1949 in New Zealand
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The following lists events that happened during 1949 in New Zealand.
| |||||
| Decades: | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| See also: | |||||
Most New Zealanders became New Zealand citizens in addition to being British subjects, as the British Nationality and New Zealand Citizenship Act 1948 came into effect.
The National government of Sydney Holland was elected in the 1949 New Zealand general election.
Population
Incumbents
Regal and viceregal
Government
The 28th New Zealand Parliament continued. Government was the Labour until after the November general election, which saw it replaced by National Party.
Iriaka Rātana (Labour) is the first Māori woman elected to Parliament.[3]
- Speaker of the House – Robert McKeen
- Prime Minister – Peter Fraser then Sidney Holland
- Deputy Prime Minister – Keith Holyoake (from 13 December)
- Minister of Finance – Walter Nash then Sidney Holland
- Minister of Foreign Affairs – Peter Fraser then Frederick Doidge
- Attorney-General – Rex Mason then Clifton Webb
- Chief Justice – Sir Humphrey O'Leary
Parliamentary opposition
- Leader of the Opposition – Sidney Holland (National Party) until 13 December, then Peter Fraser (Labour).[4]
Main centre leaders
Events
- 1 January: the status of New Zealand Citizen comes into existence.[5]
- 9 March: Referendums on gambling (passed) and extending hotel hours (failed).
- 3 August: Referendum on military training (passed)
- 29 November: Elections to the four Māori electorates
- 30 November: General election won by National Party under Sidney Holland
Arts and literature
See 1949 in art, 1949 in literature, Category:1949 books
Music
See: 1949 in music
Radio
See: Public broadcasting in New Zealand
- 18 January – Radio station 3XC (later 3ZC) luanches in Timaru on 1160 kHz.[6]
- 27 April – Radio station 1YZ launches in Rotorua on 800 kHz.[7]
- 2 July – Radio station 1XH (later 1ZH) launches in Hamilton on 1310 kHz.[8]
- 27 August – Radio station 1XN (later 1ZN) launches in Whangarei on 970 kHz.[9]
- 22 October – Radio station 2XA (later 2ZW) launches in Whanganui on 1200 kHz.[10]
Film
See: Category:1949 film awards, 1949 in film, List of New Zealand feature films, Cinema of New Zealand, Category:1949 films
Sport
Archery
National Champions
Athletics
- George Bromley wins his second national title in the men's marathon, clocking 2:40:05.6 in Christchurch.
Basketball
- Interpovincial Champions: Men – Wellington
- Interpovincial Champions: Women – Palmerston North
Chess
- The 56th National Chess Championship was held in Wanganui, and was won by A.E. Nield of Auckland.[11]
Cricket
Horse racing
Harness racing
- New Zealand Trotting Cup – Loyal Nurse[12]
- Auckland Trotting Cup – Captain Sandy (2nd win)[13]
Thoroughbred racing
- The New Zealand horse Foxzami, ridden by W. Fellows, wins the 1949 Melbourne Cup
Lawn bowls
The national outdoor lawn bowls championships are held in Auckland.[14]
- Men's singles champion – S. Gooch (Kahutia Bowling Club)
- Men's pair champions – Frank Livingstone, J.H. Mingins (skip) (Onehunga Bowling Club)
- Men's fours champions – A.J. Murdoch, H.L. Rule, A. Rivers, Pete Skoglund (skip) (Otahuhu Bowling Club)
Rugby
Category:Rugby union in New Zealand, Category:All Blacks
- 3 September: The All Blacks lose two tests on the same day
- Ranfurly Shield
Rugby league
Soccer
- The Chatham Cup is won by Petone who beat Northern 1–0 in the final.[15]
- Provincial league champions:[16]
- Auckland: Eden
- Canterbury: Technical OB
- Hawke's Bay: Napier HSOB
- Nelson:
- Otago: Northern
- South Canterbury: Northern Hearts
- Southland: Brigadiers
- Taranaki: City
- Waikato: Rotowaro
- Wanganui: Wanganui Athletic
- Wellington: Seatoun
Births
- 22 January: Cilla McQueen, poet
- 24 January: Bill Bush, rugby player
- 28 January: Mike Moore, Prime Minister and Director-General of the World Trade Organization (d. 2020)
- 15 February: Ashraf Choudhary, politician
- 19 February: Brenda Matthews, sprinter
- 28 April: Steve Gilpin, musician (d. 1992)
- 8 June: Sherryl Jordan, writer (d. 2023)
- 6 July: Grant McAuley, rower
- 12 July: Dame Karen Poutasi, government official (d. 2026)
- 20 September: Alan McIntyre, field hockey player
- 10 October: Lance Cairns, cricketer
- 2 November: Bruce Biddle, road cyclist
- 29 November (in England): Dave Bright, soccer player
- 5 December: Ray Comfort, Christian minister
- Laurence Aberhart, photographer
- Laurence Clark, cartoonist
- John Hanlon, musician
- Donna Awatere Huata, politician
- Nigel Brown, painter
- Ian Ewen-Street, politician
Deaths
- 25 May: George William von Zedlitz, professor of languages
- 20 August: Annie Lee Rees, writer.
- 7 October: Matiu Ratana, politician and Ratana church leader
- 29 October: Patrick Harvey, rugby union player
- 20 December: Jane Mander, novelist
- 28 December: Jack Lovelock, athlete
