1974 in New Zealand
The following lists events that happened during 1974 in New Zealand.Population
- Estimated population as of 31 December: 3,091,900
- Increase since 31 December 1973: 65,200
- Males per 100 females: 99.7
Incumbents
Regal and viceregal
- Head of State β Elizabeth II
- Governor-General β Sir Denis Blundell GCMG GCVO KBE QSO.
Government
The 37th New Zealand Parliament continued. Government was by a
Labour majority of 55 seats to the National Party's 32 seats.
- Speaker of the House β Stanley Whitehead.
- Prime Minister β Norman Kirk then Bill Rowling
- Deputy Prime Minister β Hugh Watt then Bob Tizard
- Minister of Finance β Bill Rowling then Bob Tizard.
- Minister of Foreign Affairs β Norman Kirk then Bill Rowling.
- Attorney-General β Martyn Finlay.
Parliamentary opposition
- Leader of the Opposition β Jack Marshall until 4 July, then Robert Muldoon.
Main centre leaders
- Mayor of Auckland β Dove-Myer Robinson
- Mayor of Hamilton β Mike Minogue
- Mayor of Wellington β Frank Kitts then Michael Fowler
- Mayor of Christchurch β Neville Pickering then Hamish Hay
- Mayor of Dunedin β Jim Barnes
Events
- 24 January β 2 February: Christchurch hosts the 1974 British Commonwealth Games.
- 30 January β 8 February: Royal visit by the Queen for the Commonwealth Games and Waitangi Day accompanied by the Duke, Princess Anne, Captain Mark Phillips and the Prince of Wales
- 6 February β Waitangi Day, then named New Zealand Day, is first celebrated as a nationwide public holiday.
- 1 April β The Accident Compensation Commission is established, providing universal no-fault accidental injury cover to all New Zealanders.
- 31 August β Prime Minister Norman Kirk dies of heart complications, aged 51. He was replaced by Bill Rowling, see New Zealand Labour Party leadership election, 1974.
- September β The country's first Pizza Hut restaurant opens in New Lynn, Auckland.
- The voting age is lowered from 20 to 18.
Arts and literature
- Hone Tuwhare wins the Robert Burns Fellowship.
See 1974 in art, 1974 in literature, :Category:1974 booksMusic
- BEST NEW ARTIST Bunny Walters
- RECORDING ARTIST / GROUP OF THE YEAR Bull Dogs All-Star Goodtime Band
- BEST NZ RECORDED COMPOSITION John Hanlon β Is It Natural
- PRODUCER OF THE YEAR Mike Harvey β Is It Natural
- ARRANGER OF THE YEAR Mike Harvey β Is It Natural
See: 1974 in musicPerforming arts
See: 1974 in New Zealand television, 1974 in television, :Category:Television in New Zealand, List of TVNZ television programming, :Category:New Zealand television shows, Public broadcasting in New ZealandFilm
See: :Category:1974 film awards, 1974 in film, List of New Zealand feature films, Cinema of New Zealand, :Category:1974 filmsSport
Athletics
Chess
- The 81st National Chess Championship is held in Christchurch. The title is shared by P.A. Garbett and Ortvin Sarapu, both of Auckland.
Horse racing
Harness racing
- Robalan defeats hot favorite Young Quinn to win the New Zealand Trotting Cup
- Auckland Trotting Cup: Young Quinn
Soccer
- New Zealand National Soccer League won by, Mount Wellington
- The Chatham Cup is won by Christchurch United who beat Wellington Diamond United 2β0 in the final.
Births
- 6 January: Dion Waller, rugby player
- 10 January: Jemaine Clement, comedian
- 28 February: Moana Mackey, politician
- 27 April : Richard Johnson, soccer player
- 6 May: Sean Pero Cameron, basketball player
- 2 June: Andy Booth, motor racing driver
- 15 June: Andrew Timlin, field hockey player
- 10 July: Chris Drum, cricketer
- 14 July : Pavlina Nola, tennis player
- 26 July: Kees Meeuws, rugby player
- 1 August: Michelle Turner, field hockey player
- 27 August: Michael Mason, cricketer
- 15 September: Emily Drumm, cricketer
- 11 October: Liz Couch, skeleton racer
- 23 October: Beatrice Faumuina, discus thrower
- 5 November: Taine Randell, rugby player
- 13 November: Carl Hoeft, rugby player
- 2 December: Robbie Hart, cricketer
- 7 December: Jason Spice, rugby and cricket player
- 10 December: Chris Martin, cricketer
- Kate Duignan, novelist
- Tim Selwyn, activist
:Category:1974 birthsDeaths
- 12 February: Alice Bush, doctor and medical activist.
- 13 February: Murray Hudson GC, soldier.
- 13 February: Sir Leslie Munro, diplomat and politician.
- 14 February: Charles 'Stewie' Dempster, cricketer.
- 5 August: Robert McKeen, politician β 12th Speaker of the House of Representatives.
- 12 August: James Fletcher, industrialist.
- 30 August: Professor George Jobberns, academic.
- 31 August: Norman Kirk, Prime Minister.
- 7 September: Paddy Kearins, politician.
- 12 September: Hector Bolitho, writer and biographer.
- 26 October: Dan Riddiford, politician.
- 28 October: Charles Elliot Fox, missionary.
- 11 December: Maurice Duggan, writer.
:Category:1974 deaths