1958 in Australia

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The following lists events that happened during 1958 in Australia.

1958 in Australia
MonarchyElizabeth II
Governor-GeneralWilliam Slim
Prime ministerRobert Menzies
Population9,842,333
ElectionsFederal, VIC

Flag of Australia.svg
1958
in
Australia

Decades:
  • 1930s
  • 1940s
  • 1950s
  • 1960s
  • 1970s
See also:
  • Other events of 1958
  • Federal election
  • Timeline of Australian history

Incumbents[]

Robert Menzies
  • MonarchElizabeth II
  • Governor-GeneralSir William Slim
  • Prime MinisterRobert Menzies
  • Chief JusticeSir Owen Dixon

State premiers[]

  • Premier of New South WalesJoseph Cahill
  • Premier of QueenslandFrank Nicklin
  • Premier of South AustraliaThomas Playford IV
  • Premier of TasmaniaRobert Cosgrove (until 26 August), then Eric Reece
  • Premier of VictoriaHenry Bolte
  • Premier of Western AustraliaAlbert Hawke

State governors[]

Events[]

  • 14 January – Qantas Airways introduces a round-the-world air service from Australia to London.
  • 20 January – The Royal Australian Naval College is moved back to Jervis Bay Territory from Flinders Naval Depot in Victoria.
  • 28 January to 11 February – Harold Macmillan visits Australia, the first Prime Minister of the United Kingdom to do so while in office.
  • 14 February to 7 March – Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother visits Australia for the second time.
  • 21 March – John McEwen replaces Arthur Fadden as federal leader of the Country Party.
  • 24 March – The Cahill Expressway in Sydney opens, the first true freeway in Australia.
  • 3 April – A cyclone destroys most of the town of Bowen in Queensland.
  • 15 April – Monash University is founded in Melbourne, Victoria.
  • 11 May – Construction of Australia's largest man-made lake, Lake Eucumbene on the Eucumbene River in the Snowy Mountains, is completed.
  • 31 May – Henry Bolte's Liberal government is re-elected in Victoria.
  • 19 July – The last tram service runs in Perth.
  • 26 August – Robert Cosgrove retires as Premier of Tasmania, and is replaced by Eric Reece.
  • 30 September – The ANZAC Day Act 1958 receives Royal Assent, making ANZAC Day (25 April) a national public holiday in Australia.
  • 26 October – The wreckage of the Australian National Airways Avro 10 aircraft, VH-UMF Southern Cloud, is found. The aircraft had been missing since 1931.
  • 22 November – A federal election is held. The Liberal-Country coalition led by Robert Menzies defeats H. V. Evatt's Australian Labor Party with 74 seats to 45 in the House of Representatives, a majority unprecedented since Federation, gained from preferences from the Democratic Labor Party.

Unknown dates[]

  • Aquila Shoes, a shoe manufacturing company, founded.
  • Johnny O'Keefe has his first hit with Wild One.
  • Radio station 2UE publishes the first Australian Top 40.

Science and technology[]

  • 26 January – The HIFAR nuclear reactor at Lucas Heights goes critical for the first time.

Unknown dates[]

  • Australian engineer Dr. David Warren of Melbourne's Aeronautical Research Laboratories constructs the world's first flight recorder ("black box").

Arts and literature[]

  • 11 December – The National Institute of Dramatic Art (NIDA) opens in Sydney.
  • William Edwin Pidgeon wins the Archibald Prize with his portrait of journalist Ray Walker
  • Eric Smith wins the Blake Prize for Religious Art with his work The Moment Christ Died
  • Randolph Stow wins the Miles Franklin Award for To the Islands
  • Russel Ward releases The Australian Legend

Film[]

  • 8 March - The film Bridge on the River Kwai was released in Sydney.

Television[]

  • October - Autumn Affair, first television soap opera produced in Australia debuts
  • 1 November – The first episode of Bandstand goes to air on TCN-9, hosted by Brian Henderson.
  • 22 November – The 1958 Australian federal election is the first to be televised.

Sport[]

  • Athletics
    • 23 March – John Russell wins his second men's national marathon title, clocking 2:40:30 in Sydney
    • 6 August – Herb Elliott sets a world record for the one-mile dash (3:54.5) at Morton Stadium in Dublin, Ireland.
  • Cricket
  • Football
    • Brisbane Rugby League premiership: Brothers defeated Valleys 22-7
    • New South Wales Rugby League premiership: St. George defeated Western Suburbs 20-9
    • WAFL East Perth defeated East Fremantle 65 - 63
    • South Australian National Football League premiership: won by Port Adelaide
    • Victorian Football League premiership: Collingwood defeated Melbourne 82-64
  • Golf
    • Australian Open: won by Gary Player
  • Horse Racing
  • Motor Racing
    • The Australian Grand Prix was held at Bathurst and won by Lex Davison driving a Ferrari
  • Tennis
  • Yachting
    • Solo takes line honours and Siandra wins on handicap in the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race

Births[]

  • 3 January – Kerry Armstrong, actress
  • 5 January – Penny Whetton, climatologist (died 2019)
  • 6 February – Simon Baker, race walker
  • 10 February – Phil Weightman, politician
  • 15 February – Steve Bredhauer, politician
  • 22 February – Bill Feldman, politician
  • 28 February – Neil Bennett, politician
  • 16 March – Phillip Wilcher, pianist and composer
  • 20 March – Phil Anderson, cyclist
  • 29 March – Geoff Provest, politician
  • 11 April – Mark Furner, politician
  • 12 April
  • 19 April – Bill Byrne, politician
  • 5 May – Robert DiPierdomenico, footballer and media personality
  • 7 May – Alan John, composer
  • 11 May – Peter Antonie, rower
  • 11 May – Phil Smyth, basketball player
  • 3 July – Gary Buckenara, Australian Rules footballer
  • 6 July – Gary Humphries, politician
  • 13 July – Richard Glover, journalist, author and radio personality
  • 15 July – Phil Gould, rugby league identity
  • 12 August – Grace Grace, politician
  • 22 August – Jo-Ann Miller, politician
  • 30 September – Rod Welford, politician
  • October - Garry Pankhurst, former child actor
  • 13 October – Jim Krakouer, Australian Rules footballer
  • 22 October – Jan Jarratt, politician
  • 3 November – Ted Radke, politician
  • 15 November – Lewis Fitz-Gerald, actor and director
  • 24 November – Alex Douglas, politician
  • 26 November – Terry Rogers, politician
  • 27 November – Linda Lavarch, politician
  • 12 December – Monica Attard, journalist
  • 31 December – Geoff Marsh, cricketer

Deaths[]

  • 24 JanuaryWilliam Roy Hodgson, public servant (b. 1892)
  • 8 AprilEthel Turner, writer (b. 1872)
  • 15 MaySir John Northmore, Western Australian Supreme Court Chief Justice (b. 1865)
  • 4 AugustEthel Anderson, poet, author, and painter (b. 1883)
  • 13 SeptemberRussell Mockridge (b. 1928), cyclist
  • 14 OctoberDouglas Mawson, polar explorer (b. 1882)
  • 30 NovemberHubert Wilkins, polar explorer (b. 1888)

See also[]

References[]


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