1937 in Australia
The following lists events that happened during 1937 in Australia.
| 1937 in Australia | |
|---|---|
| Monarch | George VI | 
| Governor-General | Alexander Hore-Ruthven, 1st Earl of Gowrie | 
| Prime minister | Joseph Lyons | 
| Population | 6,835,536 | 
| Elections | Federal, VIC, TAS | 
  | |||||
| Decades: | 
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|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| See also: | |||||
Incumbents
    
- Monarch – George VI
 - Governor-General – Alexander Hore-Ruthven, 1st Earl of Gowrie
 - Prime Minister – Joseph Lyons
 - Chief Justice – Sir John Latham
 
State Premiers
    
State Governors
    
- Governor of New South Wales – John Loder, 2nd Baron Wakehurst (from 8 April)
 - Governor of Queensland – Sir Leslie Orme Wilson
 - Governor of South Australia – Sir Winston Dugan
 - Governor of Tasmania – Sir Ernest Clark
 - Governor of Victoria – William Vanneck, 5th Baron Huntingfield
 - Governor of Western Australia – none appointed
 
Events
    
- 9 February – Cairns is hit by a tropical cyclone.
 - 15 February – An explosion kills 13 men at the State Coal Mine in Wonthaggi, Victoria.
 - 20 February – A general election is held in Tasmania. The incumbent Labor government led by Albert Ogilvie is returned to power.
 - 1 March – Bernard O'Reilly locates the wreckage of an Airlines of Australia Stinson airliner, VH-UHH City of Brisbane, in the McPherson Range in southern Queensland. Two survivors are rescued, five others did not survive.
 - 20 April – Regular airmail services begin between Australia and the USA.
 - 23 October – The ACTU calls on the government to boycott trade with Japan, following the Japanese invasion of China.
 
Arts and literature
    
- 24 June – The Commonwealth Literature Censorship Board replaces the Book Censorship Advisory Committee, and temporarily lifts the ban on Ulysses by James Joyce.
 - Sunbaker by photographer Max Dupain
 
Sport
    
- 3 March – Captained by Don Bradman, Australia defeats England in the Fifth Test at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, retaining The Ashes.
 - 25 September – Geelong become premiers of the 1937 VFL season, defeating Collingwood 18.14 (122) to 12.18 (90).
 - 19 November – Hubert Opperman completes an epic bicycle ride from Fremantle, Western Australia to Sydney, taking 13 days, 10 hours and 11 minutes.
 - Eastern Suburbs win the premiership in a shortened 1937 NSWRFL season. University finish in last place for the fourth year in a row, and voluntarily withdraw from the premiership at the end of the season.
 
Births
    
- 16 January – Lorraine Bayly, actor
 - 19 January – John Lions, computer scientist and academic (died 1998)
 - 21 January
- Peter Gallagher, rugby league footballer (died 2003)
 - Michael Beahan, Labor Senator for Western Australia (died 2022)
 
 - 25 January – John Watson, Liberal Senator for Tasmania
 - 4 February – John Devitt, Olympic swimmer
 - 19 February
- Lee Harding, science fiction writer
 - Colin Ridgway, NFL American footballer (died 1993)
 
 - 20 February – Robert Evans, minister and amateur astronomer
 - 21 February – Ron Clarke, Olympic athlete (died 2015)
 - 3 March – Kevin O'Halloran, Olympic swimmer (died 1976)
 - 7 April – Louise Faulkner, missing woman
 - 13 April – Col Joye, entertainer
 - 19 April – Lindsay Fox, businessman
 - 27 May – Peter Pinne, writer and composer
 - 1 June – Colleen McCullough, novelist (died 2015)
 - 11 June – Robin Warren, Nobel Prize-winning pathologist
 - 7 July Jocelyn Newman, politician (died 2018)
 - 26 July
- Alan Cadman, politician
 - Guy Green, Governor of Tasmania (1995–2003)
 
 - 28 August – Tony Marchant, Olympic track cyclist
 - 1 September – Ian Callinan, High Court judge
 - 4 September – Dawn Fraser, Olympic swimmer
 - 17 September – Gary Chapman, Olympic swimmer (died 1978)
 - 18 September – Barry Muir, rugby league footballer
 - 3 October – John Hodges, Minister for Immigration (1982–1983)
 - 7 October – Colin Guest, cricketer (died 2018)
 - 10 October – Bruce Devlin, golfer
 - 21 November – John Kerin, politician (died 2023)
 - 12 December
- Michael Jeffery, Governor-General of Australia (died 2020)
 - Judy Tegart, tennis player
 
 - 17 December – Kerry Packer, businessman (died 2005)
 
Deaths
    
- 11 February – Walter Burley Griffin, architect of Canberra (born in the United States and died in India) (b. 1876)
 - 18 March – Walter Wilson Froggatt, geologist and economic entomologist (b. 1858)
 - 7 May – Christina Jane Corrie, Queensland politician and suffragette (born in the United Kingdom) (b. 1867)[1]
 - 9 June – Charles Chewings, geologist and anthropologist (b. 1859)
 - 10 July – Thomas Brentnall, accountant and musician (born in the United Kingdom) (b. 1846)
 - 22 July – Ted McDonald, cricketer and Australian rules footballer (Essendon, Fitzroy) (died in the United Kingdom) (b. 1891)
 - 28 July – Sir George Hyde, 7th Naval Member and Chief of the Australian Naval Staff (born in the United Kingdom) (b. 1877)
 - 14 August – Bruce Smith, New South Wales politician (born in the United Kingdom) (b. 1851)
 - 28 August – George Prendergast, 28th Premier of Victoria (b. 1854)
 - 28 September – William Ramsay Smith, physician and anthropologist (born in the United Kingdom) (b. 1859)
 - 2 October – Sir Granville Ryrie, New South Wales politician, diplomat and soldier (b. 1865)
 - 8 October – Dame Eadith Walker, philanthropist and heiress (b. 1861)[2]
 - 4 November – Alfred Walter Campbell, neurologist (b. 1868)
 - 6 November – William Moore, art and drama critic (b. 1868)
 - 17 November – Jack Worrall, cricketer and Australian rules footballer (Fitzroy) (b. 1861)
 - 19 November – Rayner Hoff, sculptor (born in the United Kingdom) (b. 1894)
 - 27 November – Walter Howchin, geologist (born in the United Kingdom) (b. 1845)
 - 11 December – Godfrey Irving, 8th Chief of the General Staff (b. 1867)
 - 16 December – Sir Murray Bourchier, 5th Deputy Premier of Victoria and soldier (died in the United Kingdom) (b. 1881)
 
References
    
- "Death of Mrs. A. J. Thynne". The Courier-Mail. Brisbane: National Library of Australia. 8 May 1937. p. 15. Retrieved 9 March 2014.
 - MacCulloch, Jennifer, "Walker, Dame Eadith Campbell (1861–1937)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 29 October 2020
 
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