1922 in Australia
The following lists events that happened during 1922 in Australia.Incumbents
- Monarch – George V
- Governor-General – Henry Forster, 1st Baron Forster of Lepe
- Prime Minister – Billy Hughes
- Chief Justice – Adrian Knox
State premiers
- Premier of New South Wales – James Dooley, then George Fuller
- Premier of Queensland – Ted Theodore
- Premier of South Australia – Henry Barwell
- Premier of Tasmania – Walter Lee, then John Hayes
- Premier of Western Australia – James Mitchell
- Premier of Victoria – Harry Lawson
State governors
- Governor of New South Wales – Sir Walter Davidson
- Governor of Queensland – Sir Matthew Nathan
- Governor of South Australia – Sir William Weigall, then Sir Tom Bridges
- Governor of Tasmania – Sir William Allardyce
- Governor of Victoria – George Rous, 3rd Earl of Stradbroke
- Governor of Western Australia – Sir Francis Newdegate
Events
- 14 February – Women are allowed to stand for parliament in Tasmania.
- 22 March – The Queensland Legislative Council, the upper house of the Parliament of Queensland is abolished.
- 10 June – A general election is held in Tasmania, which results in a hung parliament.
- 3 July – Queensland abolishes capital punishment, the first state in Australia to do so.
- 12 August – The Country Party and the Nationalist Party form a coalition government in Tasmania, with John Hayes as Premier.
Science and technology
- 21 September – A total solar eclipse occurs over Australia, allowing scientists to test Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity.
Arts and literature
- 4 May – British author D. H. Lawrence arrives in Australia for a three-month holiday, where he will meet Mollie Skinner and write the novel Kangaroo.
Sport
- 28 February – Victoria wins the Sheffield Shield.
- 30 September – Fitzroy wins the 1922 VFL Grand Final, defeating Collingwood 11.13 to 9.14.
- 7 November – King Ingoda wins the Melbourne Cup.
- The 1922 NSWRFL Premiership is won by North Sydney who defeated Glebe in the final.
Births
- 5 January – Anthony Synnot, Chief of the Defence Force
- 15 January – Eric Willis, Premier of New South Wales
- 23 January – Tom Lewis, Premier of New South Wales
- 21 February – Fos Williams, Australian rules footballer
- 24 February – Bill Morris, Australian rules footballer
- 14 March – Bob Bignall, soccer player
- 15 March – Hesba Fay Brinsmead, children's author
- 28 March – Neville Bonner, first Indigenous federal MP
- 29 March – Mac Holten, Australian rules footballer and politician
- 30 March – John McLeay, Jr., politician
- 10 April – Nancy Millis, microbiologist
- 9 May – Col Hoy, cricket umpire
- 12 May – Arthur Gorrie, Hobby shop proprietor
- 7 July – Robert Raymond, filmmaker and television pioneer
- 1 August – Pat McDonald, actress
- 23 August – Ronald Wilson, High Court justice
- 30 August – Lionel Murphy, Attorney-General and High Court justice
- 25 September – Ted Baldwin, politician
- 26 September – Leonard Teale, actor
- 7 October – Jim McCabe, Victorian politician
- 1 November – James Rowland, Chief of Air Force and Governor of New South Wales
- 18 November – Una Hale, operatic soprano
- 6 December – Gordon Ada, microbiologist
- 20 December – Geoff Mack, country music singer
- 28 December – Lionel Bowen, politician
Deaths
- 10 January – Frank Tudor, ALP opposition leader
- 14 February – Bertram Stevens, art critic
- 8 March – Elizabeth Hope, Lady Hope, British evangelist
- 22 March – Arthur Groom, politician and land agent
- 4 April – Peter Waite, rancher and philanthropist
- 7 April – James McGowen, Premier of New South Wales
- 14 April – Rose Summerfield, feminist and labour activist
- 24 April – Colin Campbell Ross, publican executed for the Gun Alley murder
- 30 April – Robert Carl Sticht, metallurgist
- 24 May – James Arthur Pollock, physicist
- 25 May – Roy Redgrave, silent film actor
- 31 May – Jørgen Christian Jensen, Victoria Cross recipient
- 15 June – Alfred Cecil Rowlandson, publisher
- 17 June – Robert Philp, Premier of Queensland
- 11 July – Hans Irvine, Victorian politician and vigneron
- 23 July – Joseph Edmund Carne, geologist
- 30 July – Harry Butler, aviator
- 2 September – Henry Lawson, writer and poet
- 17 September – Kate Rickards, Australian trapeze artist and musical theatre actress
- 26 September – Sir Charles Wade, Premier of New South Wales
- 4 October – Ellis Rowan, naturalist and illustrator
- 17 December – David Lindsay, explorer