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The following lists events that happened during 1933 in Australia.
| 1933 in Australia | |
|---|---|
| Monarch | George V | 
| Governor-General | Isaac Isaacs | 
| Prime minister | Joseph Lyons | 
| Population | 3,262,728 | 
| Elections | SA, WA | 
Incumbents
- Monarch – George V
 - Governor-General – Sir Isaac Isaacs
 - Prime Minister – Joseph Lyons
 - Chief Justice – Frank Gavan Duffy
 
State Premiers
- Premier of New South Wales – Bertram Stevens
 - Premier of Queensland – William Forgan Smith
 - Premier of South Australia – Lionel Hill (until 13 February), then Robert Richards (until 18 April), then Richard L. Butler
 - Premier of Tasmania – John McPhee
 - Premier of Victoria – Sir Stanley Argyle
 - Premier of Western Australia – James Mitchell (until 24 April), then Philip Collier
 
State Governors
- Governor of New South Wales – Sir Philip Game
 - Governor of Queensland – Sir Leslie Orme Wilson
 - Governor of South Australia – Sir Alexander Hore-Ruthven
 - Governor of Tasmania – Sir Ernest Clark (from 4 August)
 - Governor of Victoria – none appointed
 - Governor of Western Australia – none appointed
 
Events
- 8 April – A referendum is held in Western Australia, which is carried 2 to 1 in favour of secession from the Commonwealth of Australia.
 - 26 April – The seaplane carrier, HMAS Albatross, is paid off into reserve.
 - 10 June – The Australian Women's Weekly is first published.
 - 13 June – The Australian Antarctic Territory is established.
 - 30 June - The third national Australian Census is taken, recording the population at 6,630,600. [1]
 - 28 August – The Brisbane newspaper, The Courier-Mail, is first published.
 - 5 September – Australia signs a trade agreement with New Zealand.
 - 6 September – Windscreen wipers become compulsory on all Australian cars.
 - 13 October – The first traffic lights in Sydney become operational at the intersection of Kent and Market Streets.
 
Arts and literature
- Charles Wheeler wins the Archibald Prize with his portrait of Ambrose Pratt[2]
 - Blinky Bill: The Quaint Little Australian, the first Blinky Bill book is published by children's author Dorothy Wall
 
Film
- Errol Flynn makes his first film appearance, In the Wake of the Bounty, directed by Charles Chauvel
 
Sport
- 9 September – The 1933 NSWRFL season culminates in Newtown's 18–5 victory against St. George in the premiership final. Western Suburbs finish in last place, claiming the "wooden spoon".
 - Hall Mark wins the Melbourne Cup
 - New South Wales wins the Sheffield Shield
 - England defeats Australia 4–1 in The Ashes series
 
Births
- 2 January – Ed Casey (died 2006), banker and politician
 - 19 January – Leslie Dayman (died 2023), actor
 - 23 January – Bill Hayden (died 2023), Governor-General of Australia (1989–1996)
 - 29 January – Rosemary Adey, softball player (died 2013)
 - 12 February – Brian Carlson (died 1987), rugby league footballer
 - 22 February – Faith Thomas (died 2023), cricketer and hockey player[3]
 - 20 March – Ian Walsh (died 2013), rugby league footballer and coach
 - 15 April – David Martin (died 1990), Governor of New South Wales (1989–1990)
 - 27 May – Michael Crouch (died 2018), investor, water boiler manufacturer
 - 13 July – Kel O'Shea (died 2015), rugby league footballer
 - 25 July – Owen Abrahams (died 2006), Australian rules footballer
 - 27 July – Ted Whitten (died 1995), Australian rules footballer
 - 19 August – Patricia Kailis (died 2020), businesswoman, neurologist and geneticist
 - 30 August – Keith Payne, soldier
 - 14 September – Zoe Caldwell (died 2020), actress
 - 15 September – Monica Maughan (died 2010), actress[4]
 - 3 October – Neale Fraser, tennis player
 - 6 October – Diane Cilento (died 2011), actress
 - 11 October – Gary O'Callaghan (died 2017), radio personality
 - 19 October – Brian Booth (died 2023), cricketer
 - 29 October – John Andrews (died 2022), architect
 - 1 December – James Wolfensohn (died 2020), President of the World Bank
 - 5 December – Harry Holgate (died 1997), Premier of Tasmania (1991–1992)
 - 20 December – Ted Mack (died 2018), politician
 - 26 December – Ugly Dave Gray, television personality
 
Deaths
- 7 January – Bert Hinkler, aviation pioneer (died in Italy) (b. 1892)
 - 9 January – Daphne Akhurst, tennis player (b. 1903)
 - 10 January – Richard Buzacott, Western Australian politician (b. 1867)
 - 17 January – John Hodges, cricketer (born in the United Kingdom) (b. 1855)
 - 5 February – Josiah Thomas, New South Wales politician (born in the United Kingdom) (b. 1863)
 - 16 February – Archie Jackson, cricketer (born in the United Kingdom) (b. 1909)
 - 21 March – James Edmond, journalist (born in the United Kingdom) (b. 1859)
 - 15 April – Alfred Stephens, writer and literary critic (b. 1865)
 - 20 April – Sir William Rooke Creswell, 1st Naval Officer Commanding the Commonwealth Naval Forces (born in Gibraltar) (b. 1852)
 - 30 April – Robert Hamilton Russell, surgeon (born in the United Kingdom) (b. 1860)
 - 4 June – Herbert Basedow, South Australian politician, anthropologist, geologist and explorer (b. 1881)
 - 22 June – Harold Desbrowe-Annear, architect (b. 1865)
 - 20 July – William Lowrie, agricultural educationist (b. 1857)
 - 26 July – Sir Joseph Verco, physician and conchologist (b. 1851)
 - 10 August – Alf Morgans, 4th Premier of Western Australia (born in the United Kingdom) (b. 1850)
 - 7 October – Sir Alexander Peacock, 20th Premier of Victoria (b. 1861)
 - 15 November – Affie Jarvis, cricketer (b. 1860)
 - 19 November – Hugo Throssell, soldier and Victoria Cross recipient (b. 1884)
 
See also
References
- ↑ 1933 Census - Bulletin No 1.pdf
 - ↑ "Winner: Archibald Prize 1933 - Charles Wheeler". artgallery.nsw.gov.au. Art Gallery of NSW. Retrieved 19 August 2017.
 - ↑ Faith Thomas, the first Indigenous woman to play cricket for Australia, dies aged 90
 - ↑ Carman, Gerry (9 January 2010). "'Wonderful' thespian a real trouper". The Sydney Morning Herald.
 
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