1942 in New Zealand

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1942
in
New Zealand

Decades:
  • 1920s
  • 1930s
  • 1940s
  • 1950s
  • 1960s
See also:
  • Other events of 1942
  • Timeline of New Zealand history

The following lists events that happened during 1942 in New Zealand.

Population[]

  • Estimated population as of 31 December: 1,636,400[1]
  • Increase since 31 December 1941: 5200 (0.32%)
  • Males per 100 females: 94.2

Incumbents[]

Regal and viceregal[]

  • Head of StateGeorge VI
  • Governor-GeneralMarshal of the Royal Air Force Sir Cyril Newall GCB OM GCMG CBE AM [2]

Government[]

The life of the 26th New Zealand Parliament was extended for a further year (to 1942) due to World War II, with the Labour Party in government.[3]

Parliamentary opposition[]

  • Leader of the OppositionSidney Holland (National Party).[4]

Main centre leaders[]

Events[]

  • Japanese submarines operated in New Zealand waters in 1942 and 1943. They sent reconnaissance aircraft over Auckland and Wellington, but did not carry out any attacks.
  • 8 March – Japanese Warrant Officer Nobuo Fujita of the Imperial Japanese Navy conducts aerial reconnaissance of Wellington. His Yokosuka E14y reconnaissance plane had been catapulted into the air from the Japanese submarine I-25 which stored the plane in a sealed foredeck hangar. After a successful daylight tour the submarine and plane headed north to make an inspection of Auckland on 13 March.
  • 27 April – Sugar rationing is introduced.[5]
  • 24 May – I-21 briefly operated off northern New Zealand in May 1942. I-21's floatplane flown by Lt Ito Isuma conducted a reconnaissance flight over Thames and then Auckland on 24 May.
  • 24 June – A severe earthquake, the 1942 Wairarapa earthquake struck the lower North Island, followed by a severe aftershock on 2 August. Considerable damage resulted in Masterton, other parts of the Wairarapa, Palmerston North and Wellington.
  • June – Tea rationing is introduced.[5]
  • 9 December – 37 of the 39 female patients in Ward 5 at Seacliff Lunatic Asylum (psychiatric hospital) are killed in a night-time fire – the country's worst fire disaster at that time. [1]
  • 13 December – Abel Tasman's first sighting of New Zealand 300 years earlier was commemorated in Hokitika (planned for Ōkārito but it was cut off by flooding) by a Dutch delegation led by Charles van der Plas and hosted by the New Zealand government[6]

Arts and literature[]

See 1942 in art, 1942 in literature, Category:1942 books

Music[]

See: 1942 in music

Radio[]

See: Public broadcasting in New Zealand

Film[]

See: Category:1942 film awards, 1942 in film, List of New Zealand feature films, Cinema of New Zealand, Category:1942 films

Sport[]

Most sports events were on hold due to the war.

Horse racing[]

Harness racing[]

  • New Zealand Trotting Cup: Haughty [7]
  • Auckland Trotting Cup: Loyal Friend [8]

Rugby[]

Category:Rugby union in New Zealand, Category:All Blacks

  • Ranfurly Shield

Rugby league[]

New Zealand national rugby league team

Soccer[]

  • Chatham Cup competition not held
  • Provincial league champions: [9]
    • Auckland: Mount Albert Grammar School Old Boys
    • Canterbury: Western
    • Hawke's Bay: Napier HSOB
    • Nelson: No competition
    • Otago: Army
    • South Canterbury: No competition
    • Southland: No competition
    • Waikato: No competition
    • Wanganui: No competition
    • Wellington: Hospital

Births[]

  • 5 January: Trish McKelvey, cricketer.
  • 12 January: Doug Graham, politician
  • 23 January: Phil Clarke (rugby union), rugby union player[10]
  • 23 February: John Lewis, headmaster
  • 16 March: Gordon Whiting, Judge
  • 24 March: Kerry Burke, politician.
  • 21 April: Geoffrey Palmer, 33rd Prime Minister of New Zealand
  • 19 June: Merata Mita, filmmaker
  • 18 July: Mike Ward, politician
  • 4 August: David Lange, 32nd Prime Minister of New Zealand
  • 25 September: Peter Petherick, cricketer
  • 25 November: Barbara Bevege, cricketer
  • Judith Potter, high court judge.
  • Roger Walker. architect.

Category:1942 births

Deaths[]

Category:1942 deaths

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Historical population estimates tables". Statistics New Zealand.
  2. ^ Statistics New Zealand: New Zealand Official Yearbook, 1990. ISSN 0078-0170 page 52
  3. ^ "Prolongation of Parliament Act, 1941". New Zealand Law online.
  4. ^ "Elections NZ – Leaders of the Opposition". Archived from the original on 17 October 2008. Retrieved 6 April 2008.
  5. ^ a b "Tea and Sugar – War Economy – NZETC". nzetc.victoria.ac.nz.
  6. ^ "In friendship, free peoples". Evening Star (24377). 14 December 1942. p. 2. Retrieved 18 December 2021.
  7. ^ "List of NZ Trotting cup winners". Archived from the original on 22 February 2012. Retrieved 6 May 2009.
  8. ^ Auckland Trotting cup at hrnz.co.nz Archived 2009-06-17 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ "New Zealand: List of champions". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. 1999.
  10. ^ Knight, Lindsay. "Phil Clarke". New Zealand Rugby Union. Retrieved 28 December 2019.
  11. ^ "Nicol, Robina, 1861–1942". National Library of New Zealand. 1 January 1861. Retrieved 1 November 2019.
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