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1914 in Australia
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Summary Of: 1914 in Australia

Encyclodia Page On: 1914 in Australia

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Monarch | George V | Governor-General | Thomas Denman, 3rd Baron Denman | Ronald Munro-Ferguson, 1st Viscount Novar | Prime Minister | Andrew Fisher | Population | Elections | Federal | Western Australia | 1913 in Australia | 1914 | 1915 in Australia | Timeline of Australian history | World War I | Andrew Fisher | Prime Minister | Monarch | King George V | Governor-General | Thomas Denman, 3rd Baron Denman | 18 May | Ronald Munro-Ferguson, 1st Viscount Novar | Prime Minister | Joseph Cook | 17 September | Andrew Fisher | Premier of New South Wales | William Holman | Premier of Victoria | William Alexander Watt | 18 June | Alexander Peacock | Premier of Queensland | Digby Denham | Premier of South Australia | Archibald Peake | Premier of Western Australia | John Scaddan | Premier of Tasmania | Albert Solomon | 6 April | John Earle | Governor of New South Wales | Sir Gerald Strickland | Governor of Victoria | Sir John Fuller, 1st Baronet | January 31 | Sir Arthur Stanley | February 23 | Governor of Queensland | William McGregor | Governor of South Australia | Admiral Sir Day Bosanquet | March 22 | Lieutenant Colonel Sir Henry Galway | April 18 | Governor of Western Australia | Sir Harry Barron | Governor of Tasmania | Sir William Ellison-Macartney | January 27 | February 9 | provost | Kirkcaldy | February 16 | living wage | March 1 | Point Cook, Victoria | March 16 | Exeter, New South Wales | March 27 | steamship | Cape Moreton | Queensland | May 2 | Bendigo, Victoria | May 18 | June 8 | double dissolution | unionists | Senate of Australia | July 16 | Melbourne | Sydney | Blériot | monoplane | airmail | July 31 | Colac, Victoria | Horsham, Victoria | August 4 | United Kingdom | Germany | August 5 | Fort Nepean | Victoria | Port Phillip Bay | August 10 | First Australian Imperial Force | August 18 | Sydney | New Guinea | September 5 | Australian House of Representatives | Australian Senate | September 9 | light cruiser | HMAS Melbourne | Nauru | September 11 | September 13 | Rabaul | September 14 | HMAS AE1 | New Britain | September 17 | October 29 | War Precautions Act 1914 | Government of Australia | World War I | Parliament of Australia | November 1 | First Australian Imperial Force | Egypt | November 6 | Nauru | November 9 | HMAS Sydney | SMS Emden | Battle of Cocos | November 30 | December 21 | William Birdwood | Egypt | Australian and New Zealand Army Corps | | talk page | April 6 | Hawthorn Football Club | February 11 | Clyde Cameron | February 14 | Norman Von Nida | March 14 | Robert Royce | March 20 | Tom Derrick | March 26 | Ray Robinson | March 28 | Kenneth Richard Norris | April 10 | Jack Badcock | May 7 | Scobie Breasley | May 21 | Rhodes Fairbridge | August 1 | Hughie Edwards | August 3 | Gordon Bryant | August 6 | Gordon Freeth | August 18 | Arthur Tange | September 9 | John Passmore | September 24 | John Kerr | September 25 | Ted Humphries | October 4 | Jim Cairns | October 20 | Fred Chaney | November 7 | Geoffrey Blackburn | December 8 | Ernie Toshack | December 16 | Jo Gullett | December 21 | Frank Fenner | December 29 | Albert Tucker | March 11 | John Mackay | April 23 | Alexander Robert Edgar | June 23 | Sir John Stokell Dodds | July 17 | William Piguenit | August 7 | Bransby Cooper | August 13 | Gregor McGregor | August 15 | August 24 | Sir Normand MacLaurin | September 4 | William Ramsay | October 5 | Albert Solomon | October 13 | Walter Withers | December 9 | John Arthur | Australian Broadcasting Corporation | Categories | 1914 in Australia | 1914 by country | Years of the 20th century in Australia | Articles to be expanded since June 2008 | All articles to be expanded |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "1914 in Australia".