1909 in New Zealand explained
The following lists events that happened during 1909 in New Zealand.
Incumbents
Regal and viceregal
Government
The 11th New Zealand Parliament commenced.
Parliamentary opposition
Leader of the Opposition – William Massey (independent until February and thereafter as leader of the Reform Party)[2]
Main centre leaders
Events
- 1 January: The Quackery Prevention Act 1908 becomes law, preventing false advertising in relation to ingredients, composition, structure, nature or operation of a medicine.
- 12 February: Inter-island steamer SS Penguin is wrecked at Cape Terawhiti in Cook Strait with the loss of 75 lives.[3]
- 14 February: The first North Island Main Trunk passenger express train leaves Auckland for Wellington, an overnight trip scheduled to take 19 hours 15 minutes, with a sleeping car, day cars with reclining seats, postal/parcels vans, and a dining car for part of the way.
Undated
- The Canterbury (NZ) Aero Club, the first in New Zealand, is formed by George Bolt.[4]
Arts and literature
See 1909 in art, 1909 in literature
Music
See: 1909 in music
Film
See: 1909 in film, List of New Zealand feature films, Cinema of New Zealand,
Sport
Boxing
National amateur champions
- Heavyweight – M. Ryan (Invercargill)
- Middleweight – S. Monaghan (Ohakune)
- Welterweight – G. Watchorn (Palmerston North)
- Lightweight – J. Finnerty (Invercargill)
- Featherweight – J. Hagerty (Timaru)
- Bantamweight – C. Stewart (Timaru)
Chess
- The 22nd National Chess Championship was held in Dunedin, and was won by F.K. Kelling of Wellington.[5]
Golf
- The third New Zealand Open championship was won by J.A. Clements (his second consecutive win).[6]
- The 17th National Amateur Championships were held in Auckland[7]
Horse racing
Harness racing
Rugby league
New Zealand national rugby league team
Rugby union
Soccer
Provincial league champions:[10]
- Auckland: Auckland Corinthians
- Canterbury: Burnham Industrial School
- Otago: Dunedin City
- Southland: Murihiku
- Taranaki: Kaponga
- Wellington: Wellington Swifts
Tennis
- Anthony Wilding and Australian Norman Brookes, as the Australasian team, successfully defend the Davis Cup, beating the United States 5–0. The final is held in Sydney.
- Anthony Wilding wins the men's singles at the Australian Open.
Births
- 15 April: Jack Watts, politician.
- 18 April: Tom Skinner, politician, Federation of Labour president.
- 20 May: Bill Pratney, cyclist.
- 13 June: Ralph Hanan, politician.
- 27 July: Charles Brasch, poet and literary editor.
- 20 August: Alby Roberts, cricketer.
- 15 September: Jean Batten, aviator.
- 16 September: Rod MacKenzie, rugby union player
- 31 October: Frank Bateson, astronomer.
- 23 December: Don Cleverley, cricketer.
Deaths
See also
Notes and References
- Statistics New Zealand: New Zealand Official Yearbook, 1990. ISSN 0078-0170 page 52
- Web site: Elections NZ – Leaders of the Opposition. 6 April 2008. https://web.archive.org/web/20081017200326/http://www1.elections.org.nz/democracy/leaders-opposition.html. 17 October 2008. dead.
- http://library.christchurch.org.nz/Kids/NZDisasters/SSPenguin.asp Christchurch City Libraries
- Rendel, David (1975) Civil Aviation in New Zealand: An Illustrated History. Wellington. A.H. & A.W.Reed.
- http://www.poisonpawn.co.nz/nzcftitles.htm List of New Zealand Chess Champions
- http://tvnz.co.nz/view/sport_minisite_story_skin/463413?format=html History of NZ open: TVNZ
- Web site: Men's Golf – National Champions. An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand. McLintock. A. H.. Te Ara – The Encyclopedia of New Zealand. 1966. 13 February 2009.
- Web site: List of NZ Trotting cup winners . 7 May 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120222233106/http://www.hrnz.co.nz/data/major_races/nz_trotting_cup.htm . 22 February 2012 . dead .
- http://www.hrnz.co.nz/data/major_races/major_race2.htm Auckland Trotting cup at hrnz.co.nz
- Web site: New Zealand: List of champions. Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. 1999.
- Web site: Dohrmann, Elsie . teara.govt.nz . 12 November 2019 . en.