1899 in Australia

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1899
in
Australia

Decades:
  • 1870s
  • 1880s
  • 1890s
  • 1900s
  • 1910s
See also:
  • Other events of 1899
  • Timeline of Australian history

The following lists events that happened during 1899 in Australia.

Incumbents[]

Governors of the Australian colonies[]

Premiers of the Australian colonies[]

Events[]

  • 1 January – The Police Regulation Act 1898 is enacted in Tasmania, unifying several small regional police forces to form the Tasmanian Police Force.
  • 22 January – Leaders of the six Australian colonies meet in Melbourne to discuss confederation.
  • 4 March – Cyclone Mahina strikes Bathurst Bay in Queensland. Approximately 400 persons are killed, and the pearling fleet is sunk. A storm surge of up to 14 metres sweeps 5 kilometres inland.
  • 24 April – The 1,280-ton barque Loch Sloy hits rocks off Kangaroo Island and sinks, killing 31 persons.
  • 8 December – An electric tram service commences in Sydney, along George Street from the railway to Circular Quay.[1]
  • Colonial soldiers leave to fight in the Second Boer War.

Arts and literature[]

  • 8 October – The word "wowser" is first used by John Norton, editor of the Melbourne Truth newspaper.
  • George Washington Lambert wins the Wynne Prize for landscape painting or figure sculpture for his landscape Across the Blacksoil Plains
  • Dot and the Kangaroo, a children's book by Ethel Pedley, is published.
  • On Our Selection by Steele Rudd is published.

Sport[]

  • Merriwee wins the Melbourne Cup
  • Victoria wins the Sheffield Shield

Births[]

  • 7 January – John Collins, Chief of Naval Staff and High Commissioner to New Zealand (died 1989)
  • 17 January – Nevil Shute, writer (died 1960)
  • 21 January – Ernestine Hill, travel writer (died 1972)
  • 22 February – Ian Clunies Ross, scientist (died 1959)
  • 7 March – Eddie Ward, politician (died 1963)
  • 3 September – Frank Macfarlane Burnet, biologist and Nobel Prize winner (died 1985)
  • 24 September – William Dobell, artist, sculptor and painter (died 1970)
  • 21 October – Herb Steinohrt, rugby league footballer (died 1985)
  • 14 December – Frank McMillan, rugby league footballer and coach (died 1966)

Date unknown[]

Deaths[]

  • 21 February - George Bowen (born 1821), Governor of Queensland
  • 13 April - James Service (born 1823), former Premier of Victoria
  • 25 September - Elizabeth Tripp (born 1809), educator

References[]

  1. ^ No. 11 electric C-class tram, 1898, Powerhouse Museum.
  2. ^ Hellemann, Christian, -1954, Boona Schottische [music] / by Chris Hellemann, W.H. Paling & CoCS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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