1919 in New Zealand
The following lists events that happened during 1919 in New Zealand.
Incumbents
Regal and viceregal
- Head of State – George V
- Governor-General – The Earl of Liverpool
Government
- Speaker of the House – Frederic Lang
- Prime Minister – William Massey
- Minister of Finance – Joseph Ward until 21 August, then James Allen
- Chief Justice – Sir Robert Stout
Parliamentary opposition
- Leader of the Opposition – Joseph Ward.
Main centre leaders
- Mayor of Auckland – James Gunson
- Mayor of Wellington – John Luke
- Mayor of Christchurch – Henry Holland then Henry Thacker
- Mayor of Dunedin – James John Clark then William Begg
Events
- January: George Bolt ascends to a record height of.
- 1 February: Cecil McKenzie Hill, chief instructor for the Canterbury Aviation Company, is killed in an air accident while flying over Riccarton Racecourse. This is the first aircraft fatality in New Zealand.
- 4 February: New Zealand Rifle Brigade disbanded.
- 31 May: George Bolt flies from Auckland to Russell in a Boeing and Westervelt floatplane. The distance of is a record for a flight in New Zealand.
- 16 December: George Bolt makes the first experimental airmail flight in New Zealand. He flies from Auckland to Dargaville and back again on the same day, a total distance of approximately.
- December: Ministry of External Affairs established. James Allen is the first Minister.
Arts and literature
Music
See: 1919 in musicFilm
See: :Category:1919 film awards, 1919 in film, List of New Zealand feature films, Cinema of New Zealand, :Category:1919 filmsSport
- See: 1919 in sports, :Category:1919 in sports
Chess
- The National Chess championship was not held.
Cricket
- Plunket Shield: 25–29 December, Hagley Oval, Christchurch: Canterbury defeated Wellington by 7 wickets. See 1920 in New Zealand#Cricket for remaining matches in this Plunket Shield competition.
Golf
- The ninth New Zealand Open championship was won by Ted Douglas after a playoff against Sloan Morpeth.
- The 23rd National Amateur Championships were held in Napier
- * Men: H.E. Crosse – 2nd title
- * Women: Miss N.E. Wright
Horse racing
Harness racing
- New Zealand Trotting Cup – Trix Pointer
- Auckland Trotting Cup – Creina
Lawn bowls
- Men's singles champion – M. Walker
- Men's pair champions – J.B. Rosmon, W.J. Hueston
- Men's fours champions – A.J. Andrew, W. Given, O. Gallagher, Ernie Jury
Rugby union
- Wellington successfully defended the Ranfurly Shield against six challengers; Canterbury, Taranaki, Canterbury, Auckland, and Wanganui.
Football
- Auckland: North Shore
- Canterbury: Linwood, Excelsior
- Hawke's Bay: Waipukurau
- Otago: Northern
- Southland: No competition
- Wanganui: Eastbrooke
- Wellington: YMCA
Rugby league
- New Zealand national rugby league team
Births
January–February
- 4 January – Joseph Collins, boxer
- 23 January – Dorothy Winstone, educationalist and academic
- 26 January
- * Les Gandar, politician
- * Hepi Te Heuheu, Ngāti Tūwharetoa leader
- 4 February – Sam Cusack, community character
- 5 February – William R. Newland, potter
- 10 February – Dorothy Freed, author, composer, music historian
- 12 February – Bob Miller, surveyor, Antarctic explorer, conservationist
- 25 February – Jack Tizard, psychologist
March–April
- 3 March – Henry Lang, public servant, economist
- 6 March – Jim Knox, trade union leader
- 7 March – John Wyatt, cricketer
- 29 March – Lorrie Pickering, politician
- 30 March – Robin WIlliams, mathematical physicist, university administrator, public servant
- 5 April – Les Munro, World War II bomber pilot
- 14 April – Lester Harvey, rugby union player
- 29 April – Jack Ridley, civil engineer, politician
May–June
- 10 May – Eric Godley, botanist, academic biographer
- 16 May – Frank Callaway, music academic and administrator
- 19 May – Peter Hooper, writer, conservationist
- 28 May – Alex Lindsay, violinist, orchestral conductor and leader
- 1 June – Michael Miles, television presenter
- 2 June – Bert Walker, politician
- 4 June – Alister McLellan, mathematician, physicist
- 8 June – Guy Overton, cricketer
- 13 June – Phyl Blackler, cricketer
- 14 June – James Ward, World War II bomber pilot, Victoria Cross recipient
- 15 June – Doug Harris, athlete
- 16 June – Ces Mountford, rugby league player and coach
- 28 June – Charles Willocks, rugby union player
July–August
- 6 July – Ray Dowker, cricketer, association footballer
- 14 July – Ray Dalton, rugby union player
- 17 July – Alex Moir, cricketer
- 20 July – Edmund Hillary, mountaineer, explorer, philanthropist
- 22 July – Angus Tait, electronics innovator and businessman
- 1 August – Colin McCahon, artist
- 3 August – David Aubrey Scott, diplomat
- 8 August – Hōri Mahue Ngata, lexicographer
- 10 August – Murray Beresford Roberts, confidence trickster
- 22 August – Dick Brittenden, sports journalist
- 24 August – Colin Aikman, public servant, lawyer, diplomat, academic
September–October
- 5 September – John Rangihau, academic, Māori leader
- 24 September – Gordon Walters, artist, graphic designer
- 25 September – Tony George, weightlifter
- 29 September – Ruth Dallas, poet, children's author
- 30 September – John Stacpoole, architect, historian
- 7 October – James Boyer Brown, endocrinologist
- 8 October – Mac Anderson, cricketer, air force officer
- 11 October – John Warham, photographer, ornithologist
- 20 October – John Karlsen, actor
- 25 October
- * George Burns, rower
- * George Cawkwell, classical scholar
November–December
- 6 November – Allen Lissette, cricketer
- 7 November – Levi Borgstrom, carver
- 9 November – Janet Paul, publisher, painter, art historian
- 11 November – Lance Adams-Schneider, politician, diplomat
- 25 November – Keith Lawrence, World War II pilot
- 6 December – Cedric Hassall, chemist, academic
- 10 December – Walter Robinson, Anglican bishop
- 11 December – Lady Anne Berry, horticulturalist
- 12 December – Ida Gaskin, school teacher, quiz show contestant, politician
- 17 December – Rei Hamon, artist
- 21 December – Jack Williams, politician
- 29 December – Thomas Horton, air force pilot
Deaths
January–March
- 21 January – Thomas Thompson, politician
- 22 January – Carrick Paul, World War I flying ace
- 2 February – Charles Begg, surgeon, army health administrator
- 7 February – Donald Reid, farmer, landowner, businessman, politician
- 13 February – William Temple, soldier, Victoria Cross recipient
- 18 February – Searby Buxton, politician
- 19 February – William Tucker, soldier, farmer, politician, mayor of Gisborne
- 24 February – Alfred Fraser, politician
- 18 March – Isabella Siteman, farmer, philanthropist
- 25 March – Harry Burnand, engineer, sawmiller
April–June
- 3 April
- * Charlie Frith, cricket player and umpire
- * Mary Hames, farmer, dressmaker
- 23 April – Archie McMinn, rugby union player
- 24 April – William Speight, politician
- 6 May – Catherine Fulton, diarist, philanthropist, social reformer, suffragette
- 28 May – Edward Bartley, architect
- 1 June – Thomas William Adams, farmer, forester, educationalist
- 4 June – John Sharp, politician, mayor of Nelson
- 25 June – Hamilton Gilmer, politician
- 29 June – James McKerrow, astronomer, surveyor, public servant
July–September
- 22 July – Sir John Denniston, lawyer, jurist
- 3 August – Stuart Newall, military leader
- 6 August – James Dawe, cricketer
- 13 August – Jackson Palmer, politician
- 24 August – Thomas Broun, entomologist
- 26 August – Richard Molesworth Taylor, politician
- 4 September – Joseph Ivess, politician
October–December
- 13 October – James Stack, missionary, writer, interpreter
- 21 October – Alexander McMinn, teacher, journalist, newspaper proprietor
- 29 October – James Colvin, politician
- 3 November – Ellen Dougherty, nurse
- 15 November – Maria Marchant, school principal
- 24 November – George Randall Johnson, cricketer, politician
- 11 December – Takaanui Hohaia Tarakawa, Tapuika, Ngāti Rangiwewehi and Ngāi Te Rangi tohunga, historian and genealogist
- 15 December – Louisa Snelson, civic leader
- 18 December – Frederick Strouts, architect
- 29 December – Wiremu Hoani Taua, Ngāti Kahu leader, school principal