1934 in Australia
The following lists events that happened during 1934 in Australia.Incumbents
- Monarch – George V
- Governor-General – Sir Isaac Isaacs
- Prime Minister – Joseph Lyons
- Chief Justice – Frank Gavan Duffy
State Premiers
- Premier of New South Wales – Bertram Stevens
- Premier of Queensland – William Forgan Smith
- Premier of South Australia – Richard L. Butler
- Premier of Tasmania – John McPhee, then Walter Lee, then Albert Ogilvie
- Premier of Victoria – Sir Stanley Argyle
- Premier of Western Australia – Philip Collier
State Governors
- Governor of New South Wales – Sir Philip Game
- Governor of Queensland – Sir Leslie Orme Wilson
- Governor of South Australia – Sir Alexander Hore-Ruthven, then Sir Winston Dugan
- Governor of Tasmania – Sir Ernest Clark
- Governor of Victoria – William Vanneck, 5th Baron Huntingfield
- Governor of Western Australia – none appointed
Events
- 18 January – Qantas and Imperial Airways join forces and establish Qantas Empire Airways.
- 12 March – An intense cyclone crosses the Queensland coast near Innisfail, 75 people were confirmed dead.
- 1 September – Body of the "Pyjama Girl" found in Albury, New South Wales.
- 15 September – A federal election is held. Joseph Lyons is returned as Prime Minister, leading a United Australia Party-Country Party coalition to victory over the Australian Labor Party.
- 3 October – Qantas de Havilland DH.50 Atalanta, registration VH-UHE, crashes near Winton, Queensland, killing the pilot and 2 passengers.
- 15 October – Captain Cook's cottage is opened to the public, after being dismantled in England, then shipped to Australia and reassembled in Fitzroy Gardens, Melbourne.
- 18 October – Charles Prince of Morphettville is found guilty of fraud for the "ring in" of Redlock at the Murray Bridge Racing Club on 28 July.
- 24 October – C. W. A. Scott and Tom Campbell Black cross the finishing line and win the MacRobertson Air Race, flying from London to Melbourne in an elapsed time of 71 hours.
- 6 November – The Australian government attempts to stop left-wing writer Egon Erwin Kisch from entering the country, using the language provisions of the Immigration Restriction Act 1901 which allowed a test in any European language. The multi-lingual Kisch was tested in Scottish Gaelic, although the decision to block his entry was later overturned by the High Court.
- 11 November – The Shrine of Remembrance in Melbourne is dedicated.
- 15 November – Qantas de Havilland DH86 crashes after departing from Longreach Airport during its delivery flight.
Unknown dates
- The first ute is produced by Ford in Geelong
- CMV Group founded
Arts and literature
- Henry Hanke wins the Archibald Prize with his self-portrait
- Eleanor Dark's Prelude to Christopher is published. The author was later awarded the ALS Gold Medal.
- Martin Boyd publishes his first novel Scandal of Spring
- Christina Stead publishes her first novel Seven Poor Men of Sydney
Film
- Strike Me Lucky, starring Roy Rene and directed by Ken G. Hall, is released
Sport
- 8 September - The 1934 NSWRFL season culminates in Western Suburbs' victory against Eastern Suburbs in the final
- Peter Pan wins the Melbourne Cup
- Victoria wins the Sheffield Shield
- Australia defeats England 2–1 in The Ashes series, held in England
Births
- 6 January – Harry M. Miller, promoter and publicist
- 11 January – Peter Badcoe, soldier and Victoria Cross recipient
- 20 January – Barry Fisher, cricketer
- 26 January – Ruby Langford Ginibi, Indigenous author and historian
- 31 January – Gil Jamieson, painter
- 15 February – Graham Kennedy, entertainer
- 17 February – Barry Humphries, entertainer
- 20 March – David Malouf, writer
- 16 April – Barrie Unsworth, Premier of New South Wales
- 27 April – Colin Holt, Australian rules footballer
- 1 May – John Meillon, actor
- 5 May – Victor Garland, politician and high commissioner to the UK
- 6 May – Chris Wallace-Crabbe, poet and academic
- 2 June – Ian Brooker, botanist
- 27 June – Bill Hay, Australian rules footballer
- 6 July – Tony Burreket, politician
- 7 July – Brian Davis, politician
- 11 July – Barney Cooney, politician
- 16 July – Marjorie McQuade, swimmer
- 18 July – Alan Ridge, politician
- 12 August – Ian George, Anglican Archbishop of Adelaide
- 17 August – Ben Humphreys, politician
- 25 August – Jimmy Hannan, television presenter
- 15 September – Fred Nile, clergyman and politician
- 9 October – Jill Ker Conway, author and academic
- 10 October – Julian Beale, politician
- 2 November – Ken Rosewall, tennis player
- 16 November – Peter Ross Sinclair, Governor of New South Wales
- 4 December – Bill Collins, film critic
- 24 December – Alan Beaumont, Chief of the Australian Defence Force,
Deaths
- 1 January – Robert Gibson, businessman
- 22 January – Arthur Wilberforce Jose, historian
- 30 January – Edward Heitmann, WA politician
- 21 February – Sydney Smith, NSW and federal politician
- 27 February – George Temple-Poole, architect
- 17 March – Walter Rosenhain, metallurgist
- 23 March – Thomas Brown
- 29 March – Josiah Symon, Attorney-General of Australia
- 30 March – Ronald Munro-Ferguson, 1st Viscount Novar, Governor General of Australia
- 12 April – Bertram Steele, scientist
- 12 May – Agar Wynne, politician
- 25 May – Percy Coleman, union organiser and politician
- 5 June - Emily Dobson, philanthropist
- 6 June – William Holman, Premier of New South Wales
- 19 June – John McDonald, WA politician
- 14 July – John Thomson, politician
- 31 July – Charles McGrath, politician
- 6 August – Alexander Leeper, educationist
- 18 August – Sir John Sulman, architect
- 27 August – Linda Agostini, murder victim
- 28 August – T. W. Edgeworth David, scientist
- 5 September – Sidney Myer, businessman
- 10 September – Fred Bamford, politician
- 7 October – William Sutherland Dun, paleontologist and geologist
- 16 October – James Mathews, politician
- 21 November – John Scaddan, Premier of Western Australia
- 3 December – Charles Ulm, aviator