The following lists events that happened during 1968 in Australia .
Decades:
1940s
1950s
1960s
1970s
1980s
See also:
Incumbents
Lord Casey
State and territory leaders
Governors and administrators
Events
4 January – The search for the body of Prime Minister Harold Holt , who disappeared whilst swimming near Portsea, Victoria , is called off.
10 January – John Gorton is sworn in as Prime Minister of Australia after the disappearance of Harold Holt.
28 January – Members of English rock groups The Who and Small Faces are escorted by police from a plane at Melbourne's Essendon Airport , after the pilot diverts the flight citing the bands' behaviour.
31 January – The Australian-administered United Nations trust territory of Nauru became independent, in accordance with the provisions of the Nauru Independence Act 1967 .
1 April – American evangelist Billy Graham begins a tour of Australia.
17 April – A state election is held in South Australia . Steele Hall (Liberal and Country League ) defeats Don Dunstan (ALP ), and becomes Premier of South Australia .
8 April – Fluoridation of Sydney's water supply begins.
30 April – Jim Cairns unsuccessfully challenges Gough Whitlam for leadership of the Australian Labor Party .
1 May – The Duke of Edinburgh arrives in Australia for a ten-day visit.
5 May – Three Australian journalists are killed by the Viet Cong in Saigon .
19 May – The body of 3-year-old boy Simon Brook is found after he is murdered near his home in the Sydney suburb of Glebe .[ 1] As of 2025, no person has ever been charged with Brook's murder but his parents allege convicted child killer Derek Percy , who died in 2013, was responsible.[ 2]
21 May – Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi visits Australia.
14 June – Journalist Simon Townsend , future host of Simon Townsend's Wonder World , is granted exemption from military service after lodging a fifth appeal against his imprisonment and court martial for conscientious objection .
18 June – The first stage of the Warringah Freeway opens in Sydney .
24 June – British comedian Tony Hancock commits suicide in his Sydney hotel room.
2 July – Fifty students are arrested during an anti-Vietnam War protest in Martin Place , Sydney .
4 July – Forty five people are arrested during an anti-war protest outside the U.S. consulate in St Kilda Road , Melbourne .
31 July – The Premier of Queensland , Jack Pizzey , dies in office.
1 August – Jack Pizzey's deputy, Gordon Chalk , is sworn in as his successor until the appointment of Joh Bjelke-Petersen as Premier a week later.
3 August – The standard gauge rail line between Perth and Kalgoorlie is completed.
20 August – The National Gallery of Victoria is opened in Melbourne .
14 October – The town of Meckering , Western Australia , is badly damaged by an earthquake .
28 October – The Postmaster-General's Department decreases the number of mail deliveries per day from two to one.
31 October – Minister for the Army Phillip Lynch admits that Australian Army troops may have breached the Geneva Convention by using water torture during the interrogation of a female Viet Cong suspect.
1 November – The airline Ansett-ANA is renamed Ansett .
14 December – A referendum is held in Tasmania to allow the granting of Australia's first casino license to the Wrest Point Hotel . The referendum is passed.
31 December – MacRobertson Miller Airlines Flight 1750 crashes south of Port Hedland , Western Australia , killing all 26 people on board.
Non-specific dates
Australia's population is estimated to have reached 12 million in 1968.
Arts and literature
Film
Television
25 May – An episode of the ABC series Bellbird stops the nation when the character of Charlie Cousins (played by Robin Ramsay ) dies in a fall from a silo.
Sport
Unknown dates
Births
9 January – Mardi Lunn , golfer
7 February – Phillip Tahmindjis , ice speed skater
12 February – Nathan Rees , 41st Premier of New South Wales (2008–2009)
1 April – Mike Baird , 44th Premier of New South Wales (2014–2017)
7 April – Duncan Armstrong , swimmer
20 April – Julia Morris , actress, comedian, television presenter and producer
13 May – Scott Morrison , 30th Prime Minister of Australia
26 May – Rachael Sporn , basketball player
28 May – Kylie Minogue , entertainer
1 June – Jason Donovan , entertainer
4 June – Rachel Griffiths , actress
15 June – Hugh McDermott , politician
27 July – Julian McMahon , actor (died 2025)
3 August – Tom Long , actor (died 2020)
8 August – Craig Ruddy , artist (died 2022)
9 August – Eric Bana , actor
10 August – Cate Shortland , film and television writer and director
20 August – Sandy Brondello , basketball player and coach
13 September – Andrew Gee , politician
17 September – Peter Anderson , cricketer
18 September – Brad Beven , triathlete
30 September – Sharon Jaklofsky , track and field athlete
8 October – Garry Hocking , footballer
12 October – Hugh Jackman , actor
15 October – Trent Zimmerman , politician
5 November – Penny Wong , politician, Minister for Foreign Affairs
13 November – Cherie Burton , politician
10 December – Barry Urban , politician (died 2025)
19 December – Kristina Keneally , 42nd Premier of New South Wales (2009–2011)
Deaths
14 January – Dorothea Mackellar (born 1885), poet
21 February – Howard Florey (born 1898), Nobel Prize-winning pharmacologist
22 May – Arthur Bridges (born 1901), New South Wales Minister for Child and Social Welfare
24 June – Tony Hancock (born 1924), British comedian
31 July – Jack Pizzey (born 1911), Premier of Queensland
19 August – William McCall (born 1908), politician
25 August – Stan McCabe (born 1910), cricketer
28 September – Sir Norman Brookes (born 1877), tennis player
10 October – Gavin Long (born 1901), journalist and military historian
13 October – Dame Jean Macnamara (born 1899), medical scientist
27 October – James Hunter (born 1882), politician
14 December – Margaret Theadora Allan (born 1889), community worker
20 December – John Jennings (born 1878), politician
See also
References
18th century 19th century 20th century 21st century
1968 in Oceania
Sovereign states
Federated States of Micronesia
Fiji
Indonesia
Kiribati
Marshall Islands
Nauru
New Zealand
Palau
Papua New Guinea
Samoa
Solomon Islands
Timor-Leste
Tonga
Tuvalu
Vanuatu
Associated states of New Zealand