1917 in Australia
The following lists events that happened during 1917 in Australia.Incumbents
- Monarch – George V
- Governor-General – The Right Hon. Sir Ronald Munro-Ferguson
- Prime Minister – Billy Hughes
- Chief Justice – Samuel Griffith
State premiers
- Premier of New South Wales – William Holman
- Premier of South Australia – Crawford Vaughan, then Archibald Peake
- Premier of Queensland – T. J. Ryan
- Premier of Tasmania – Walter Lee
- Premier of Western Australia – Frank Wilson, then Henry Lefroy
- Premier of Victoria – Sir Alexander Peacock, then John Bowser
State governors
- Governor of New South Wales – Sir Gerald Strickland
- Governor of South Australia – Lieutenant Colonel Sir Henry Galway
- Governor of Queensland – Major Sir Hamilton Goold-Adams
- Governor of Tasmania – Sir William Ellison-Macartney, then Sir Francis Newdegate
- Governor of Western Australia – Major General Sir Harry Barron, then Sir William Ellison-Macartney
- Governor of Victoria – Sir Arthur Stanley
Events
- 20 March – Lieutenant Frank Hubert McNamara becomes the first Australian airman to receive the Victoria Cross.
- 5 May – A federal election is held. The incumbent Nationalist government led by Billy Hughes is returned to power.
- 5 May – Queenslanders reject a referendum to abolish the state's Legislative Council.
- 2 August – The General Strike of 1917 begins, a massive industrial action involving over 100,000 workers in support of railway workers in Sydney.
- 17 October – The two-halves of the Trans-Australian Railway meet.
- 15 November – A general election is held in Victoria. The Commonwealth Liberal Party led by John Bowser defeats the incumbent Labour government led by Sir Alexander Peacock.
- 29 November – The "Egg Throwing Incident" takes place in the town of Warwick, Queensland. A man throws an egg at Prime Minister Billy Hughes, and the refusal of Queensland Police Service to arrest him leads to the forming of the Commonwealth Police Force.
- 12 December – The Royal Australian Navy battlecruiser HMAS Australia is damaged in a collision with the British cruiser HMS Repulse.
- 20 December – The second plebiscite on the issue of military conscription was held; it was defeated.
- Daniel Mannix becomes a Catholic archbishop of Melbourne. He publicly supports Sinn Féin.
Arts and literature
- Foundation of Australian Entertainment Industry Association, the peak body for Australia's live entertainment and performing arts industry.
Film
- 19 March – Our Friends, the Hayseeds released in Sydney. The film made by Beaumont Smith was Australia's first substantial film comedy.
Sport
- The Melbourne Cup is won by Westcourt
- The 1917 NSWRFL Premiership is won by Balmain
- The Sheffield Shield is not contested due to the war
Births
- 17 February – Harry Gibbs, Chief Justice of the High Court
- 11 March – Nancy Cato, writer
- 14 March – John McCallum, actor
- 21 March – Frank Hardy, novelist
- 25 March – Barbara Jefferis, author
- 22 April – Sidney Nolan, artist
- 30 April – Mervyn Wood, Olympic rower
- 3 May – James Penberthy, composer
- 7 May – Lenox Hewitt, public servant
- 15 May – Ron Saggers, cricketer
- 25 May – James Plimsoll, Governor of Tasmania from 1982–1987
- 2 June – Peggy Antonio, female Test cricketer
- 14 July – Pat Moran, statistician
- 17 July – Jack Beale, politician and first Environment Minister
- 19 August – Laurie Aarons, leader of the Australian Communist Party
- 20 August – Dudley Erwin, politician
- 7 September – John Cornforth, Australian chemist, Nobel Prize laureate
- 12 September – Charles Jones, politician
- 19 September – Paterson Clarence Hughes, RAF pilot
- 30 September – Kim Beazley Sr., Federal politician
- 2 October – Phil Ridings, cricketer
- 5 October – Kenneth Jacobs, Chief Justice of the High Court
- 17 October – Sumner Locke Elliott, novelist
- 20 October – D'Arcy Niland, novelist
- 21 November – Tom Reynolds, VFL footballer
- 22 November – Jon Cleary, novelist
- 8 December – Ian Johnson, cricketer
- 12 December – Xavier Connor, jurist
- 25 December – Tim Walker, NSW politician
- 31 December – Pat Hills, NSW politician
Deaths
- 31 March – Joseph Cullen, NSW and WA politician
- 5 April – E. H. Coombe, South Australian politician
- 6 May – Thomas Joseph Carr, Catholic Archbishop of Melbourne
- 24 May – Les Darcy, boxer
- 15 August – John Haynes, NSW politician
- 26 August – William Lane, journalist and labour movement pioneer
- 17 September – Edward Petherick, book collector
- 31 October – Tibby Cotter, cricketer
- 10 November – Harry Trott, cricketer
- 20 December – Frederick McCubbin, painter