| 1940 in Australia | |
|---|---|
| Monarch | George VI | 
| Governor-General | Alexander Hore-Ruthven, 1st Earl of Gowrie | 
| Prime minister | Robert Menzies | 
| Population | 7,039,490 | 
| Elections | Federal, VIC | 
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| Decades: | 
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|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| See also: | |||||
The following lists events that happened during 1940 in Australia.
Incumbents
- Monarch – George VI
 - Governor-General – Alexander Hore-Ruthven, 1st Baron Gowrie
 - Prime Minister – Robert Menzies
 - Chief Justice – Sir John Latham
 
State Governors
Events

Story Bridge (built 1940), Brisbane in 2009 
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A.B.C. truck recording soldiers off to war, Darling Harbour, May 1940
- 28 February – The Australian 7th Division is formed.
 - 16 March – A state election is held in Victoria. The Country Party led by Albert Dunstan is returned to government.
 - 14 June – The Volunteer Defence Corps is formed, a militia force based on the British Home Guard.
 - 6 July – The Story Bridge is opened in Brisbane.
 - 19 July – The Australian cruiser HMAS Sydney takes part in the sinking of the Italian cruiser Bartolomeo Colleoni
 - 1 August – The first of sixty Bathurst-class corvettes, HMAS Bathurst, is launched in Sydney.
 - 13 August – An RAAF Lockheed Hudson crashes near Canberra, killing three members of Cabinet and the Chief of the General Staff.[1]
 - 3 September – The heavy cruiser HMAS Australia takes part in Operation Menace off Dakar.
 - 6 September – The British prison ship HMT Dunera docks in Sydney, carrying refugees and prisoners of war considered a danger to British security, for internment in Hay and Tatura.
 - 21 September – The 1940 federal election results in a hung parliament, with Prime Minister Robert Menzies remaining in office at the head of a minority government.
 - 16 October – Country Party leader Archie Cameron resigns and is succeeded by Arthur Fadden as acting leader.
 - 26 October – Double-decker buses replace the last cable trams in Melbourne.
 
Arts and literature
- Max Meldrum wins the Archibald Prize with his portrait of Dr J Forbes McKenzie
 - The Man Who Loved Children by Christina Stead is published.
 - The Magic Basket a musical play for children by Alfred Wheeler is published
 
Film
- Forty Thousand Horsemen, directed by Charles Chauvel and starring Chips Rafferty, is released
 
Sport
- Old Rowley wins the Melbourne Cup
 - Beaulivre wins the Caulfield Cup
 - Beau Vite wins the Cox Plate
 - New South Wales wins the Sheffield Shield
 - Eastern Suburbs win the 1940 NSWRFL season, defeating Canterbury-Bankstown 24–14. Western Suburbs finish in last place, claiming the wooden spoon.
 
Births
- 5 January – Athol Guy, musician
 - 19 January – Paul Calvert, Liberal Senator for Tasmania
 - 17 February – Marilyn Jones, ballet dancer
 - 22 February – Neil Brown, politician
 - 24 February – Ian Shelton, Australian rules football player (died 2021)
 - 27 February – Bill Hunter, actor (died 2011)
 - 1 March – Robin Gray, Premier of Tasmania (1982–1989)
 - 8 March – Don Barker, actor
 - 19 March – Andrew Taylor, poet
 - 20 March – Paul Neville, politician (died 2019)
 - 12 April – Jack Hibberd, playwright
 - 16 April – Marion Halligan, writer
 - 24 April – Trevor Kent, actor (died 1989)
 - 26 April – Ian Geoghegan, race car driver (died 2003)
 - 15 June – Ken Fletcher, tennis player (died 2006)
 - 17 June – Alan Murray, Australian golfer (died 2019)
 - 23 June – Diana Trask, country music singer
 - 25 June – Judy Amoore, athlete
 - 29 June – Ken Done, artist
 - 3 August – Judith Troeth, Liberal Senator for Victoria
 - 16 August – Bruce Beresford, film director
 - 18 August – Jan Owen, poet
 - 31 August – Jack Thompson, actor
 - 9 September – Hugh Morgan, businessman
 - 13 September – Kerry Stokes, chairman of the Seven Network
 - 15 September – Allan Andrews, NSW politician
 - 21 September – John Pochee, jazz musician (died 2022)
 - 3 October – Diana Warnock, radio broadcaster and politician
 - 4 October – Ian Kiernan, environmentalist, 1994 Australian of the Year (died 2018)
 - 5 October – Bob Cowper, cricketer
 - 15 October – Peter C. Doherty, medical researcher, Nobel Prize recipient
 - 19 October – Ian Causley, politician (died 2020)
 - 21 October – Peter Arnison, Governor of Queensland (1997–2003)
 - 1 November – John Bell, actor and theatre director
 - 4 November – John Sanderson, Governor of Western Australia (2000–2005)
 - 12 November – John Dowd, NSW politician
 - 7 December – Robin Miller, aviator and nurse (died 1975)
 - 19 December – Jane Mathews, judge (died 2019)
 
Deaths
- 3 February – John Henry Michell, mathematician (b. 1863)
 - 5 February – Bill Wilks, New South Wales politician (b. 1863)
 - 8 March – Michael Kelly, Catholic archbishop (b. 1850)
 - 16 April – Herbert James Carter, entomologist (b. 1858)
 - 20 April – Sir Ernest Gaunt, naval admiral (b. 1865)
 - 22 June – Monty Noble, cricketer (b. 1873)
 - 23 June – Hugh Denis Macrossan, Queensland politician and judge (b. 1881)
 - 6 July – Michael O'Connor, Western Australian politician (b. 1865)
 - 22 July – Sir George Fuller, 22nd Premier of New South Wales (b. 1861)
 - 27 July – Bluey Wilkinson, speedway rider (b. 1911)
 - 30 July
- Arthur Merric Boyd, painter (b. 1862)
 - Archibald Watson, surgeon and professor of anatomy (b. 1849)
 
 - 13 August
- James Fairbairn, Victorian politician (b. 1897)
 - Henry Gullett, Victorian politician (b. 1878)
 - Geoffrey Street, Victorian politician (b. 1894)
 - Sir Brudenell White, 10th Chief of the General Staff (b. 1876)
 
 - 9 September – Percy Abbott, New South Wales politician (b. 1869)
 - 11 September – Issy Smith, soldier and Victoria Cross recipient (b. 1890)
 - 22 September – Robert Blackwood, New South Wales politician (b. 1861)
 - 2 October – Albert Green, Western Australian politician (b. 1869)
 - 14 October – Helen de Guerry Simpson, novelist (b. 1897)
 - 25 October – Thomas Waddell, 15th Premier of New South Wales (b. 1854)
 - 31 October
- Frank Anstey, Victorian politician (born in the United Kingdom) (b. 1865)
 - John Keating, Tasmanian politician (b. 1872)
 
 - 2 November – Colin Rankin, Queensland politician and soldier (b. 1869)
 - 3 November – James Fowler, Western Australian politician (born in the United Kingdom) (b. 1863)
 - 23 November – Sir Stanley Argyle, 32nd Premier of Victoria (b. 1867)
 - 11 December – Belle Golding, feminist, suffragist and labour activist (b. 1864)
 - 20 December – Tom Foster, composer (b. 1870)
 
See also
References
- ↑ "Nation Mourns Victims of Air Disaster" (scan). The Canberra Times. 15 August 1940. pp. 2, 3. Retrieved 9 August 2017 – via Trove.
 
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