1973 in Australia
1973 in Australia | |
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Monarchy | Elizabeth II |
Governor-General | Paul Hasluck |
Prime minister | Gough Whitlam |
Population | 13,303,664 |
Elections | SA, VIC, NSW |
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Decades: |
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See also: |
Incumbents
- Queen of Australia – Elizabeth II
- Governor General – Sir Paul Hasluck
- Prime Minister – Gough Whitlam
- Premier of New South Wales – Sir Robert Askin
- Premier of South Australia – Don Dunstan
- Premier of Queensland – Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen
- Premier of Tasmania – Eric Reece
- Premier of Western Australia – John Tonkin
- Premier of Victoria – Rupert Hamer
Events
- 10 February – Australia's first casino, the Wrest Point Hotel Casino, opens in Hobart
- 28 February – The federal voting age is lowered from 21 to 18. The state of New South Wales had already enacted such a change in 1970.
- 8 March – Whiskey Au Go Go fire
- 1 June – The first General Dynamics F-111 aircraft is delivered to the Royal Australian Air Force
- 25 August - Disappearance of Joanne Ratcliffe and Kirste Gordon
- 20 October – Sydney Opera House officially opened by Elizabeth II
- 1 December – Papua New Guinea is granted self-government prior to independence
- 31 December – AC/DC perform their first major gig in Sydney Australia.
- Removal of "White Australia Policy".
Arts and literature
Main article: 1973 in Australian literature
- Patrick White is announced as Australian of the Year
- 21 September – The Jackson Pollock painting Blue Poles is controversially purchased by the Whitlam government for US$2 million (A$1.3 million).
- "No award" was made for the Miles Franklin Award
Film
Television
- Certain Women (TV series) commences
- The novel Seven Little Australians adapted for television (10 part series)
- The New South Wales Rugby Football League negotiates its first television deal with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
Sport
- 8 September – Derek Clayton wins his fourth men's national marathon title, clocking 2:12:07.6 in Perth.
- Gala Supreme wins the Melbourne Cup
- Western Australia wins the Sheffield Shield
- Helsall takes line honours in the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race. Ceil III is the handicap winner
- Australia defeats South Africa 3-0 in the Federation Cup
Births
- 31 January — Portia de Rossi, actress
- 4 February — James Hird, Australian footballer and coach
- 15 February — Sarah Wynter, actress
- 16 February — Cathy Freeman, athlete
- 20 February — Kimberley Davies, actor
- 26 March — Matt Burke, rugby union footballer
- 13 April — Tammy Cole, field hockey defender
- 19 April — George Gregan, rugby union player
- 26 April — Stephanie Graf, middle distance athlete
- 29 May — Malcolm Allen, swimmer
- 21 June — Alyson Annan, field hockey player
- 1 July - Dean Farrow, Ozzie Legend
- 27 July — Gorden Tallis, rugby league footballer
- 2 August — Susie O'Neill, swimmer
- 14 August — Kieren Perkins, swimmer
- 20 August — Scott Goodman, swimmer
- 22 August — Mark Hickman, field hockey goalkeeper
- 2 September — Matthew Dunn, swimmer
- 5 September — Jennifer Whittle, basketball player
- 18 September — Louise Sauvage, wheelchair athlete
- 8 October — Toby Haenen, swimmer
- 14 October — Steven Bradbury, speed skater
- 23 October — David Beard, volleyball player
- 20 November — Matthew Smith, field hockey player
- 4 December — Steve Menzies, rugby league footballer
- 24 December — Kerry Nettle, politician
- 28 December — Alex Dimitriades, actor
- (Date Unknown) — Rodger Corser, Actor
Deaths
- 5 April – John Coleman (born 1928), Australian rules footballer
- 21 April – Arthur Fadden (born 1894), former Prime Minister
- 8 July – Arthur Calwell (born 1896), politician
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