[edit] Population - Estimated Population as of 31 December: 2,403,600 [1]
- Increase since 31/12/1959: 43,900 (1.86%)
- Males per 100 Females: 101.0
[edit] Incumbents [edit] Regal and Vice Regal [edit] Government The 32nd New Zealand Parliament continued. In power was the Labour government under Walter Nash. The general election saw the governing Labour Party defeated by a twelve-seat margin. [edit] Parliamentary opposition [edit] Main centre leaders [edit] Events [edit] Arts and literature See 1960 in art, 1960 in literature, Category:1960 books See: 1960 in music [edit] Radio and Television - At 7.30pm on Wednesday 1 June 1960, a switch was flicked in a building in Shortland Street in central Auckland and New Zealand's first official television transmission began. [1]. For the first six weeks, programs are limited to two hours a night and two nights a week. [2]. In mid-July, this was extended to four nights a week. A television licence fee of £4 per year was introduced in August.
See: 1960 in New Zealand television, 1960 in television, List of TVNZ television programming, Category:Television in New Zealand, Category:New Zealand television programmes, Public broadcasting in New Zealand See: Category:1960 film awards , 1960 in film , List of New Zealand feature films , Cinema of New Zealand, Category:1960 films [edit] Appointments and awards See: New Zealand Order of Merit , Order of New Zealand [edit] Athletics [edit] Cricket [edit] Horse racing [edit] Harness racing [edit] Thoroughbred racing [edit] Summer Olympics [edit] Netball [edit] Rugby league [edit] Rugby union - The All Blacks toured South Africa, losing the four-test series 2-1 with one game drawn. [7]
- 25 June, Ellis Park, Johannesburg: New Zealand 0 - 13 South Africa
- 23 July, Newlands, Cape Town: New Zealand 11 - 3 South Africa
- 13 Aug, Free State Stadium, Blomfontein: New Zealand 11 - 11 South Africa
- 27 August, Boet Erasmus, Port Elizabeth: New Zealand 3 - 8 South
- Ranfurly Shield: Auckland managed successful defences against Thames Valley (22-6) and Counties (14-3) before losing to North Auckland, 17-11. North Auckland managed to defend the shield against Poverty Bay, (24-3) before losing 3-6 to Auckland. Auckland held the shield for the remainder of the season, beating Manawatu (31-8), Bay of Plenty (9-6), Wellington (22-9), Taranaki (25-6) and Canterbury (19-18).
[edit] Soccer - The national mens team made a short tour to Tahiti. [8]
- 5 September, Papeete: NZ 5 - 1 Tahiti
- 8 September, Papeete: NZ 8 - 0 Tahiti Juniors
- 12 September, Papeete: NZ 2 - 1 Tahiti
- Chatham Cup won by North Shore United, who beat Technical Old Boys (of Christchurch) 5-3 in the final. [9]
- Provincial league champions: [10]
- Auckland: North Shore United
- Bay of Plenty: Kahukura
- Buller: Waimangaroa United
- Canterbury: Western
- Franklin: Papatoetoe
- Hawke's Bay: Napier Rovers
- Manawatu: Kiwi United
- Marlborough: Woodbourne
- Nelson: Athletic
- Northland: Otangarei United
- Otago: Northern
- Poverty Bay: Eastern Union
- South Canterbury: Thistle
- Southland: Invercargill Thistle
- Taranaki: Moturoa
- Waikato: Hamilton Technical OB
- Wairarapa: YMCA
- Wanganui: Blue Rovers
- Wellington: Railways
- West Coast: Cobden-Kohinoor
[edit] Births - 21 January: Phil Horne, cricketer
- 15 February: Michael James "Jock" Hobbs, rugby player and administrator
- 6 April: Richard Loe, rugby player
- April 10 — Rex Wilson, long-distance runner
- 14 May: Frank Nobilo, golfer
- 7 June: Lianne Dalziel, politician
- 15 July: Gary Robertson, cricketer
- 9 September: Chris White, rower
- 29 September: Tau Henare, politician
- 26 December: Temuera Morrison, actor
Category:1960 births [edit] Deaths Category:1960 deaths [edit] References [edit] See also For world events and topics in 1960 not specifically related to New Zealand see: 1960 |