1972 in Australia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
See also: 1971 in Australia, other events of 1972, 1973 in Australia and the Timeline of Australian history.
Contents |
[edit] Incumbents
- Queen of Australia - HM Queen Elizabeth II
- Governor General - Sir Paul Hasluck
- Prime Minister - William McMahon, then 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 - Angus Bethune, then Eric Reece
- Premier of Western Australia - John Tonkin
- Premier of Victoria - Sir Henry Bolte, then Rupert Hamer
- Chief Minister of the Northern Territory - Marshall Perron
[edit] Events
- Douglas Nicholls becomes the first Indigenous Australian to be knighted
- May 10 - Homosexual Law Professor George Duncan "drowns" in the Torrens River, Adelaide.
- October 6 - Faraday School kidnapping - teacher and 6 pupils kidnapped for $1 million ransom in Victoria.
- November 15 - First aircraft hijacking in Australia. Ansett Airlines flight 232 from Adelaide to Alice Springs with 28 passengers and a crew of 4. Followed by gun battle at Alice Springs Airport.
- December 2 - Gough Whitlam becomes Prime Minister
- Shane Gould is announced as Australian of the Year
[edit] Arts and Literature
[edit] Film
[edit] Television
- March 13 - Controversial T.V soap Opera Number 96 debuts on Network 0-10.
- November 16 - The Aunty Jack Show premieres on ABC-TV in Sydney.
[edit] Sport
- Piping Lane wins the Melbourne Cup
- Western Australia wins the Sheffield Shield
- American Eagle takes line and handicap honours in the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race
- Shane Gould wins 3 gold medals for swimming at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich
- Australia draws Ashes Cricket Test Series 2-2 with England
[edit] Births
- June 19 – Poppy Montgomery, actress
- June 24 – Robbie McEwen, cyclist
- June 24 – Ian Rutledge, field hockey coach
- September 1 – Louise Dobson, field hockey player
- October 11 – Claudia Black, actress
- November 1 – Toni Collette, actress
- November 13 – Samantha Riley, swimmer
- December 28 – Patrick Rafter, tennis player
[edit] Deaths
- July 7 - Owen Dixon (b.1886), former Chief Justice of Australia
- August 22 - Ernestine Hill (b.1899), author