The year was dominated by the 1951 New Zealand waterfront dispute. New Zealand entered a mutual defence pact with the United States and Australia - ANZUS. [edit] Population A census was held in 1951. | Male | Female | Total | | Usually resident population | 967,647 (50.1%) | 962,835 (49.9%) | 1,930,482 | | Overseas Visitors | 6,297 | 2,661 | 8,958 | | Total | 973,968 | 965,505 | 1,939,473 | - Estimated Population as of 31 December: 1,970,500[1]
- Increase since 31/12/1950: 42,800 (2.22%)
- Males per 100 Females: 100.9
[edit] Incumbents [edit] Regal and Vice Regal [edit] Government The 29th New Zealand Parliament continued. In power was the National government under Sidney Holland. The general election saw the governing National Party re-elected with a twenty-seat margin, a substantial improvement on the twelve-seat margin it previously held. The New Zealand Legislative Council voted itself out of existence, making New Zealand a unicameral democracy.[3] [edit] Parliamentary opposition [edit] Main centre leaders [edit] Events - 1 September: Signing of the ANZUS treaty.
[edit] Arts and literature See 1951 in art, 1951 in literature, Category:1951 books See: 1951 in music [edit] Radio and Television - Experimental television broadcasts had been allowed from 1951 (as long as they included nothing that could be classed as 'entertainment'). [1]
See: Public broadcasting in New Zealand See: Category:1951 film awards , 1951 in film , List of New Zealand feature films , Cinema of New Zealand, Category:1951 films [edit] Appointments and awards See: New Zealand Order of Merit , Order of New Zealand [edit] Athletics [edit] Horse racing [edit] Harness racing [edit] Thoroughbred racing [edit] Rugby union - Bledisloe Cup: New Zealand beat Australia in all three tests, winning back the cup.
- Ranfurly Shield: North Auckland defended the shield against Bay of Plenty (16-12) and Thames Valley (19-6) before losing it to Waikato (3-6). Waikato then defended successfully against Auckland (14-6), Bay of Plenty (32-10), Taranaki (21-12) and Wanganui (14-0).
[edit] Soccer - The New Zealand national soccer team played 9 matches, 6 of them internationals:[7]
- 11 August, Wellington: NZ 3 - 1 Victoria (Australia)
- 10 September, Auckland: NZ 2 - 0 Auckland
- 15 September, Suva: NZ 6 - 1 Suva
- 19 September, Nouméa: NZ 0 - 2 New Caledonia
- 22 September, Nouméa: NZ 6 - 4 New Caledonia
- 24 September, Nouméa: NZ 0 - 2 New Caledonia
- 30 September, Nouméa: NZ 3 - 1 New Caledonia
- 4 October, Nouméa: NZ 9 - 0 New Hebrides
- 7 October, Suva: NZ 6 - 4 Fiji
- The Chatham Cup is won by Eastern Suburbs of Auckland who beat Northern of Dunedin 5— 1in the final.[8]
- Provincial league champions:[9]
- Auckland: Eastern Suburbs
- Buller: Millerton Thistle
- Canterbury: Technical OB
- Hawke's Bay: Napier HSOB
- Manawatu: St Andrews
- Nelson: Thistle
- Northland: Kamo Swifts
- Otago: Northern
- Poverty Bay: Thistle
- South Canterbury: Northern Hearts
- Southland: Brigadiers
- Taranaki: Old Boys
- Waikato: Claudelands Rovers, Rotowaro (shared)
- Wanganui: Technical College Old Boys
- Wellington: Seatoun
- West Coast: Ranunga
[edit] Births - 8 January: Garry Moore, mayor of Christchurch.
- 21 February: John Parker, cricketer.
- 6 March: Maurice Williamson, politician, cabinet minister
- 29 March: Geoff Howarth, cricketer.
- 22 June: Todd Hunter, musician.
- 3 July: Richard Hadlee, cricketer.
- 21 July: (in Fiji) Bernie Fraser, rugby player.
- 14 August: Vern Hanaray, road cyclist.
- 14 September: Karen Plummer, cricketer.
- 20 September: Stephen Boock, cricketer.
- 27 October: Rick Barker, politician.
- 16 November: Andy Dalton, rugby player.
- 21 November: Joe Karam, rugby union and rugby league player, lobbyist.
- 8 December: Paul Brydon, road and track cyclist.
- 9 December: Tuariki Delamere, politician.
[edit] Deaths [edit] References [edit] See also For world events and topics in 1951 not specifically related to New Zealand see: 1951 |