John Walter Thomas PottsAge: 761905–1982
- Name
- John Walter Thomas Potts
- Given names
- John Walter Thomas
- Surname
- Potts
- Also known as
- John Walter Thomas
Birth | 8 October 1905 Victoria, Australia |
Adoption | 8 October 1905 Adoption: Adopted by both parents Note: Adopted October 8th 1905, by Oliver Henry POTTS and Elizabeth CARR after his Mother died in childbirth. |
Death of a mother | 8 October 1905 Victoria, Australia
mother -
Mabel Eloise "May" Thomas
|
Australian History | 1906 (Age 2 months) Note: Australia takes control of south-eastern New Guinea |
Australian History | 1908 (Age 2) Note: Dorothea Mackellar publishes My Country Note: The Dalgety proposal for the national capital is revoked, and Canberra is chosen instead |
Australian History | 1909 (Age 3) Note: The first powered aeroplane flight in Australia is made. |
Australian History | 1910 (Age 4) Note: Andrew Fisher forms the first federal majority Labor government. |
Australian History | 1911 (Age 5) Note: The Royal Australian Navy is founded Note: The Northern Territory comes under Commonwealth control, being split off from South Australia Note: The first national census is conducted. Note: Australian Capital Territory proclaimed. |
Australian History | 1912 (Age 6) Note: Australia sends women to the Olympic Games for the first time Note: Walter Burley Griffin wins a design competition for the new city of Canberra |
Australian History | 1913 (Age 7) Note: Blaxland, Lawson and Wentworth cross the Blue Mountains. Note: Matthew Flinders refers to New South Wales by the name 'Australia'. |
Australian History | 1913 (Age 7) Note: The foundation stone for the city of Canberra is put in place |
Australian History | 1914 (Age 8) Note: Australian soldiers are sent to the First World War. This was first time Australians had fought under the Australian flag, as opposed to that of Britain's. |
Marriage of a brother | James Abraham Garfield "Jim" Potts - View family 17 July 1915 (Age 9) Hawthorn, Victoria, Australia
elder brother -
James Abraham Garfield "Jim" Potts
sister-in-law -
Evelyn Maude Langley
|
Marriage of a sister | Elizabeth Violet Potts - View family 27 November 1915 (Age 10) Healesville, Victoria, Australia
brother-in-law -
Leslie Roy Langmead
elder sister -
Elizabeth Violet Potts
|
Australian History | 1915 (Age 9) Note: (25 APRIL)Australian soldiers land at Anzac Cove on the Gallipoli Peninsula in Turkey on 25 April. Note: Jervis Bay Territory comprising 6,677 hectares surrendered and becomes part of the Australia Capital Territory. Note: Surfing is first introduced to Australia Note: Billy Hughes became Prime Minister |
Marriage of a brother | Jabez Jagger "Jay" Potts M.B.E. J.P. - View family 11 September 1916 (Age 10) Mordialloc, Victoria, Australia
elder brother -
Jabez Jagger "Jay" Potts M.B.E. J.P.
sister-in-law -
Ruby Caroline Miller
|
Australian History | 1916 (Age 10) Note: Hotels are forced to close at 6 p.m., leading to the beginning of the 'six o'clock swill' Note: Australia suffers heavy casualties in the Western Front Battle of the Somme. Note: The Returned Sailors� and Soldiers� Imperial League of Australia, the forerunner to the Returned and Services League of Australia is founded Note: The Labor government under Billy Hughes splits over conscription. First referendum on conscription is rejected |
Marriage of a brother | Charles Ernest Herbert "Charlie" Potts B.A. - View family 15 September 1917 (Age 11) Surrey Hills, Victoria, Australia
elder brother -
Charles Ernest Herbert "Charlie" Potts B.A.
sister-in-law -
Beryl Mayo Watson
|
Australian History | 1917 (Age 11) Note: Second referendum on conscription is rejected. Transcontinental railway linking Adelaide to Perth is completed. Note: Australian 4th Light Horse Brigade launches last cavalry charge in modern warfare to capture Beersheba from the Ottoman Turks. |
Australian History | 1918 (Age 12) Note: (08 AUG) Battle of Amiens Note: Australian troops spearhead 8 August offensive against Hindenberg Line - the 'black day of the German Army'. Note: On 12 August, Australian commander General Sir John Monash is knighted in the field of battle by King George V Note: First World War ends - 60,000 Australians dead. Note: The Darwin Rebellion takes place, with 1,000 demonstrators demanding the resignation of the Administrator of the Northern Territory, John A. Gilruth. |
Australian History | 1919 (Age 13) Note: Prime Minister Billy Hughes signs Treaty of Versailles: the first signing of an international treaty by Australia. Australia obtains League of Nations mandate over German New Guinea. |
Australian History | 1920 (Age 14) Note: The airline Qantas is founded |
Australian History | 1921 (Age 15) Note: Edith Cowan becomes the first woman elected to an Australian parliament |
Australian History | 1922 (Age 16) Note: The Smith Family charity is founded in Sydney |
Australian History | 1923 (Age 17) Note: Vegemite is first produced |
Marriage of a brother | James Abraham Garfield "Jim" Potts - View family 2 November 1926 (Age 21) Sea Lake, Victoria, Australia
elder brother -
James Abraham Garfield "Jim" Potts
sister-in-law -
Violet Marquerite Kirk
|
Australian History | 1926 (Age 20) Note: The first Miss Australia contest is held |
Marriage of a brother | Harold George Wilson Potts - View family 8 December 1927 (Age 22) Box Hill, Victoria, Australia
elder brother -
Harold George Wilson Potts
sister-in-law -
Emma Haines Sedgman
|
Australian History | 1927 (Age 21) Note: The tenth parliament is formally opened in Canberra, finalising the move to the new capital |
Death of a sister | 15 March 1928 (Age 22) Healesville, Victoria, Australia
elder sister -
Sarah Elizabeth Annie "Betty" Potts
|
Australian History | 1928 (Age 22) Note: Bert Hinkler makes the first successful flight from Britain to Australia, and Charles Kingsford Smith makes the first flight from the United States to Australia. The Shrine of Remembrance is built. |
Australian History | 1929 (Age 23) Note: Western Australia celebrates its centenary Note: Labor returns to office under James Scullin. The Great Depression hits Australia. |
Australian History | 1930 (Age 24) Note: Batsman Don Bradman scores a record 452 not out in one cricket innings Note: Phar Lap wins his first Melbourne Cup |
Australian History | 1931 (Age 25) Note: Sir Douglas Mawson charts 4,000 miles of Antarctic coastline and claims 42% of the icy mass for Australia |
Australian History | 1932 (Age 26) Note: The Sydney Harbour Bridge opens Note: The Labor government falls and Joseph Lyons becomes Prime Minister |
Death of a mother | 20 May 1933 (Age 27) Healesville, Victoria, Australia
mother -
Elizabeth "Betty" Carr
|
Australian History | 1933 (Age 27) Note: Western Australia votes at a rerefendum to secede from the Commonwealth, but the vote is ignored by both the Commonwealth and British governments |
Occupation | Nil 1936 (Age 30) Healesville, Victoria, Australia |
Australian History | 1936 (Age 30) Note: The last Thylacine dies |
Australian History | 1937 (Age 31) Note: The radio series Dad and Dave begins |
Australian History | 1938 (Age 32) Note: Sydney hosts the Empire Games, the forerunner to the Commonwealth Games |
Australian History | 1939 (Age 33) Note: (April) Prime Minister Lyons dies in office and is replaced by Robert Menzies and the first Menzies Government Note: (September) Australia enters the Second World War following the German Invasion of Poland. The 2nd Australian Imperial Force is raised. Note: The first flight is made by an Australian-made warplane, the Wirraway Note: Victoria is devastated by the Black Friday bushfires |
Australian History | 1940 (Age 34) Note: A team of scientists, under Howard Florey, develops penicillin Note: Fascist Italy enters war, Royal Australian Navy engages Italian Navy in the early stages of the Battle of the Mediterranean. |
Australian History | 1941 (Age 35) Note: 3 Divisions of the 2nd Australian Imperial Force join operations in the Mediterranean. After initial successes against Italy, 2nd AIF suffered defeat against the Germans in Greece, Crete, and North Africa. Note: Apr-Aug, Australian garrison (Rats of Tobruk) halt advance of Hitler's panzers for the first time during the Siege of Tobruk. Note: Menzies resigns and John Curtin becomes Prime Minister in the Curtin Government of 1941-45. |
Australian History | 1942 (Age 36) Note: Feb, Fall of Singapore. 15,000 Australians become Prisoners of War of the Japanese Note: 1942-43 - Japanese air raids - almost 100 attacks against sites in the Northern Territory, Western Australia and Queensland. Note: The Royal Australian Navy and 6th and 7th Divisions of 2nd AIF are recalled from Mediterranean Theatre to participate in the anticipated Battle of Australia. Note: 1942-3 - Sparrow Force engages in guerilla campaign in Battle of Timor Note: Battle of the Coral Sea - United States and Royal Australian Navy halt advance of the Japanese towards Port Moresby (Australian Territory of Papua) Note: Battle of Kokoda Trail - Australian soldiers halt Japanese march on Port Moresby Note: Aug-Sep, Australian forces inflict the first defeat on the Imperial Japanese Army in the Battle of Milne Bay. Note: Jul-Nov, Australia's 9th Division plays crucial role in the First and Second Battle of El Alamein, which turned the North Africa Campaign in favour of the Allies. Note: National daylight saving is introduced as a war time measure. Note: The UK Statute of Westminster is formally adopted by Australia. The Statute formally grants Australia the right to pass laws that conflict with UK laws. |
Australian History | 1943 (Age 37) Note: Australia wins its first Oscar, with cinematographer Damien Parer honoured for Kokoda Front Line! documentary. Note: 2,815 Australian Pows die constructing Japan's Burma-Thailand Railway Note: 1943-44 - Australian forces engage Japan in New Guinea, Wau, and the Huon peninsula. |
Australian History | 1944 (Age 38) Note: Cowra breakout, mass escape of Japanese prisoners of war occurs in NSW. Note: Japanese inflict Sandakan Death March on 2,000 Australian and British prisoners of war - only 6 survive. The single worst war crime perpetrated against Australians. Note: Australian forces battle Japanese garrisons from Borneo to Bougainville. Note: The Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme is introduced, providing subsidised medicine to all Australians |
Death of a brother | 4 February 1945 (Age 39) Brighton East, Victoria, Australia
elder brother -
Herbert Henry "Bert" Thomas
|
Australian History | 1945 (Age 39) Note: the Liberal Party of Australia is established with Robert Menzies as its first leader. Note: Australian forces lead Battle of Borneo Note: (7 May) Nazi Germany surrenders Note: (July) Prime Minister Curtin dies and is replaced by Ben Chifley and the Chifley Labor Government Note: (1 August) Japan Surrenders Note: Australia becomes a founding member of the United Nations Note: The Sydney-Hobart Yacht Race is held for the first time |
Australian History | 1946 (Age 40) Note: Minister for Immigration Arthur Calwell introduces the major post-war immigration scheme Note: Norman Makin, is voted in as the first President of the United Nations Security Council. |
Death of a father | 10 August 1948 (Age 42) Box Hill, Victoria, Australia
father -
Oliver Henry "O. H." Potts
|
Australian History | 1948 (Age 42) Note: Minister for External Affairs, Dr. H.V. Evatt is elected President of the United Nations General Assembly. Note: Australia becomes a signatory to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. |
Australian History | 1949 (Age 43) Note: Construction of the Snowy Mountains Hydro-Electric Scheme begins Note: All indigenous ex-servicemen and any Indigenous Australians who are eligible to vote in State Elections (NSW, VIC, SA and TAS) are given an unrestricted right to vote in Federal Elections. Note: The Nationality and Citizenship Act is passed. Rather than being identified as subjects of Britain, the Act established Australian citizenship for people who met eligibility requirements. Note: Menzies returns to power as leader of the new Liberal Party Menzies Government. |
Australian History | 1950 (Age 44) Note: 1950-53 - Australian troops are sent to the Korean War to assist South Korea. Note: Voters reject a referendum to change the Constitution to allow the Menzies Government to ban the Communist Party |
Australian History | 1951 (Age 45) Note: Australia signs the ANZUS treaty with the United States and New Zealand |
Australian History | 1952 (Age 46) Note: First nuclear test conducted in Australian territory by the United Kingdom off the coast of Western Australia. |
Death of a brother | 23 September 1954 (Age 48)
elder brother -
John Carr Potts
|
Burial of a brother | September 1954 (Age 48) Healesville, Victoria, Australia
elder brother -
John Carr Potts
|
Australian History | 1954 (Age 48) Note: Elizabeth II and Prince Philip make a royal visit; the Soviet diplomat Vladimir Petrov defects, leading to the Petrov Affair and another split in the Labor Party |
Australian History | 1955 (Age 49) Note: Democratic Labor Party splits from Australian Labor Party over concerns of Communist influence in the labour movement Note: Australia becomes involved in Malayan Insurgence Note: Hotels in New South Wales no longer have to close at 6 p.m., ending the 'six o'clock swill' |
Australian History | 1956 (Age 50) Note: Television in Australia is launched. Note: Melbourne holds the Olympics Note: performing artist Barry Humphries introduces Edna Everage to the Australian stage |
Death of a brother | 21 August 1957 (Age 51) Surrey Hills, Victoria, Australia
elder brother -
Charles Ernest Herbert "Charlie" Potts B.A.
|
Burial of a brother | August 1957 (Age 51) Box Hill, Victoria, Australia
elder brother -
Charles Ernest Herbert "Charlie" Potts B.A.
|
Australian History | 1957 (Age 51) Note: The song 'Wild One' makes Johnny O'Keefe the first Australian rock'n'roller to reach the national charts. Note: Slim Dusty's Australian country music hit Pub With No Beer becomes the first Australian song to attain international chart success. |
Death of a brother | 26 January 1959 (Age 53) Auburn, Victoria, Australia
elder brother -
James Abraham Garfield "Jim" Potts
|
Burial of a brother | January 1959 (Age 53)
elder brother -
James Abraham Garfield "Jim" Potts
|
Death of a brother | 16 February 1960 (Age 54) Healesville, Victoria, Australia
elder brother -
William Robert "Bill" Potts
|
Burial of a brother | 19 February 1960 (Age 54) Box Hill, Victoria, Australia
elder brother -
William Robert "Bill" Potts
|
Death of a sister | 5 May 1960 (Age 54) Surry Hills, Victoria, Australia
elder sister -
Elizabeth Violet Potts
|
Burial of a sister | May 1960 (Age 54) Box Hill, Victoria, Australia
elder sister -
Elizabeth Violet Potts
|
Australian History | 1962 (Age 56) Note: Robert Menzies' Commonwealth Electoral Act provided that all Indigenous Australians should have the right to enrol and vote at federal elections, removing remaining restrictions applying in QLD, WA and NT. Note: Malayan Insurgence ends |
Australian History | 1964 (Age 58) Note: The Beatles tour Australia; Note: 82 sailors die when HMAS Voyager sinks after being rammed by HMAS Melbourne; Note: The editors of Oz magazine are charged with obscenity; Note: PM Robert Menzies announces the reintroduction of compulsory military service for men aged from 18-25 years old; Note: First troops sent to Vietnam War. |
Australian History | 1965 (Age 59) Note: Indigenous Australians gain right to vote in state of Queensland |
Australian History | 1966 (Age 60) Note: The ban on the employment of married women in the Commonwealth Public Service is lifted; Note: Menzies retires as Australia's longest-serving Prime Minister and is succeeded by Harold Holt. |
Australian History | 14 February 1966 (Age 60) Note: Decimalisation; on 14 February the Australian currency is changed to dollars and cents, with the Australian Dollar replacing the Australian pound. |
Australian History | 1967 (Age 61) Note: Large areas of Hobart and south-eastern Tasmania are devastated by bushfires on 7 February that kill 62 people; Note: Prime Minister Holt drowns and is succeeded by John Gorton; Note: The constitution is changed to allow Aboriginal Australians to be included in the population count and for the federal government to legislate for them; Sydney is rocked by a series of brutal underworld killings; Note: Talkback radio is introduced; Note: British comedian Tony Hancock commits suicide in Sydney; Note: Gough Whitlam becomes leader of the Labor Party; Note: Ronald Ryan becomes the last person legally executed in Australia. |
Australian History | 1968 (Age 62) Note: Australia signs the nuclear non-proliferation treaty; Aboriginal boxing champion Lionel Rose defeats Masahiko 'Fighting' Harada in Japan to become the world bantamweight champion; Australia's first liver transplant operation is performed in Sydney; |
Death of a brother | 1969 (Age 63) Healesville, Victoria, Australia
elder brother -
Oliver Henry "Olly" Potts Jr.
|
Australian History | 1969 (Age 63) Note: French conceptual artist Christo 'wraps' Little Bay in Sydney; Note: Renowned author-artists Norman Lindsay and May Gibbs die; Note: The Australian production of the rock musical Hair premieres in Sydney; Note: Top pop groups The Easybeats and The Twilights break up; Tim Burstall directs2000 Weeks, the first all-Australian feature released since Charles Chauvel's Jedda in 1958 |
Australian History | 1970 (Age 64) Note: More than 200,000 people participate in the largest demonstrations in Australian history, against the Vietnam War |
Australian History | 1971 (Age 65) Note: Neville Bonner becomes the first Aborigine to become an Australian Member of Parliament; Note: John Gorton resigns and is succeeded by William McMahon Note: The 1971 Springbok tour sparks protest all throughout Australia. Premier of Queensland Joh Bjelke-Petersen declares a state of emergency in QLD in response to escalating protest. Note: Daylight Saving is introduced to New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, South Australia, and the Australian Capital Territory. |
Australian History | 1972 (Age 66) Note: The Commonwealth Conciliation and Arbitration Commission rules that women doing the same job as men have the right to be paid the same wage. Note: Aboriginal Tent Embassy erected in response to the Coalition government's approval of exploration licences and mining tenements on reserves Note: The first Labor government since 1949 is elected under the leadership of Gough Whitlam Note: Australia recognizes the People's Republic of China Note: Queensland abandons Daylight Saving. |
Australian History | 1973 (Age 67) Note: The Sydney Opera House is opened Note: The White Australian Policy (established 1901) is officially dismantled Note: Vietnam War ends Note: The federal voting age is dropped from 21 to 18 Note: Unionists save the historic 'The Rocks' area of Sydney from demolition by introducing 'Green Bans' Note: Patrick White becomes the first Australian to win the Nobel Prize for Literature |
Death of a brother | 27 May 1974 (Age 68)
elder brother -
Jabez Jagger "Jay" Potts M.B.E. J.P.
|
Australian History | 1974 (Age 68) Note: Darwin is devastated by Cyclone Tracy |
Australian History | 1975 (Age 69) Note: (November) A constitutional crisis occurs when Malcolm Fraser blocks supply, bringing the nation to a standstill until Governor-General John Kerr dismisses Prime Minister Gough Whitlam on the 11.11.75. Fraser wins elections and becomes Prime Minister Note: The 'Privy Council (Appeals from the High Court) Act removes the right to appeal High Court decisions to the British Privy Council. Appeals to the Privy Council direct from State Supreme Courts remain until 1988. Note: South Australia becomes the first state in Australia to legalise homosexuality between consenting adults in private. Note: Whitlam government introduced the Aboriginal Land (NT) Bill into Parliament. The bill proposed land rights in the Northern Territory based on land claimed on grounds of need as well as traditional affiliation and traditional landowners maintaining control over mining and development. |
Australian History | 1976 (Age 70) Note: The Australian Capital Territory legalises homosexuality between consenting adults in private. |
Australian History | 1977 (Age 71) Note: Advance Australia Fair becomes Australia's official national anthem Note: Granville rail disaster killed eighty-three people |
Australian History | 1978 (Age 72) Note: The First Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras kicks off in Sydney |
Australian History | 1979 (Age 73) Note: Australian women win the right to maternity leave Note: Kakadu National Park and the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park are both proclaimed. |
Australian History | 1980 (Age 74) Note: Baby Azaria Chamberlain disappears from a campsite at Uluru (Ayers Rock), reportedly taken by a dingo. The Coalition wins the 1980 Australian federal election. |
Australian History | 1981 (Age 75) Note: A referendum is held in Tasmania to vote for whether or not the Franklin Dam should be built. |
Australian History | 1982 (Age 76) Note: Commonwealth Games held in Brisbane. The National Gallery of Australia is opened. |
Death | 7 April 1982 (Age 76) |
Burial | Healesville, Victoria, Australia Cemetery: Healesville Cemetary |
Religion | Salvation Army |
Family with parents - View family |
mother |
Mabel Eloise "May" Thomas
Birth 1879 32 32 Victoria, Australia Death 8 October 1905 (Age 26) Victoria, Australia Loading...
|
Marriage: yes |
|
#1 himself |
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Family with foster parents - View family |
father |
Oliver Henry "O. H." Potts
Birth 26 January 1862 37 27 Yackandandah, Victoria, Australia Death 10 August 1948 (Age 86) Box Hill, Victoria, Australia Loading...
|
-4 years mother |
Elizabeth "Betty" Carr
Birth 12 April 1858 43 41 Frankston, Victoria, Australia Death 20 May 1933 (Age 75) Healesville, Victoria, Australia Loading...
|
Marriage: 13 November 1883 — Frankston, Victoria, Australia |
|
-7 years #1 elder brother |
Herbert Henry "Bert" Thomas
Birth 1877 Sandhurst, Victoria, Australia Death 4 February 1945 (Age 68) Brighton East, Victoria, Australia Loading...
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4 years #2 elder sister |
Florence Margaret "Pearl" Thomas
Birth 1881 Victoria, Australia Death yes Loading...
|
3 years #3 elder sister |
Elizabeth Violet Potts
Birth 8 June 1884 22 26 Frankston, Victoria, Australia Death 5 May 1960 (Age 75) Surry Hills, Victoria, Australia Loading...
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2 years #4 elder brother |
Oliver Henry "Olly" Potts Jr.
Birth 15 July 1886 24 28 Frankston, Victoria, Australia Death 1969 (Age 82) Healesville, Victoria, Australia Loading...
|
21 months #5 elder brother |
John Carr Potts
Birth 7 April 1888 26 29 Frankston, Victoria, Australia Death 23 September 1954 (Age 66) Loading...
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21 months #6 elder brother |
James Abraham Garfield "Jim" Potts
Birth 17 January 1890 27 31 Frankston, Victoria, Australia Death 26 January 1959 (Age 69) Auburn, Victoria, Australia Loading...
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21 months #7 elder brother |
William Robert "Bill" Potts
Birth 26 October 1891 29 33 Frankston, Victoria, Australia Death 16 February 1960 (Age 68) Healesville, Victoria, Australia Loading...
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19 months #8 elder brother |
Jabez Jagger "Jay" Potts M.B.E. J.P.
Birth 27 May 1893 31 35 Frankston, Victoria, Australia Death 27 May 1974 (Age 81) Loading...
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3 years #9 elder brother |
Charles Ernest Herbert "Charlie" Potts B.A.
Birth 21 June 1896 34 38 Healesville, Victoria, Australia Death 21 August 1957 (Age 61) Surrey Hills, Victoria, Australia Loading...
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20 months #10 elder sister |
Sarah Elizabeth Annie "Betty" Potts
Birth 12 February 1898 36 39 Healesville, Victoria, Australia Death 15 March 1928 (Age 30) Healesville, Victoria, Australia Loading...
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17 months #11 elder brother |
Harold George Wilson Potts
Birth 4 July 1899 37 41 Healesville, Victoria, Australia Death 4 August 1995 (Age 96) Loading...
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6 years #12 himself |
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John Walter Thomas Potts has 3 first cousins recorded
Father's family (0)
Mother's family (3)
Parents Arthur James Trembath Thomas + Elsie Constance Hague
Parents Herbert Henry "Bert" Thomas + Nellie Mattei
Adoption | Adopted October 8th 1905, by Oliver Henry POTTS and Elizabeth CARR after his Mother died in childbirth. |
Australian History | Australia takes control of south-eastern New Guinea |
Australian History | Dorothea Mackellar publishes My Country |
Australian History | The first powered aeroplane flight in Australia is made. |
Australian History | Andrew Fisher forms the first federal majority Labor government. |
Australian History | The Royal Australian Navy is founded |
Australian History | Australia sends women to the Olympic Games for the first time |
Australian History | Blaxland, Lawson and Wentworth cross the Blue Mountains. |
Australian History | The foundation stone for the city of Canberra is put in place |
Australian History | Australian soldiers are sent to the First World War. This was first time Australians had fought under the Australian flag, as opposed to that of Britain's. |
Australian History | (25 APRIL)Australian soldiers land at Anzac Cove on the Gallipoli Peninsula in Turkey on 25 April. |
Australian History | Hotels are forced to close at 6 p.m., leading to the beginning of the 'six o'clock swill' |
Australian History | Second referendum on conscription is rejected. Transcontinental railway linking Adelaide to Perth is completed. |
Australian History | (08 AUG) Battle of Amiens |
Australian History | Prime Minister Billy Hughes signs Treaty of Versailles: the first signing of an international treaty by Australia. Australia obtains League of Nations mandate over German New Guinea. |
Australian History | The airline Qantas is founded |
Australian History | Edith Cowan becomes the first woman elected to an Australian parliament |
Australian History | The Smith Family charity is founded in Sydney |
Australian History | Vegemite is first produced |
Australian History | The first Miss Australia contest is held |
Australian History | The tenth parliament is formally opened in Canberra, finalising the move to the new capital |
Australian History | Bert Hinkler makes the first successful flight from Britain to Australia, and Charles Kingsford Smith makes the first flight from the United States to Australia. The Shrine of Remembrance is built. |
Australian History | Western Australia celebrates its centenary |
Australian History | Batsman Don Bradman scores a record 452 not out in one cricket innings |
Australian History | Sir Douglas Mawson charts 4,000 miles of Antarctic coastline and claims 42% of the icy mass for Australia |
Australian History | The Sydney Harbour Bridge opens |
Australian History | Western Australia votes at a rerefendum to secede from the Commonwealth, but the vote is ignored by both the Commonwealth and British governments |
Australian History | The last Thylacine dies |
Australian History | The radio series Dad and Dave begins |
Australian History | Sydney hosts the Empire Games, the forerunner to the Commonwealth Games |
Australian History | (April) Prime Minister Lyons dies in office and is replaced by Robert Menzies and the first Menzies Government |
Australian History | A team of scientists, under Howard Florey, develops penicillin |
Australian History | 3 Divisions of the 2nd Australian Imperial Force join operations in the Mediterranean. After initial successes against Italy, 2nd AIF suffered defeat against the Germans in Greece, Crete, and North Africa. |
Australian History | Feb, Fall of Singapore. 15,000 Australians become Prisoners of War of the Japanese |
Australian History | Australia wins its first Oscar, with cinematographer Damien Parer honoured for Kokoda Front Line! documentary. |
Australian History | Cowra breakout, mass escape of Japanese prisoners of war occurs in NSW. |
Australian History | the Liberal Party of Australia is established with Robert Menzies as its first leader. |
Australian History | Minister for Immigration Arthur Calwell introduces the major post-war immigration scheme |
Australian History | Minister for External Affairs, Dr. H.V. Evatt is elected President of the United Nations General Assembly. |
Australian History | Construction of the Snowy Mountains Hydro-Electric Scheme begins |
Australian History | 1950-53 - Australian troops are sent to the Korean War to assist South Korea. |
Australian History | Australia signs the ANZUS treaty with the United States and New Zealand |
Australian History | First nuclear test conducted in Australian territory by the United Kingdom off the coast of Western Australia. |
Australian History | Elizabeth II and Prince Philip make a royal visit; the Soviet diplomat Vladimir Petrov defects, leading to the Petrov Affair and another split in the Labor Party |
Australian History | Democratic Labor Party splits from Australian Labor Party over concerns of Communist influence in the labour movement |
Australian History | Television in Australia is launched. |
Australian History | The song 'Wild One' makes Johnny O'Keefe the first Australian rock'n'roller to reach the national charts. |
Australian History | Robert Menzies' Commonwealth Electoral Act provided that all Indigenous Australians should have the right to enrol and vote at federal elections, removing remaining restrictions applying in QLD, WA and NT. |
Australian History | The Beatles tour Australia; |
Australian History | Indigenous Australians gain right to vote in state of Queensland |
Australian History | The ban on the employment of married women in the Commonwealth Public Service is lifted; |
Australian History | Decimalisation; on 14 February the Australian currency is changed to dollars and cents, with the Australian Dollar replacing the Australian pound. |
Australian History | Large areas of Hobart and south-eastern Tasmania are devastated by bushfires on 7 February that kill 62 people; |
Australian History | Australia signs the nuclear non-proliferation treaty; Aboriginal boxing champion Lionel Rose defeats Masahiko 'Fighting' Harada in Japan to become the world bantamweight champion; Australia's first liver transplant operation is performed in Sydney; |
Australian History | French conceptual artist Christo 'wraps' Little Bay in Sydney; |
Australian History | More than 200,000 people participate in the largest demonstrations in Australian history, against the Vietnam War |
Australian History | Neville Bonner becomes the first Aborigine to become an Australian Member of Parliament; |
Australian History | The Commonwealth Conciliation and Arbitration Commission rules that women doing the same job as men have the right to be paid the same wage. |
Australian History | The Sydney Opera House is opened |
Australian History | Darwin is devastated by Cyclone Tracy |
Australian History | (November) A constitutional crisis occurs when Malcolm Fraser blocks supply, bringing the nation to a standstill until Governor-General John Kerr dismisses Prime Minister Gough Whitlam on the 11.11.75. Fraser wins elections and becomes Prime Minister |
Australian History | The Australian Capital Territory legalises homosexuality between consenting adults in private. |
Australian History | Advance Australia Fair becomes Australia's official national anthem |
Australian History | The First Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras kicks off in Sydney |
Australian History | Australian women win the right to maternity leave |
Australian History | Baby Azaria Chamberlain disappears from a campsite at Uluru (Ayers Rock), reportedly taken by a dingo. The Coalition wins the 1980 Australian federal election. |
Australian History | A referendum is held in Tasmania to vote for whether or not the Franklin Dam should be built. |
Australian History | Commonwealth Games held in Brisbane. The National Gallery of Australia is opened. |