)
  • 18 December – Andy Thomas, astronaut
  • 22 December – Jan Stephenson, professional golfer

Deaths

  • 29 January – Frank Tarrant, cricketer (b. 1880)
  • 18 April – Daisy Bates, journalist and anthropologist (born in Ireland) (b. 1859)
  • 27 May – Sir Thomas Blamey, field marshal (b. 1884)
  • 11 June – William Higgs, Queensland politician (b. 1862)
  • 13 June – Ben Chifley, 16th Prime Minister of Australia (b. 1885)
  • 17 June - Vin Coutie, footballer (b. 1881)
  • 3 July – Sydney Jephcott, poet (b. 1864)
  • 4 October – Bartlett Adamson, journalist, poet, author and political activist (b. 1884)
  • 10 December – Ernest Edwin Mitchell, composer (b. 1865)

References

References

  1. [http://www.assoa.nt.edu.au/_HISTORY/how_it_began.html How It Began] {{Webarchive. link. (8 April 2011 , Alice Springs School of the Air.)
  2. [http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article48994805 "Seven Dead In W.A. Air Crash"] ''The West Australian'' – 16 October 1951, p.1 (National Library of Australia) Retrieved 2012-08-24
  3. "Frank Tarrant".
  4. [https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/adamson-george-ernest-bartlett-9309 Adamson, George Ernest Bartlett (1884–1951)]
  5. (19 December 1951). "OBITUARY". [[The Advertiser (Adelaide)]].
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