
On this day: Uluru given its Aboriginal name
On 15 December 1993, Uluru was officially given a dual name, recognising its importance to Aboriginal people.
On 15 December 1993, Uluru was officially given a dual name, recognising its importance to Aboriginal people.
On this day, in 1903, Australian women were given the right to vote in federal elections.
The ceremony was fraught with felony on the official birthday of the Sydney Harbour Bridge on 19 March 1932.
In 1989, Australia’s most destructive earthquake hit Newcastle with devastating consequences.
In Jan 1903, a pipeline bringing water from Perth to Western Australia’s parched goldfields began to flow.
In 1808, NSW Governor William Bligh was ousted in Australia’s first and only military coup.
In 1942, 130,000 British, Indian and Australian troops surrendered in one of the most stinging defeats of World War II.
Banjo Paterson, the Australian bush poet who penned Waltzing Matilda, was born on 17 February 1864.
The first solo flight from England to Australia was completed on 22 February 1928 by Australian aviator Bert Hinkler.
The Aboriginal legend who turned his back on the Europeans to incite a three-year guerilla warfare resistance.