1920 in New Zealand
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Incumbents
Regal and viceregal
- Head of State - George V
- Governor-General - The Earl of Liverpool, succeeded the same year by The Viscount Jellicoe GCB OM GCVO [1]
Government
The 20th New Zealand Parliament commenced, with the Reform Party in Government
- Speaker of the House - Frederic Lang (Reform Party)
- Prime Minister - William Massey
- Minister of Finance - James Allen
- Minister of External Affairs - James Allen until 20 April, then Ernest Page Lee until 17 May, then Francis Bell
Parliamentary opposition
- Leader of the Opposition - William MacDonald (Liberal Party) until his death on 31 August, then Thomas Wilford.[2]
Main centre leaders
- Mayor of Auckland - James Gunson
- Mayor of Hamilton - John Robert Fow
- Mayor of Wellington - John Luke
- Mayor of Christchurch - Henry Thacker
- Mayor of Dunedin - William Begg
Events
- 1 May: The Colonist publishes its final issue, and is incorporated into The Nelson Evening Mail. The newspaper began in 1857.[3]
Arts and literature
See 1920 in art, 1920 in literature, Category:1920 books
Music
See: 1920 in music
Film
See: Category:1920 film awards, 1920 in film, List of New Zealand feature films, Cinema of New Zealand, Category:1920 films
Sport
Chess
The 29th National Chess Championship was held in Wellington, and was won by W.E. Mason of Wellington, his fifth title.[4]
Cricket
Golf
- The 10th New Zealand Open championship was won by J.H. Kirkwood.[5]
- The 24th National Amateur Championships were held in Hamilton [6]
- Men: Sloan Morpeth (Hamilton)
- Women: Miss N.E. Wright (2nd title)
Horse racing
Harness racing
- New Zealand Trotting Cup: Reta Peter [7]
- Auckland Trotting Cup: Man O'War [8]
Olympic games
- New Zealand at the 1920 Summer Olympics
- New Zealand also competed at the Inter-Allied Games held in Paris.
Rugby league
- 1920 Great Britain Lions tour of New Zealand, won test series 3-0
- 1st test, 23-10 Wellington
- 2nd test, 19 - 3, Christchurch
- 3rd test, 31 - 7, Auckland
Rugby
- 1920 New Zealand rugby union tour of New South Wales
- Wellington defended the Ranfurly Shield 10 times before losing it to Southland:[9]
- vs Canterbury 15-3
- vs Bay of Plenty 22-3
- vs Taranaki 20-9 (played in Hawera)
- vs Hawkes Bay 20-5
- vs Auckland 23-20 (played in Auckland)
- vs Taranaki 16-5
- vs Wanganui 20-14
- vs Auckland 20-3
- vs South Canterbury 32-16 (played in Timaru)
- vs Otago 16-5 (played in Dunedin)
- vs Southland 6-17 (played in Invercargill)
Soccer
Provincial league champions:[10]
- Auckland: YMCA
- Canterbury: Nomads
- Hawke's Bay: Waipukurau
- Otago: Kaitangata FC
- Southland: No competition
- Wanganui: Eastbrooke
- Wellington: Wellington Thistle
Births
January–March
- 1 January – Ruth Ross, historian
- 14 January – Don Beard, cricketer
- 24 January –
- Len Jordan, rugby league player
- Gerard Wall, surgeon and politician
- 26 January – Tapihana Paraire Paikea, politician
- 29 January – Bob Yule, fighter pilot
- 9 February – Fred Allen, rugby union player and coach
- 17 February – Dorothea Anne Franchi, pianist, harpist, music educator and composer
- 9 March – Diggeress Te Kanawa, tohunga raranga
- 23 March – Peter Quilliam, jurist
April–June
- 2 April – David Gay, soldier, cricketer and educator
- 4 April – Jim Kearney, rugby union player
- 5 April – Pat Ralph, marine biology academic
- 14 April – John Chewings, politician
- 23 April – Colin Horsley, classical pianist and music teacher
- 26 April – Joyce McDougall, psychoanalyst
- 17 May – Frank Corner, diplomat
- 18 May – Molly Macalister, sculptor
- 26 May
- Frank Bethwaite, pilot, boat designer
- Merimeri Penfold, Māori language academic
- 8 June – Manahi Nitama Paewai, doctor, rugby union player, politician and community leader
- 20 June – John O'Shea, filmmaker
July–September
- 10 July – Warwick Snedden, cricketer
- 11 July – Richard Dell, malacologist
- 9 August – Albert Jones, amateur astronomer
- 29 August
- Eric Batchelor, soldier
- Jack Laird, potter
- 3 September – Peter de la Mare, physical organic chemist
- 9 September – Joan Francis, cricketer
- 10 September – Russell Pettigrew, businessman and philanthropist
- 30 September
- Margaret Alington, librarian and historian
- Trevor Horne, politician
October–December
- 7 October – James Brodie, geologist, oceanographer and amateur historian and philatelist
- 8 October – Jean Wishart, magazine editor
- 24 October – Ron Westerby, rugby league player
- 28 October – Bob Stuart, rugby player and administrator
- 1 November – Harry Dansey, journalist, cartoonist, broadcaster, politician and race relations conciliator
- 9 November – John Macdonald, forensic psychiatrist
- 16 November – Ronald Davison, jurist
- 11 December – Gus Fisher, fashion industry leader and philanthropist
- 15 December – Peg Batty, cricketer
- 27 December – Warren Freer, politician
- 28 December – Marty McDonnell, Australian rules footballer
Deaths
January–March
- 5 January – Walter Gudgeon, farmer, soldier, historian, land court judge, colonial administrator (born 1841)
- 15 January – Richard Cockburn Maclaurin, mathematical physics academic (born 1870)
- 24 January – William Plunket, 5th Baron Plunket, Governor of New Zealand (1904–1910) (born 1864)
- 27 January – William Fitzgerald, teacher, educationalist (born 1838)
- 29 January – Constance Frost, doctor, bacteriologist, pathologist (born c.1863)
- 3 March – George Vesey Stewart, politician (born 1832)
April–June
- 10 April – Courtney Nedwill, doctor, public health officer (born 1837)
- 21 April – Jesse Piper, politician (born 1836)
- 26 April
- George Robertson, rugby union player (born 1859)
- George Hogben, educationalist, seismologist (born 1853)
- 2 May – A. L. Beattie, locomotive designer/engineer (born 1852)
- 6 May – James Black, cricketer (born 1873)
- 13 May – Fred Hobbs, politician (born 1841)
- 20 May – Henare Kaihau, politician
- 20 June – John Grigg, astronomer (born 1838)
July–September
- 23 July – Robin Dods, architect (born 1868)
- 28 July – Edward Shillington, librarian (born 1835)
- 17 August – Amey Daldy, women's suffrage campaigner (born 1829)
- 23 August – David Cossgrove, teacher, soldier, scout leader (born 1852)
- 25 August – Donald Reid, politician (born 1855)
- 31 August – William MacDonald, politician (born 1862)
- 26 September – Appo Hocton, servant, landlord, carter, farmer (born c.1823)
October–December
- 1 October – Henare Wepiha Te Wainohu, Māori leader, Anglican clergyman, army chaplain (born 1882)
- 7 October – Chew Chong, merchant, fungus exporter, butter manufacturer (born c.1844)
- 10 October – Meri Te Tai Mangakāhia, women's suffrage campaigner (born 1868)
- 14 October – Samuel Carnell, politician (born 1832)
- 21 October – Mary Gibbs, community leader (born 1836)
- 12 November – Thomas Porter, soldier, land purchase officer (born 1843)
- 14 November – Edward Ker Mulgan, newspaper editor, teacher, school inspector (born c.1858)
- 17 November – Alexander Hogg, politician (born 1841)
- 23 November – Cyril Mountfort, architect (born 1853)
- 28 November – Peter Webb, rugby union player (born 1854)
- 13 December – Joseph Tole, politician (born 1846)
- 16 December – George Jones, politician (born 1844)
- 27 December – Charles Button, politician, solicitor, judge (born 1838)
See also
- List of years in New Zealand
- Timeline of New Zealand history
- History of New Zealand
- Military history of New Zealand
- Timeline of the New Zealand environment
- Timeline of New Zealand's links with Antarctica
References
- ↑ Statistics New Zealand: New Zealand Official Yearbook, 1990. ISSN 0078-0170 page 52
- ↑ "Elections NZ - Leaders of the Opposition". Retrieved 6 April 2008.
- ↑ "Chapter 2: Early Statistical Sources – 19th Century" (PDF). Statistical Publications 1840–2000. Statistics New Zealand. p. 12. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 November 2007.
- ↑ List of New Zealand Chess Champions
- ↑ "PGA European - Holden New Zealand Open". The Sports Network. 2005. Retrieved 25 March 2009.
- ↑ edited by A. H. McLintock (1966). "Men's Golf - National Champions". An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand. Te Ara - The Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Retrieved 13 February 2009.
- ↑ List of NZ Trotting cup winners
- ↑ Auckland Trotting cup at hrnz.co.nz
- ↑ Palenski, R. and Lambert, M. The New Zealand Almanac, 1982. Moa Almanac Press. ISBN 0-908570-55-4
- ↑ "New Zealand: List of champions". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. 1999.
External links
Media related to 1920 in New Zealand at Wikimedia Commons
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