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History of Tasmania

The history of Tasmania begins at the end of the Last Glacial Period (approximately 12,000 years ago) when it is believed that the island was joined to the Australian mainland. Little is known of the human history of the island until the British colonisation of Tasmania in the 19th century.

Indigenous people edit

Tasmania was inhabited by an Indigenous population, the Aboriginal Tasmanians, and evidence indicates their presence in the territory, later to become an island, at least 35,000 years ago.[citation needed] At the time of the British occupation and colonisation in 1803 the Indigenous population was estimated at between 3000 and 10,000. Historian Lyndall Ryan's analysis of population studies led her to conclude that there were about 7000 spread throughout the island's nine nations;[1] Nicholas Clements, citing research by N.J.B. Plomley and Rhys Jones, settled on a figure of 3000 to 4000.[2]

The combination of the so-called Black War, internecine conflict and, from the late 1820s, the spread of infectious diseases to which they had no immunity,[3] reduced the population to about 300 by 1833. Almost all of the Indigenous population was relocated to Flinders Island by George Augustus Robinson. Until the 1970s, most people thought that the last surviving Tasmanian Aboriginal person was Truganini,[4] who died in 1876. However, this "extinction" was a myth, as documented by Lyndall Ryan in 1991.[5]

European arrival edit

 
Seventeenth century map of Tasmania, showing the parts seen by Tasman.
 
Melchisedech Thevenot (1620?–1692): Map of New Holland 1644, based on a map by the Dutch cartographer Joan Blaeu.

The first reported sighting of Tasmania by a European was on 24 November 1642 by the Dutch explorer Abel Tasman, who named the island Anthoonij van Diemenslandt, after his sponsor, the Governor of the Dutch East Indies. The name was later shortened to Van Diemen's Land by the British. In 1772, a French expedition led by Marc-Joseph Marion du Fresne landed on the island. Captain James Cook also sighted the island in 1777, and numerous other European seafarers made landfalls, adding a colourful array to the names of topographical features.

The first settlement was by the British at Risdon Cove on the eastern bank of the Derwent estuary in 1803, by a small party sent from Sydney, under Lt. John Bowen. An alternative settlement was established by Capt. David Collins 5 km to the south in 1804 in Sullivans Cove on the western side of the Derwent, where fresh water was more plentiful. The latter settlement became known as Hobart Town, later shortened to Hobart, after the British Colonial Secretary of the time, Lord Hobart. The settlement at Risdon was later abandoned.

The early settlers were mostly convicts and their military guards, with the task of developing agriculture and other industries. Numerous other convict settlements were made in Van Diemens Land, including secondary prisons, such as the particularly harsh penal colonies at Port Arthur in the south-east and Macquarie Harbour on the West Coast. The Aboriginal resistance to this invasion was so strong, that troops were deployed across much of Tasmania to drive the Aboriginal people into captivity on nearby islands.

Timeline edit

Pre-1800 edit

1800–1809 edit

 
Group of natives of Tasmania
  • 1802: French explorer Nicolas Baudin surveys Derwent during month-long visit to South-East Tasmania, on which his party makes extensive notes on Aboriginal people, plants and animals.
  • 1803: Lieutenant John Bowen's 49-member party, with the ships Lady Nelson and Albion, starts first British settlement of Tasmania at Risdon Cove, naming it Hobart.
  • 1804: Lieutenant-Colonel David Collins' 262-member party lands at Sullivans Cove in February; the settlement, which becomes known as Hobart Town, grows to 433 with arrival in June of rest of his Port Phillip party.
  • 1804: Soldiers temporarily refuse guard duties at Risdon amid fears of convict rebellion.
  • 1804: Aboriginal people killed in Risdon affray and settlement there abandoned.
  • 1804: Church of England clergyman Robert Knopwood conducts first divine service at Sullivans Cove.
  • 1804: Hobart's first cemetery opens, later St David's Park.
  • 1804: Colonel William Paterson establishes Port Dalrymple (Tamar River) settlement, first at George Town, then at York Town on river's western side.
  • 1805: After supply ships fail to arrive on time, famine forces David Collins to cut rations by one-third
  • 1805: Collins leaves tent home to take up residence in first Government House, a wooden cottage.
  • 1805: Harbourmaster William Collins establishes Australia's first whaling station at Ralphs Bay.
  • 1805: First land grants include 10 acres (40,000 m2) to Robert Knopwood
  • 1806: Colonel William Paterson begins transfer of York Town settlement to site of modern Launceston
  • 1807: First Norfolk Island settlers arrive in Hobart in the Lady Nelson and settle at New Norfolk
  • 1807: Lieutenant Thomas Laycock leads five-man party on first overland journey from Launceston to Hobart, taking nine days, mainly to seek supplies for the northern settlement.
  • 1809: Deposed New South Wales Governor William Bligh arrives in Hobart and temporarily disrupts David Collins' authority as lieutenant-governor.
  • 1809: Floods in Derwent

1810–1819 edit

 
Hobart Town chain gang
 
Proclamation issued in 1816 to promote friendship between Aboriginal and white people , though it had little effect
  • 1810: David Collins dies suddenly, Lieutenant Edward Lord takes over and first of three administrators pending appointment of second lieutenant-governor.
  • 1810: First church, St David's, built
  • 1810: Colony's first flour mill built beside Rivulet between Murray St and Elizabeth St, operated by Edward Lord and William Collins
  • 1810: Administration launches colony's first newspaper, the Derwent Star and Van Diemen's Land Intelligencer
  • 1810: Sealing expedition discovers Macquarie Island
  • 1811: After arriving from Sydney, Governor Lachlan Macquarie draws up plan for Hobart streets and orders construction of public buildings and Mount Nelson signal station.
  • 1812: Michael Howe (later bushranging gang leader) among first convicts to arrive directly from England in HMS Indefatigable
  • 1812: Northern Tasmania's lieutenant-governorship ceases, Government House in Hobart takes control of whole island
  • 1813: Schooner Unity not heard of again after convicts seize it in Derwent
  • 1813: First Post Office opens in postmaster's house on corner of Argyle St and Macquarie St
  • 1814: Work starts on Anglesea Barracks, Australia's longest continuously occupied military building
  • 1814: Colony's first horse races believed to have taken place at New Town
  • 1814: Lieutenant-governor's court created to deal with small personal financial disputes.
  • 1814: Governor Lachlan Macquarie offers amnesty to bushrangers
  • 1814: Ship Argo disappears after seizure by convicts in Derwent
  • 1815: Michael Howe's bushranging gang kills two settlers in New Norfolk raid
  • 1815: Lieutenant-Governor Thomas Davey declares martial law against all bushrangers, mainly escaped convicts, with some military deserters; Governor Lachlan Macquarie later revokes order.
  • 1815: Captain James Kelly circumnavigates island in whaleboat
  • 1815: First Van Diemen's Land wheat shipment to Sydney.
  • 1816: First emigrant ship arrives with free settlers from England
  • 1817: Weekly mail service begins between Hobart and Launceston
  • 1817: Work starts on new St David's Church, replacing earlier structure blown down in storm
  • 1817: First convict ships arrive directly from England
  • 1817: New Government House occupied in Macquarie St, on site of present Town Hall, lower Elizabeth St and Franklin Square.
  • 1818: Government opens flour mill in Hobart
  • 1818: Soldiers and convict kill bushranger Michael Howe on banks of Shannon River
  • 1818: Government establishes nucleus of Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens
  • 1819: First proper hospital opens
  • 1819: Hobart-New Norfolk road built
  • 1819: St David's Church opens

1820–1829 edit

In 1820, Tasmanian roads were first macadamised and carthorses began to replace bullocks. In the same year, the first substantial jail was completed on the corner of Macquarie Street and Murray Street; and merino sheep arrived from John Macarthur's stud in New South Wales. 1820 also saw the first Wesleyan (Methodist) meeting in the colony. The following year marked the arrival of the first Catholic clergyman, Father Phillip Conolly; and on his second visit, Governor Lachlan Macquarie chose sites for Perth, Campbell Town, Ross, Oatlands, Sorell and Brighton. In 1821, officials and convicts left Port Dalrymple to establish Macquarie Harbour penal settlement at Sarah Island.

1822 was the first year Van Diemen's Land Agricultural Society held a meeting in Hobart. In 1823 the Presbyterian Church's first official ministry in Australia occurred in Hobart and the first Tasmanian bank, Bank of Van Diemen's Land, was established.

The inauguration of the Supreme Court occurred in 1824, as did the opening of Cascade Brewery, Australia's longest continuously operating Brewery. Convict Alexander Pearce was hanged after escaping twice from Macquarie Harbour and surviving by eating his companions. Convict Matthew Brady began his bushranging career after escaping from Macquarie Harbour.

On 3 December 1825, Van Diemen's Land became independent from New South Wales with an appointed Executive Council, its own judicial establishment, and Legislative Council. Also in that year, the Richmond Bridge, Australia's oldest existing bridge, was opened; and a party of soldiers and convicts established Maria Island penal settlement

In 1826, Van Diemen's Land Company launched the North-West pastoral and agricultural development at Circular Head; and the Tasmanian Turf Club was established. Settler John Batman, later one of Melbourne's founders, helped capture bushranger Matthew Brady near Launceston. Hobart experienced a disease epidemic which was blamed on rivulet pollution. A courthouse was built on the corner of Macquarie Street and Murray Street; and street lighting with oil lamps was introduced. 1826 was also the year that the Legislative Council met formally for the first time.

1827 saw the first regatta-style events on Derwent River; and Van Diemen's Land Company began settlement at Emu Bay (now Burnie).

A proclamation made in 1828 by Lieutenant-Governor George Arthur excluded Aboriginal people from settled areas and was the year of the Cape Grim massacre. In 1828, martial law was also declared against Aboriginal people in settled areas after Van Diemen's Land Company shepherds killed 30 Aboriginal people at Cape Grim. Regular mail services to and from Sydney began. That year also saw widespread floods. The following year a jail for women convicts ("female factory") opened at Cascades; "Protector" George Augustus Robinson started an Aboriginal mission at Bruny Island, convicts seized the brig Cyprus at Recherche Bay and sailed to China; Van Diemen's Land Scientific Society was formed under patronage of Lieutenant-Governor George Arthur; and a Hobart-New Norfolk coach service began.

1830–1839 edit

 
A map of Tasmania from 1837.
  • 1830: George Augustus Robinson starts reconciliation efforts with Aboriginal people by visiting west coast
  • 1830: Samuel Anderson, Pioneer Settler, arrives in Hobart aboard the Lang, employed as book keeper with Van Diemens Land Co. Will go on to establish the third permanent settlement in Victoria at Westernport.
  • 1830: Administration launches "Black Line" military campaign across most of colony to round up Aboriginal people; in seven weeks two are shot and two are captured
  • 1830: Port Arthur penal settlement established
  • 1830: Convict chain gang starts work on causeway across Derwent at Bridgewater
  • John Glover English landscape painter, arrives in Van Diemen's Land on his 64th birthday
  • 1831: Australia's first novel, Quintus Servinton, by Henry Savery, published in Hobart
  • 1831: New land regulations discontinue free land grants, replacing them with sales
  • 1832: George Augustus Robinson arrives in Hobart with Aboriginal people from Oyster Bay and Big River tribes, the last Aboriginal people removed from European-settled areas; Wybalenna, Flinders Island, chosen for Aboriginal resettlement site.
  • 1832: Ends of martial law against Aboriginal people
  • 1832: Work starts on Cascade Brewery
  • 1832: Regular Hobart-Launceston coach service begins
  • 1832: Maria Island penal settlement closes
  • 1832: Derwent Light ("Iron Pot") lit for first time
  • 1833: Robert Massie arrives in Tasmania takes up position as Engineer with Van Diemens Land Co.
  • 1833: First professional theatrical performance in Hobart
  • 1833: Macquarie Harbour penal settlement closes, convicts transferred to Port Arthur
  • 1834: Convicts evacuating Macquarie Harbour capture brig Frederick and sail to Chile
  • 1834: Stagecoaches begin daily Hobart-New Norfolk, weekly Hobart-Launceston services
  • 1834: Daily Hobart-New Norfolk steamship trips begin
  • 1834: Launceston "female factory" completed
  • 1834: Point Puer boys' convict establishment opens at Port Arthur
  • 1834: First coal shipment leaves convict mines on Tasman Peninsula
  • 1834: Jury trial system for all civil cases begins
  • 1834: Horse-drawn coaches begin taxi-style service
  • 1834: Henty brothers leave Launceston for Portland Bay to make first European settlement in Victoria
  • 1835: Nearly all remaining Tasmanian Aboriginal people surrender to George Augustus Robinson and are moved to Flinders Island
  • 1835: Transport George III sinks in D'Entrecasteaux Channel with loss of 139 male convicts of 220 aboard
  • 1835: In separate expeditions, John Batman and John Pascoe Fawkner leave Launceston to launch first European settlements at Port Phillip, which developed into Melbourne.
  • 1835: Samuel Anderson leaves Launceston to establish third permanent Victorian settlement at Bass in Western Port.
  • 1835: Colonial artist John Glover sends 35 paintings of Van Diemen's Land to London exhibition.
  • 1835: First meeting to establish Launceston Bank for Savings.
  • 1836: First Catholic Church was built—St John the Evangelist's Church in Richmond. It is the oldest running Catholic Church in Australia.
  • 1836: Charles Darwin visits Hobart during round-the-world voyage in HMS Beagle
  • 1836: Hobart Post office moves to premises on corner of Elizabeth Street and Collins Street
  • 1836: Eleven counties, and some parishes therein, proclaimed; establishing the cadastral divisions of the colony
  • 1837: Theatre Royal opens
  • 1837: Lieutenant Governor Sir John Franklin founds Tasmanian Society for the Study of Natural Science
  • 1837: Police office built on corner of Macquarie Street and Murray Street
  • 1838: The first secular register of births, deaths and marriages in the British colonies established
  • 1838: First annual Hobart Regatta on Derwent
  • 1838: Work begins on old Customs House, which becomes Parliament House at start of responsible self-government in 1856
  • 1838: Sir John Franklin establishes board of education to introduce non-denominational schools
  • 1838: Bruny Island Lighthouse completed

1840–1849 edit

  • 1840: Economic depression starts, continues until 1845
  • 1840: Captain James Ross arrives with Antarctic expedition in HMS Erebus and HMS Terror
  • 1840: Sir John Franklin establishes Ross Bank meteorological observatory site, named after explorer, near present Government House site
  • 1840: Dr William Bedford founds first Hobart private hospital (in house near Theatre Royal) after dispute at government hospital
  • 1840: Transportation from Britain to NSW ends, causing heavier influx of convicts to Tasmania
  • 1842: Colony's first official census, population 57,471
  • 1842: The Weekly Examiner begins publication in Launceston
  • 1842: Hobart proclaimed a city
  • 1842: Tasmanian Journal of Natural Science, first Australian scientific journal, begins publication
  • 1842: Peak year for convict arrivals (5329)
  • 1842: Maria Island's Darlington penitentiary reopened
  • 1843: Arrival of Tasmania's first Anglican bishop, Francis Russell Nixon
  • 1843: Bushranger Martin Cash captured in Hobart, his death sentence was commuted and he was later pardoned
  • 1844: First Catholic bishop, Robert Willson, arrives
  • 1844: Formation of Royal Society of Tasmania, first branch outside Britain, as development of society founded in 1837 by Sir John Franklin; society branch takes over botanical gardens
  • 1844: Norfolk Island, formerly administered by NSW, comes under Tasmanian control
  • 1845: Emigrant ship Cataraqui wrecked near King Island, 406 lives lost
  • 1845: Hobart Savings Bank opens
  • 1845: Jewish community consecrates Hobart Synagogue, Australia's oldest
  • 1845: Artist John Skinner Prout organises first known Australian exhibition of pictures in Hobart
  • 1846: Absconding Act introduced to detain escaping convicts.[7]
  • 1846: Foundation of the Hutchins School and Launceston Grammar School
  • 1846: Lieutenant-governor Sir John Eardley-Wilmot dismissed, allegedly for failure to suppress convict homosexuality
  • 1846: Convict transportation to Tasmania suspended until 1848
  • 1846: Tasmania becomes first Australian colony to enact legislation to protect native animals
  • 1847: Britain orders closure of NSW convict establishment and transfer of remaining prisoners to Tasmania
  • 1847: Big Hobart meeting petitions Queen Victoria for end to transportation
  • 1847: Wybalenna Aboriginal settlement at Flinders Island closes and surviving 47 Aboriginal people move to Oyster Cove
  • 1847: News of Sir John Franklin's death during Arctic exploration reaches Hobart
  • 1847: Charles Davis founds hardware business
  • 1847: Launceston doctor W. R. Pugh uses ether as general anaesthetic for first time in Tasmania
  • 1848: Hobart peaks as whaling port, with 1046 men aboard 37 ships
  • 1848: Colony now only place of transportation in British Empire
  • 1849: "Young Irelanders" (Irish political prisoners), including William Smith O'Brien, arrive at Port Arthur
  • 1849: Anti-transportation league formed after Launceston public meeting
  • 1849: Tasmania gets first public library
  • 1849: Tasmanian apple growers export to the United States of America and New Zealand

1850–1859 edit

  • 1850: Prisoner Patrick O'Donoghue starts publishing 'The Irish Exile', first Irish Nationalist paper in Australia.
  • 1850: First secular high school built at Domain
  • 1850: Constitution Dock officially opened
  • 1851: O'Donoghue sent to a chain-gang, released, restarts his paper and sent again to a chain-gang.
  • 1851: Black Thursday bushfires in February
  • 1851: Influenza epidemic
  • 1851: First election for 16 non-appointed members of Legislative Council
  • 1851: Hobart Chamber of Commerce established
  • 1851: Launceston host for first intercolonial cricket match (Van Diemen's Land v Port Phillip district)
  • 1851: Maria Island's Darlington penitentiary abandoned
  • 1852: Elections for first Hobart and Launceston municipal councils
  • 1852: Payable gold discovered near Fingal
  • 1853: Jubilee festival in Hobart celebrates end of convict transportation after arrival of last ship, the St Vincent
  • 1853: First Tasmanian adhesive postage stamp issued
  • 1854: Severe floods, fires hit city
  • 1854: The Mercury founded as bi-weekly publication
  • 1855: Horse-drawn "buses" (large carts) begin services, mainly on city–New Town route; they later become enclosed vehicles
  • 1855: Henry Young becomes first vice-regal representative to have title of Governor
  • 1856: Name of Van Diemen's Land officially changed to Tasmania after grant of responsible self-government
  • 1856: New two-house Parliament opens after elections, William Champ becomes colony's first Premier
  • 1856: Norfolk Island transferred from Tasmanian to NSW control
  • 1857: Hobart's municipal Incorporation
  • 1857: Hobart-Launceston telegraph line opens
  • 1857: Hobart customers start using coal gas, streets get gas lighting
  • 1858: First meeting of Hobarts Marine Board, Australia's oldest port authority
  • 1858: Hobart and Launceston councils form municipal police forces
  • 1858: Council of Education established
  • 1858: Hobart Savings Bank founded
  • 1858: Parliament passes Rural Municipalities Act
  • 1859: Worries about public health prompt Hobart Town Council to appoint health officer
  • 1859: New Government House at Domain occupied for first time, by Governor Henry Young and Lady Young

1860–1869 edit

  • 1860: British troops sail from Hobart for Māori war in New Zealand
  • 1860: Volunteer corps of infantry, cavalry and artillery formed
  • 1860: Economic depression
  • 1860: The Mercury begins daily publication
  • 1862: Tasmania adopts Torrens title land-conveyancing and registration system
  • 1862: Serious Derwent flooding
  • 1862: Hobart's post office moves to rebuilt courthouse on corner of Macquarie St and Murray St
  • 1863: Opening of Tasmanian Museum on present site
  • 1864: First shipment of trout and salmon ova arrives from England
  • 1866: Hobart Town Hall opened
  • 1866: Hobart Philharmonic Society formed
  • 1867: George Peacock launches one of Australia's first jam factories in Hobart (later operated by Henry Jones and Co under the name IXL)
  • 1868: First royal visit, during which Prince Alfred (Duke of Edinburgh) lays foundation stone for St David's Cathedral and turns first sod for Tasmania's first railway, Launceston-Deloraine line, built by a private company.
  • 1868: With Education Act, Tasmania becomes first Australian colony to have compulsory state education system, administered by local school boards
  • 1869: Death of William Lanne ("King Billy"), reputedly the last full blood Tasmanian Aboriginal man; whose remains were disrespected horribly after disagreement over who should have his remains.
  • 1869: Submarine communications cable successfully establishes link between Tasmania and Melbourne.

1870–1879 edit

  • 1870: British troops leave
  • 1870: Tasmanian Public Library formally constituted
  • 1871: Opening of Launceston–Deloraine railway, Tasmania's first—(1,600 mm (5 ft 3 in))
  • 1871: James "Philosopher" Smith discovers tin at Mount Bischoff
  • 1872: Direct telegraphic communication begins between Tasmania and England
  • 1873: Work begins on private operated Hobart–Launceston rail link—(1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in))
  • 1873: Government takes over Launceston-Deloraine line
  • 1874: St David's Cathedral consecrated
  • 1874: Tasmanian Racing Club established
  • 1874: Launceston rioters protest against rates levy for Deloraine railway
  • 1874: First book publication of Marcus Clarke's For the Term of His Natural Life, set mainly in Tasmania
  • 1875: Hobart Hospital begins professional training of nurses
  • 1875: Widespread flooding
  • 1876: Truganini, described as last Tasmanian full blooded Aboriginal person, dies in Hobart
  • 1876: Hobart-Launceston railway opens
  • 1877: Port Arthur penal settlement closed
  • 1877: Gold discovered at Beaconsfield
  • 1878: Mount Heemskirk tin mining begins

1880–1889 edit

  • 1880: Earthquake hits Hobart
  • 1880: Tasmania gets first telephone with line from city centre to Mount Nelson signal station
  • 1880: Start of Derwent Sailing Boat Club (later Royal Yacht Club of Tasmania)
  • 1880: Gold discovered at Pieman River on West Coast, Tasmania
  • 1881: William Shoobridge organises first trial shipment of apples from Hobart to Britain
  • 1881: Hobart officially replaces 'Hobart Town' as capital's name
  • 1882: Married Women's Property Act allows wives to own property in their own right
  • 1882: Silver-lead discovered at Zeehan
  • 1882: Hobart Stock Exchange opens
  • 1883: Typhoid and diphtheria epidemic prompt public health legislation
  • 1883: Government opens first Hobart and Launceston telephone exchanges
  • 1883: Trades and Labor Council formed
  • 1883: Discovery of gold at "Iron Blow" at Mount Lyell amidst increased West Coast, Tasmania mineral prospecting
  • 1885: Education Department created, centralising control of schools
  • 1885: Mersey and Deloraine Railway opened—4′6″ gauge
  • 1885: Oatlands to Parattah Railway opened
  • 1885: Formation of the Mt Lyell Prospecting Association
  • 1886: Copper found at Mount Lyell
  • 1886: Government takes over Tasmanian Museum and Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens
  • 1886: Federal Council of Australasia discusses Federation at its first assembly held in Hobart
  • 1886: Public Health Act creates local boards of health
  • 1887: Derwent Valley railway line to New Norfolk opens, extended to Glenora within a year
  • 1887: Establishment of The Friends School in Hobart by the Society of Friends (Quakers).
  • 1887: Italian entrepreneur Diego Bernacchi floats company to develop Maria Island
  • 1888: Hobart gets first technical school
  • 1888: Reservoir water supply opened
  • 1888: Launceston proclaimed a city
  • 1889: Launceston Post Office built

1890–1899 edit

  • 1890: University of Tasmania opens at the Domain
  • 1890: Government takes over Hobart-Launceston railway
  • 1890: Legislation provides for payment of Tasmanian parliamentarians
  • 1891: Bank of Van Diemen's Land collapses, economic depression follows
  • 1891: Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery opens in Launceston
  • 1891: Apsley Railway opened
  • 1892: George FitzGerald founds FitzGeralds department store chain, now owned by Harris Scarfe
  • 1893: Private company begins electric tramway in Hobart, first in an Australian capital city
  • 1893: Mount Lyell Mining and Railway Company formed
  • 1893: Government establishes Tasmanian Tourist Association
  • 1894: Hobart international exhibition opens
  • 1894: Government introduces flat-rate income tax system
  • 1895: The premiers conference in Hobart discusses proposals for federal constitution and plebiscite.
  • 1895: Launceston becomes first southern hemisphere city to get electric light after first Tasmanian hydro-electric station opens at Duck Reach on South Esk River
  • 1895: All Tasmanian districts move to Australian Eastern Standard Time, ending different time zones in colony
  • 1896: Entrepreneur George Adams launches Tattersalls lottery venture in Hobart; first lottery held to dispose of assets of failed Bank of Van Diemen's Land
  • 1896: Ore smelting begins at Mount Lyell
  • 1897: Hare-Clark voting system used on trial basis for state polls in Hobart and Launceston (six members in Hobart, four in Launceston)[8]
  • 1897: Formation of Southern Tasmania Football Association
  • 1897: Serious bushfires start on New Year's Eve, end with six lives lost
  • 1898: Tasmanians vote four to one in favor of referendum on federation with mainland colonies
  • 1898: Municipal police forces become part of new statewide government force
  • 1898: Electric street lighting begins in Hobart
  • 1898: Norwegian-born Carsten Borchgrevink's Antarctic expedition arrives in Hobart on way south; Tasmanian Louis Bernacchi joins as physicist
  • 1899: First Tasmanian troops leave for Second Boer War in South Africa
  • 1899: Federation of Australia wins overwhelming Tasmanian approval in the second referendum

1900–1909 edit

 
Horace Watson recording the songs of Fanny Cochrane Smith, considered to be the last fluent speaker of a Tasmanian language, 1903.
  • 1900: More Tasmanian troops leave for Second Boer War
  • 1900: Adult male suffrage for House of Assembly adopted, with property qualifications abolished
  • 1900: End of whaling operations from Hobart
  • 1900: Bubonic plague scare grips Tasmania
  • 1900: Macquarie Island becomes a Tasmanian dependency
  • 1901: Administrator Sir John Dodds reads proclamation of Commonwealth of Australia from Tasmanian Supreme Court steps
  • 1901: Visit by Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York (future King George V and Queen Mary)
  • 1901: First elections for Federal Parliament
  • 1901: Zeehan conference leads to formation of Tasmanian Workers Political League (forerunner to Labor Party)
  • 1902: Last Tasmanian troops return from the Boer War
  • 1902: Robert Carl Sticht completes world's first successful pyritic smelting at Mount Lyell
  • 1903: Women get House of Assembly voting right (the already had it for federal polls)
  • 1903: Hobart-Launceston telephone line opens
  • 1903: Two ships leave Hobart on relief expedition to free British explorer Robert Scott's Discovery from Antarctic ice
  • 1903: Launceston smallpox epidemic forces cancellation of Tasmanian centenary celebrations, some festivities a year later
  • 1904: Legislation allows Tasmanian women to become lawyers
  • 1904: Formation of Tasmanian National Association (forerunner to Liberal Party)
  • 1904: Native flora and fauna reserve declared at Schouten Island and Freycinet Peninsula
  • 1905: Wireless telegraphy experiments between Hobart and Tasman Island and between state and mainland
  • 1905: Hobart General Post Office building opens
  • 1906: Marconi Co. demonstrated a wireless telegraphy service between Devonport and Queenscliff, Victoria
  • 1906: Tasman Lighthouse first lit
  • 1907: New public library, built with money from American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie, opens in Hobart
  • 1907: Hare-Clark voting system extended to all of Tasmania
  • 1908: State school fees abolished
  • 1908: Queen Alexandra Maternity Hospital opens in Hobart
  • 1908: First Scout troops formed
  • 1909: Guy Fawkes Day (5 November) fire destroy Hobart market, City Hall later built on site
  • 1909: First statewide use of Hare-Clark voting system elects first Labor government, led by John Earle; government lasts only one week, with return of conservatives
  • 1909: Irish blight wipes out potato crop

1910–1919 edit

  • 1910: Carters' wage strike paralyses Hobart for a week, ends with win for workers
  • 1910: Legislation sets maximum 48-hour working week and minimum wages in several trades
  • 1910: Great Lake hydro-electric project starts
  • 1911: The Christian Brothers founded and opened the St. Virgil's College School in what is now, Barrack Street in Hobart.
  • 1911: Douglas Mawson's ship Aurora docks in Hobart on way to Antarctic
  • 1911: Philip Smith teachers' college opens at Domain, Electric trams begin running in Launceston
  • 1912: Mount Lyell fire traps miners underground, 42 die
  • 1912: Norwegian Roald Amundsen, first man to reach South Pole, arrives in Hobart on return from Antarctic expedition
  • 1912: Hobart City Council takes over tramway service
  • 1912: First Tasmanian Girl Guide company formed
  • 1913: First government high schools open in Hobart and Launceston
  • 1913: Hobart City Council buys tram service
  • 1913: Term "free by servitude" referring to ex-convicts, appears for last time in official documents, after use for more than 100 years
  • 1914: A. Delfosse Badgery makes Tasmania's first flight from Elwick in a plane he built himself
  • 1914: First Tasmanian troops leave to fight in World War I
  • 1914: The town of Bismarck is renamed Collinsvale due to anti-German sentiment inflamed by the war
  • 1914: State government buys hydro-electric company
  • 1915: Tasmanian legislation establishes Australia's first special authority to create and manage parks and reserves
  • 1915: Serious bushfires
  • 1916: In Tasmania's worst rail disaster, driver and six passengers die, 31 survive injuries, after Launceston-Hobart express crashes near Campania
  • 1916: First all-Tasmanian battalion (the 40th) leaves for World War I
  • 1916: Opening of Great Lakes hydro scheme's first stage, Waddamana power station
  • 1916: State's first national parks declared at Mount Field and Freycinet
  • 1916: Daylight saving time first introduced as temporary wartime measure
  • 1917: Electrolytic Zinc Company works at Risdon and Australian Commonwealth Carbide's plant at Electrona established
  • 1917: Ridgeway reservoir completed
  • 1919: Worldwide Spanish influenza epidemic reaches Tasmania, affecting one-third of the population and claiming 171 lives
  • 1919: Ex-World War I airman A. L. Long makes first flight over Bass Strait
  • 1919: Frozen Tasmanian meat exported for the first time

1920–1929 edit

  • 1920: Visit by Prince of Wales, future King Edward VIII
  • 1920: Miena dam completed
  • 1920: Launceston-born Hudson Fysh helps found Qantas
  • 1922: Legislation enables women to stand in state elections
  • 1922: Legacy movement starts with founding of Remembrance Club in Hobart by Major-General Sir John Gellibrand
  • 1922: Cradle Mountain-Lake St Clair National Park proclaimed
  • 1923: First concert by Hobart Symphony Orchestra
  • 1923: Severe flooding in Hobart
  • 1923: Labor's Joseph Lyons, a future prime minister, becomes state premier
  • 1924: Private company starts first Tasmanian radio station, 7ZL (now part of ABC), with regular broadcasts from The Mercury building
  • 1924: Electrolytic Zinc Co makes first superphosphate at Risdon
  • 1925: Workmen open David Collins' grave during conversion of old St David's Cemetery into St David's Park
  • 1925: Osmiridium fields discovered at Adamsfield in south-west
  • 1927: Inquiry into proposed bridge linking Hobart city with eastern shore
  • 1927: Visit by Duke and Duchess of York (future King George VI and Queen Elizabeth)
  • 1928: Cadbury's Claremont factory makes first chocolate
  • 1928: Voting in Tasmanian state elections becomes compulsory (federal voting became compulsory in 1924)
  • 1929: Disastrous floods, mainly in Northern Tasmania, take 22 lives; dam burst damages Derby township and tin mines
  • 1929: Hobart gets automatic telephone system
  • 1929: Great Depression begins
  • 1929: Legislation creates Hydro-Electric Commission, replacing government department

1930–1939 edit

  • 1931: Tasmanian Harold Gatty and American Wiley Post make record round-the-world flight (eight days, 15 hours)
  • 1932: Ivan and Victor Holyman start air service between Launceston and Flinders Island
  • 1932: Lyell Highway opens, linking Hobart with West Coast
  • 1932: Former premier Joseph Lyons becomes prime minister, only Tasmanian to hold that office
  • 1933: Commonwealth Grants Commission appointed to inquire into affairs of claimant states, including Tasmania
  • 1934: Holyman Airways (a forerunner of Ansett) launches Launceston–Melbourne service, within months, company plane Miss Hobart disappears over Bass Strait with loss of 12 people, including proprietor Victor Holyman
  • 1934: Election of government led by Albert Ogilvie starts 35 years of continuous Labor governments
  • 1935: Five die when Holyman Airways plane Loina crashes off Flinders Island.
  • 1935: Hobart gets first electric trolley buses
  • 1935: Legislation for three-year state parliament terms
  • 1936: SS Paringa sinks in Bass Strait while towing tanker, 31 die
  • 1936: ABC forms orchestra
  • 1936 (7 September): Last known Tasmanian tiger (thylacine) dies at Hobart's Beaumaris Zoo
  • 1936: First commercial flights use federal aerodrome at Cambridge
  • 1936: Submarine telephone cable service begins between Tasmania and Victoria via King Island
  • 1936: First two area schools (renamed district schools in 1973) open at Sheffield and Hagley
  • 1937: Open of Mount Wellington summit road, built as Depression relief work project
  • 1937: Poliomyelitis epidemic
  • 1937: Five-year state parliamentary terms return
  • 1938: Production starts at APPM's Burnie mill
  • 1938: Work begins on a floating arch bridge across Derwent in Hobart
  • 1939: World War II begins
  • 1939: Death in office of prime minister Joseph Lyons
  • 1939: Royal Hobart Hospital opens on present site

1940–1949 edit

  • 1940: Tasmanian soldiers leave for North African campaign with Australian 6th Division
  • 1940: German naval raiders Pinguin and Atlantis lay mines off Hobart and other Australian areas. Hobart closed to shipping because of mine threat; Bass Strait closed after mine sinks British steamer Cambridge.
  • 1941: Tasmanian soldiers leave for Malaya with Australian 8th Division
  • 1941: Australian Newsprint Mills' Boyer plant becomes first in world to produce newsprint from hardwood
  • 1942 (January–March): daylight saving time introduced as wartime measure
  • 1942: Women 18 to 30 called up for war work
  • 1943: Floating-arch pontoon bridge Hobart Bridge opens
  • 1943: Enid Lyons (later Dame Enid), widow of Joseph Lyons, elected first woman member of House of Representatives, winning seat of Darwin (now Braddon).
  • 1944: University of Tasmania begins transfer to Sandy Bay site
  • 1944: State Library established
  • 1945: Rani wins first Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race
  • 1946: Australian National Airways plane crashes at Seven Mile Beach, killing 25
  • 1946: Last horse-drawn Hobart cab ceases operation
  • 1946: Poliomyelitis epidemic
  • 1947: War-affected migrants begin arriving from Europe to work for Hydro-Electric Commission
  • 1947: Edward Brooker takes over as Labor premier after Robert Cosgrove's resignation to face corruption and bribery charges
  • 1947: Major flooding in south of state
  • 1948: Margaret McIntyre wins Legislative Council seat in May, becoming the first woman member of Tasmanian Parliament; airliner crash in NSW in September kills her and 12 others.
  • 1948: Robert Cosgrove resumes premiership after acquittal on corruption and bribery charges
  • 1948: ABC forms Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra on permanent basis
  • 1948: Fire destroys Ocean Pier
  • 1948: Antarctic research station established on Macquarie Island
  • 1949: Poliomyelitis epidemic
  • 1949: Government introduces compulsory X-rays in fight against tuberculosis
  • 1949: Tasmanian politician Dame Enid Lyons, widow of former prime minister Joseph Lyons, becomes first woman to reach federal ministry rank, as Executive Council vice-president
  • 1949: Government buys Theatre Royal

1950–1959 edit

  • 1951: Brighton army camp gets first intake of national service trainees
  • 1951: Hartz Mountains National Park proclaimed
  • 1951: Tasmanian Historical Research Association commences
  • 1951: Serious bushfires
  • 1951: Italian and German migrants arrive to work under contract for Hydro-Electric Commission
  • 1952: First woman elected to Hobart City Council
  • 1952: Severe floods
  • 1952: Government ends free hospital scheme
  • 1952: Single state licensing body formed for hotels and clubs
  • 1953: Tasman Limited diesel train service begins between Hobart and northern towns
  • 1953: Housing Department created to manage public housing
  • 1953: Beaconsfield becomes first Australian centre to get fluoridated water
  • 1954: Queen Elizabeth II becomes first reigning monarch to visit state, accompanied by Prince Philip. As part of 150th anniversary celebrations, she unveils monument to pioneer British settlers
  • 1954: Hobart Rivulet area damaged as severe floods affect southern and eastern Tasmania
  • 1954: Metropolitan Transport Trust formed
  • 1954: Tattersalls Lotteries moves headquarters from Hobart to Melbourne
  • 1954: Spouses of property owners get right to vote in Legislative Council elections
  • 1955: Royal commission appointed to inquire into University of Tasmania after request by Professor Sydney Orr
  • 1955: House of Assembly gets first two women members, Liberals Mabel Miller and Amelia Best
  • 1955: Hobart becomes first Australian city to get parking meters
  • 1955: Proclamation of Lake Pedder National Park (later extended to form Southwest National Park).
  • 1955: First ingot poured at Bell Bay aluminium refinery
  • 1955: Labor Party's federal conference in Hobart brings Australian Labor Party split over industrial groups to head, leading to formation of Australian Labor Party (Anti-Communist), later Democratic Labor Party
  • 1955: Lactos cheese factory opens at Burnie
  • 1956: University of Tasmania Council dismisses Professor Sydney Orr, alleging improper conduct by him with female student; Orr launches unsuccessful court action against university for wrongful dismissal
  • 1956: Tasmania gets first woman mayor, Dorothy Edwards of Launceston
  • 1957: Water Act establishes Rivers and Water Supply Commission
  • 1958: Hobart waterside works block two Australian Labor Party (Anti-Communist) members, father Frank Hursey and son Denis, from working in dispute over their objection to paying union levy that would partly go to ALP; police guard Hurseys after court order; Supreme Court awards them damages
  • 1959: MG Car Club of Tasmania formed
  • 1959: Princess of Tasmania becomes first roll-on/roll-off passenger ferry on Bass Strait run
  • 1959: High Court verdict in Hursey case upholds unions' right to levy members for political purposes, expel those who refuse to pay
  • 1959: Federal Government reduces claimant states to two, Tasmania and Western Australia

1960–1969 edit

  • 1960: Severe floods in Derwent Valley and Hobart, with business basements under water and houses washed away
  • 1960: Television stations ABT-2 (ABC) and TVT-6 (now WIN) start programs from Mount Wellington transmitters
  • 1960: New jail opens at Risdon
  • 1960: Hobart trams cease, succeeded by electric trolley buses
  • 1960: First meeting of Inland Fisheries Commission
  • 1960: Opening of new State Library headquarters
  • 1960: First city parking station opens in Argyle Street
  • 1961: Construction of Hobart-Sydney ferry terminal begins
  • 1962: Australian Paper Makers Ltd's Port Huon mill opens
  • 1962: TEMCO's Bell Bay ferro-manganese plant begins production
  • 1962: Government subsidises municipal fluoridation schemes
  • 1963: University of Tasmania completes move to Sandy Bay site; Universities Commission recommends medical school
  • 1964: Tasman Bridge opens for traffic, old pontoon bridge towed away
  • 1964: Hobart's water supply fluoridated
  • 1964: Glenorchy proclaimed city
  • 1965: First Tasmanians leave for Vietnam War under national service scheme
  • 1965: Ferry Empress of Australia makes first Sydney–Hobart voyage
  • 1965: Official opening of Tasmanian Conservatorium of Music
  • 1965: Bass Strait oil drilling begins
  • 1966: Huge copper reserves found in Mount Lyell area
  • 1966: Savage River iron ore agreements involving $62 million signed
  • 1967 (February): Black Tuesday bushfires claim 62 lives—53 in Hobart area—and destroy more than 1300 homes
  • 1967: Tasmanian joins other states in approving full constitutional rights for Aboriginal people
  • 1967: Hydro-Electric Commission tables plans in State Parliament to dam Lake Pedder in South-West
  • 1967: Daylight saving time and breathalyser tests introduced
  • 1968: Full adult franchise introduced for Legislative Council elections
  • 1968: Hobart trolley buses cease, replaced by diesel vehicles
  • 1968: State abolishes death penalty
  • 1968: Savage River iron ore project officially opens
  • 1968: Batman Bridge across lower Tamar River opens
  • 1969: Tasmanians vote Labor Party out after 35 years in office, Liberal-Centre Party forms coalition government
  • 1969: Worst floods in 40 years hit Launceston

1970–1979 edit

A video by the ABC about the introduction of daylight saving time.
  • 1970: Parliament legislates for permanent daylight saving time
  • 1970: State marine research laboratories at Taroona open
  • 1970: Electrolytic Zinc Company opens $6 million residue treatment plant
  • 1971: First woodchip shipment leaves Tasmanian Pulp and Forest Holdings' mill at Triabunna
  • 1971: APPM Ltd's Wesley Vale paper plant opens
  • 1971: First state Aboriginal conference held in Launceston
  • 1972: Conservationists lose battle to prevent flooding of Lake Pedder in South-West for hydro-electric scheme
  • 1972: Liberal-Centre Party coalition government collapses
  • 1972: Tasmanian College of Advanced Education opens in Hobart
  • 1972: Ferry Princess of Tasmania makes last Tasmanian voyage
  • 1972: Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre opens at Tasmanian Aboriginal Information Centre
  • 1973: Coastal freighter Blythe Star sinks with loss of three men, seven survivors spend eight days adrift in lifeboat before coming ashore on Forestier Peninsula
  • 1973: Australia's first legal casino opens at Wrest Point Hotel Casino
  • 1973: Sir Stanley Burbury, formerly chief justice, becomes first Australian-born governor of Tasmania
  • 1974: Three die when boiler explosion demolishes laundry at Mt St Canice Convent, Sandy Bay
  • 1974: Tasmanian workers under state wages board awards get four weeks annual leave; woman awarded equal pay
  • 1974: Hobart suburban rail services cease
  • 1975: Freighter MV Lake Illawarra crashes into Tasman Bridge, causing 12 deaths and bringing down part of bridge; temporary Bailey bridge put across Derwent
  • 1975: Police academy completed at Rokeby
  • 1975: Hotels allowed to open for Sunday trading
  • 1975: Totalizator Agency Board begins operating
  • 1976: Members of Aboriginal community ritually cremate Truganini's remains, scatter ashes in D'Entrecasteaux Channel
  • 1976: Tasmanian Wilderness Society formed
  • 1976: Freight equalisation scheme subsidises sea cargo to and from state
  • 1977: Repaired Tasman Bridge reopens to traffic
  • 1977: Royal visit, during which Aboriginal activist Michael Mansell presents the Queen with land rights claim
  • 1977: Tasmanian Film Corporation launched
  • 1978: Australian National Railways takes over Tasmanian rail system; Tasman Limited ceases operations, ending regular passenger train services in state
  • 1978: Hydro-Electric Commission proposes power scheme involving Gordon, Franklin and King rivers
  • 1979: Tasmanian College of Advanced Education moves to Launceston
  • 1979: State's first ombudsman begins duties
  • 1979: Hobart gets increased Saturday morning shopping
  • 1979: Government expands South-West conservation area to more than one-fifth of state's total area

1980–1989 edit

  • 1980: Australian Antarctic Division headquarters completed at Kingston
  • 1980: Labor MHA Gillian James becomes first woman to become State Government minister
  • 1980: Australian Maritime College opens at Beauty Point
  • 1980: Australian Heritage Commission includes Tasmania on National Estate register
  • 1981: Plebiscite on preferred new hydro-electric power development scheme shows 47% of voters favour Gordon-below-Franklin development, 8% prefer Gordon-above-Olga, with 45% casting informal votes, including 'no dams' write-ins.
  • 1981: Devonport proclaimed city
  • 1981: Bushfires destroy 40 Zeehan homes
  • 1982: Proclamation of Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area, including South-West, Franklin-Lower Gordon Wild Rivers and Cradle Mountain-Lake St Clair national parks; conservationists blockade Gordon-below-Franklin hydro-electric dam work
  • 1982: Tasmanians elect Liberals as government in their own right for first time in state's history
  • 1983: Federal regulations block Franklin Dam construction; High Court rules in favour of federal sovereignty, ending the proposed Gordon-below-Franklin scheme
  • 1983: Tasmanian Aboriginal Land Council established
  • 1983: Visit by The Prince and Princess of Wales
  • 1984: Official opening of Bowen Bridge
  • 1984: Official opening of Wrest Point Convention Centre
  • 1984: Fire damages Theatre Royal
  • 1984: Atlantic salmon eggs introduced to Tasmania
  • 1985: Four-day cremation ceremony at Oyster Cove, south of Hobart, for Aboriginal remains recovered from museums
  • 1985: CSIRO Marine Laboratories open in Hobart
  • 1985: Last voyage by ferry Empress of Australia before replacement by Abel Tasman
  • 1985: Last Tasmanian drive-in theatres close in Hobart and Launceston
  • 1985: Municipal rationalisation advances with Launceston taking over St Leonards and Lilydale
  • 1986: Pope John Paul II holds mass for 32,000 people at Elwick racecourse during Hobart visit
  • 1986: Archaeologists discover Aboriginal rock paintings in South-West believed to be 20,000 years old
  • 1987: Launching of Lady Nelson replica ship
  • 1987: High Court decision bans logging in Lemonthyme, southern forests
  • 1987: Antarctic supply ship Nella Dan sinks off Macquarie Island
  • 1988: International fleet of about 200 sailing, cruise and naval ships from about 20 countries calls at Hobart as part of Australian Bicentennial celebrations; more than 150 leave on race to Sydney
  • 1988: Clarence and Burnie proclaimed cities
  • 1988: Tasmanian Sporting Hall of Fame opens
  • 1989: State election ends with Labor-Green accord involving five independents; their no-confidence vote in Robin Gray's minority Liberal government gives Labor's Michael Field premiership

1990–1999 edit

  • 1990: Sea Cat Tasmania, built in Hobart by Incat, begins summer crossings of Bass Strait
  • 1990: King Island scheelite mine closes
  • 1990: World Rowing Championships held on Lake Barrington, near Sheffield
  • 1991: Savings Bank of Tasmania and Tasmanian Bank amalgamate as Trust Bank
  • 1991: Port Huon paper mill, Electrona silicon smelter, Renison tin mine and Devonport Ovaltine factory close
  • 1992: Aboriginal people occupy Risdon Cove in protest over land claims
  • 1992: Royal Hobart Hospital nursing school closes, ending hospital-based nursing training in Tasmania
  • 1992: Seven women ordained as Anglican priests at St David's Cathedral
  • 1992: State's unemployment rate reaches 12.2% as jobs decline in public and private sectors; rallies of angry workers force temporary closure of House of Assembly
  • 1993: Christine Milne (Tasmanian Greens) becomes first female leader of a Tasmanian political party
  • 1993: Spirit of Tasmania replaces Abel Tasman on Bass Strait ferry service
  • 1993: Tasmania's unemployment rate reaches 13.4%
  • 1993: State Government reduces total of municipalities from 46 to 29, number of departments from 17 to 12
  • 1994: End to 80 years of dam building as state's last power station, Tribute, opens near Tullah
  • 1994: HMAS Huon naval base decommissioned
  • 1995: All-day Saturday shop trading begins
  • 1995: Government announces legislation to transfer 38 km2 of culturally significant land to Aboriginal community, including Risdon Cove and Oyster Cove
  • 1995: States unemployment rate falls to 9.6% as number of Tasmanians in work sets record
  • 1996 (28 April): Gunman Martin Bryant kills 35 people and injures 20 more in shooting rampage at Port Arthur historic site; Supreme Court sentences him to life imprisonment
  • 1996: Former federal Liberal minister Peter Nixon heads Commonwealth state inquiry into Tasmanian economy
  • 1997: Tasmania becomes first state to formally apologise to Aboriginal community for past actions connected with the 'stolen generation'.
  • 1997: Hobart Ports Corporation succeeds marine board
  • 1997: State Parliament repeals two century-old laws that together made all male homosexual activity criminal
  • 1997: Royal Hobart Hospital announces part privatisation
  • 1997: Official opening of Hobart's Aquatic Centre
  • 1997: Nixon report recommendations include single chamber State Parliament with 27 members, government asset sales
  • 1997: About 800 gaming machines introduced into 55 Tasmanian hotels, clubs amid predictions of major social problems
  • 1998: Federal Government sells Hobart and Launceston airports
  • 1998: Subsidiary Kendell Airlines takes over Ansett's Tasmanian services
  • 1998: Parliament reduced from 54 members to 40–25 Members of the House of Assembly and 15 Members of the Legislative Council
  • 1998: Legislation passed to separate Hydro-Electric Commission into three bodies: Aurora Energy, Transend Networks and Hydro Tasmania.
  • 1998: Bushfires destroy six houses in Hobart suburbs, burn out 30 km2
  • 1998 (December): Storms and massive seas claim six lives in Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race
  • 1999: Wild winds and heavy rain caused chaos across Tasmania, one casualty being the Ferris Wheel at the Royal Hobart Regatta which blew over onto the Gee Whizzer ride. 113 km/h winds in Hobart, 158 km/h winds on Mount Wellington.
  • 1999: Tasmanian cricketer David Boon announced his retirement from Sheffield Shield cricket
  • March 1999: Tasmania is almost booked out for the millennium New Year's Eve party—a once-in-1000-year event for Tasmania's key resorts, hotels, motels and restaurants
  • 1999: Albanian refugees from Kosovo housed at Brighton military camp, renamed Tasmanian Peace Haven
  • 1999: Legislation passed to give Aboriginal community control of Wybalenna, Flinders Island
  • 1999: Colonial State Bank of NSW takes over Trust Bank
  • 1999: Official opening of Port Arthur Visitor Centre
  • 1999: Queen Alexandra Hospital building leased to private operators
  • 1999 (25 October): Labor part stalwart Eric Reece, hailed as Tasmania's greatest premier, died in Hobart, aged 90
  • 1999: Proclamation of Tasmanian Seamounts Marine Reserve, Australia's first deep-sea reserve
  • 1999: Tasmania voted the best temperate island in the world by the world's largest travel magazine, Conde Nast Traveler

2000–present edit

  • 2000 (1 January): Tasmania beamed to 43 television networks around the world to herald the new millennium
  • 2000: Elizabeth II, Queen of Australia visits Hobart
  • 2000: Tasmania hosts its first Sorry Day at Risdon Cove
  • 2000: Olympic Torch comes to Tasmania
  • 2000: New Federation Concert Hall opens in Hobart
  • 2001 (10 May): Centenary of Federation celebrated
  • 2001: For the first time in 120 years, Tasmanian Australian rules football clubs take the national stage playing home and away VFL games
  • 2001: Tasmanian company Gunns clinches $335 million deal to become one of the giants of the Australian forestry industry
  • 2001: Impulse Airlines begins, cutting one way Hobart-Melbourne fares to $40, but is subsumed by Qantas
  • 2001: 10 Days on the Island begins. It is Tasmania's biggest cultural festival in a century
  • 2001: State Government announces $53 million jail to replace the old Risdon Jail
  • 2001: New traffic laws introduced, drivers face automatic disqualification if travelling 38 km/h over the limit
  • 2001: Meningoccocal hits Tasmania with the first of many deaths
  • 2002: House and land boom begins with East Coast blocks selling for almost three times the town's previous record
  • 2002 (May): : Tasmania's suburban street speed limit dropped to 50 km/h in a bid to increase road safety
  • 2002: Tasmania hit by drought
  • 2002 (16 May): Death of Australia's last ANZAC, Tasmania's Alec Campbell, aged 103.
  • 2002 (3 August): Tasmanian boxer Daniel Geale wins Tasmania's only gold medal at the Commonwealth Games in Manchester, England.
  • 2002: Virgin Blue begins operating in Tasmania offering introductory $66 one-way fares to Melbourne
  • 2002 (1 September): Tasmania's fast ferries Spirit of Tasmania I and II replace original Spirit of Tasmania on Bass Strait trade.
  • 2002 (12 October): Tasmanian Tim Hawkins killed in Bali bombing
  • 2002: Deregulated shop trading hours begin
  • 2003 (January): People urged by Tasmanian Fire Service to abandon their Australia Day long-weekend plans and prepare their homes for a potential firestorm as a number of fires pose the worst fire threat in 30 years
  • 2003: Official opening of the restored Queenstown to Regatta Point railway line West Coast Wilderness Railway. (1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in))
  • 2003: Attempted hijack of a Qantas flight from Melbourne to Launceston
  • 2003: Federal Hotels gets exclusive control of state's gaming machines for 15 years with a further 5-year option
  • 2003: Richard Butler becomes Tasmania's new governor
  • 2003: Regina Bird wins reality-TV show Big Brother, becomes first Tasmanian to do so
  • 2003: Tasmania passed some of the most progressive relationship laws in the world including same-sex adoptions and registration of 'significant' relationships
  • 2003: Engagement of Tasmania's Mary Donaldson to Denmark's Crown Prince Frederik
  • 2004 (13 January): Spirit of Tasmania III makes its first voyage from Sydney to Devonport
  • 2004: State Government announces legislation to legalise brothels; leading to a back flip in 2005 when the government chose to ban brothels altogether.
  • 2004 (14 May): Wedding of Tasmania's Mary Donaldson to Denmark's Crown Prince Frederik in Copenhagen.
  • 2004 (20 May): Premier Jim Bacon dies in Hobart of lung cancer
  • 2004 (8 August): Tasmanian governor Richard Butler resigns at the request the premier, who agreed to pay "compensation" of $600,000 in lost salary
  • 2005 (15 October): Tasmanian Mary Donaldson and Crown Prince Frederik give birth to a male infant Prince Christian who will be in the line of succession to the Danish throne
  • 2006 (26 April): Beaconsfield mine collapse—One miner killed, two trapped underground for a fortnight.
  • 2006 (27 August): Final crossing of the Spirit of Tasmania III from Sydney to Devonport
  • 2011 (22 January) : The Museum of Old and New Art (MONA) opens to the public.
  • 2012 : Tasmania's largest company, Gunns, enters voluntary administration.

See also edit

References and sources edit

References
  1. ^ Ryan, Lyndall (2012), Tasmanian Aborigines, Sydney: Allen & Unwin, pp. 4, 43, ISBN 978-1-74237-068-2
  2. ^ Clements, Nicholas (2013), Frontier Conflict in Van Diemen's Land (Ph.D. thesis) (PDF), University of Tasmania, pp. 324, 325
  3. ^ Clements, Nicholas (2013), Frontier Conflict in Van Diemen's Land (Ph.D. thesis) (PDF), University of Tasmania, pp. 329–331
  4. ^ Bonwick, James: The Last of the Tasmanians, p 270-295
  5. ^ Ryan, Lyndall: The Aboriginal Tasmanians, 1991
  6. ^ Baker, W. T (1961), Adventure Bay - explorers landfall, retrieved 17 March 2020
  7. ^ Van Diemen's Land. Legislative Council; Barnard, James, fl. 1839-1880., (printer.); Tasmania Laws, etc (1838), [Collection of Acts passed by the Legislative Council of Van Diemen's Land concerning prisoners and prisons], retrieved 17 March 2020{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ Farrell, David M. The Australian Electoral System. p. 27.
Sources
  • Alexander, Alison, ed. (2005). The Companion to Tasmanian History. Hobart, Tasmania: Centre for Tasmanian Historical Studies, University of Tasmania. ISBN 1-86295-223-X. OCLC 61888464.
  • Robson, L. L. (1983). A History of Tasmania. Volume I. Van Diemen's Land From the Earliest Times to 1855. Melbourne: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-554364-5.
  • Robson, L. L. (1991). A History of Tasmania. Volume II. Colony and State From 1856 to the 1980s. Melbourne: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-553031-4.
  • Fenton, James. A history of Tasmania from its discovery in 1642 to the present time. London: Macmillan and Co., 1884. (link)

history, tasmania, history, tasmania, begins, last, glacial, period, approximately, years, when, believed, that, island, joined, australian, mainland, little, known, human, history, island, until, british, colonisation, tasmania, 19th, century, contents, indig. The history of Tasmania begins at the end of the Last Glacial Period approximately 12 000 years ago when it is believed that the island was joined to the Australian mainland Little is known of the human history of the island until the British colonisation of Tasmania in the 19th century Contents 1 Indigenous people 2 European arrival 3 Timeline 3 1 Pre 1800 3 2 1800 1809 3 3 1810 1819 3 4 1820 1829 3 5 1830 1839 3 6 1840 1849 3 7 1850 1859 3 8 1860 1869 3 9 1870 1879 3 10 1880 1889 3 11 1890 1899 3 12 1900 1909 3 13 1910 1919 3 14 1920 1929 3 15 1930 1939 3 16 1940 1949 3 17 1950 1959 3 18 1960 1969 3 19 1970 1979 3 20 1980 1989 3 21 1990 1999 3 22 2000 present 4 See also 5 References and sourcesIndigenous people editMain article Aboriginal Tasmanians Tasmania was inhabited by an Indigenous population the Aboriginal Tasmanians and evidence indicates their presence in the territory later to become an island at least 35 000 years ago citation needed At the time of the British occupation and colonisation in 1803 the Indigenous population was estimated at between 3000 and 10 000 Historian Lyndall Ryan s analysis of population studies led her to conclude that there were about 7000 spread throughout the island s nine nations 1 Nicholas Clements citing research by N J B Plomley and Rhys Jones settled on a figure of 3000 to 4000 2 The combination of the so called Black War internecine conflict and from the late 1820s the spread of infectious diseases to which they had no immunity 3 reduced the population to about 300 by 1833 Almost all of the Indigenous population was relocated to Flinders Island by George Augustus Robinson Until the 1970s most people thought that the last surviving Tasmanian Aboriginal person was Truganini 4 who died in 1876 However this extinction was a myth as documented by Lyndall Ryan in 1991 5 European arrival editMain article Van Diemens Land nbsp Seventeenth century map of Tasmania showing the parts seen by Tasman nbsp Melchisedech Thevenot 1620 1692 Map of New Holland 1644 based on a map by the Dutch cartographer Joan Blaeu The first reported sighting of Tasmania by a European was on 24 November 1642 by the Dutch explorer Abel Tasman who named the island Anthoonij van Diemenslandt after his sponsor the Governor of the Dutch East Indies The name was later shortened to Van Diemen s Land by the British In 1772 a French expedition led by Marc Joseph Marion du Fresne landed on the island Captain James Cook also sighted the island in 1777 and numerous other European seafarers made landfalls adding a colourful array to the names of topographical features The first settlement was by the British at Risdon Cove on the eastern bank of the Derwent estuary in 1803 by a small party sent from Sydney under Lt John Bowen An alternative settlement was established by Capt David Collins 5 km to the south in 1804 in Sullivans Cove on the western side of the Derwent where fresh water was more plentiful The latter settlement became known as Hobart Town later shortened to Hobart after the British Colonial Secretary of the time Lord Hobart The settlement at Risdon was later abandoned The early settlers were mostly convicts and their military guards with the task of developing agriculture and other industries Numerous other convict settlements were made in Van Diemens Land including secondary prisons such as the particularly harsh penal colonies at Port Arthur in the south east and Macquarie Harbour on the West Coast The Aboriginal resistance to this invasion was so strong that troops were deployed across much of Tasmania to drive the Aboriginal people into captivity on nearby islands Timeline editPre 1800 edit Date unknown BC Mouheneener band of South East Tasmanian Aboriginal peoples settle in what is now the Hobart area 1642 Abel Tasman of the Dutch East India Company becomes first European to sight Tasmanian mainland he names it Van Diemen s Land after fellow Dutch East Indies now Indonesia Governor General Anthony van Diemen 1792 Captain William Bligh anchors in Adventure Bay for a second time and names Table Mountain now kunanyi Mount Wellington 1793 French explorer Bruni d Entrecasteaux surveys Derwent naming it Riviere du Nord 1793 John Hayes of British East India Company unaware of the French visit sails up the river which he names Derwent 1798 Explorers George Bass and Matthew Flinders visit Derwent as part of circumnavigation of Van Diemen s Land Bass climbs at least part of Mount Wellington then known as Table Mountain on Christmas Day 1798 Adventure Bay became the site of a whaling station then later on a Timber station 6 1800 1809 edit nbsp Group of natives of Tasmania 1802 French explorer Nicolas Baudin surveys Derwent during month long visit to South East Tasmania on which his party makes extensive notes on Aboriginal people plants and animals 1803 Lieutenant John Bowen s 49 member party with the ships Lady Nelson and Albion starts first British settlement of Tasmania at Risdon Cove naming it Hobart 1804 Lieutenant Colonel David Collins 262 member party lands at Sullivans Cove in February the settlement which becomes known as Hobart Town grows to 433 with arrival in June of rest of his Port Phillip party 1804 Soldiers temporarily refuse guard duties at Risdon amid fears of convict rebellion 1804 Aboriginal people killed in Risdon affray and settlement there abandoned 1804 Church of England clergyman Robert Knopwood conducts first divine service at Sullivans Cove 1804 Hobart s first cemetery opens later St David s Park 1804 Colonel William Paterson establishes Port Dalrymple Tamar River settlement first at George Town then at York Town on river s western side 1805 After supply ships fail to arrive on time famine forces David Collins to cut rations by one third 1805 Collins leaves tent home to take up residence in first Government House a wooden cottage 1805 Harbourmaster William Collins establishes Australia s first whaling station at Ralphs Bay 1805 First land grants include 10 acres 40 000 m2 to Robert Knopwood 1806 Colonel William Paterson begins transfer of York Town settlement to site of modern Launceston 1807 First Norfolk Island settlers arrive in Hobart in the Lady Nelson and settle at New Norfolk 1807 Lieutenant Thomas Laycock leads five man party on first overland journey from Launceston to Hobart taking nine days mainly to seek supplies for the northern settlement 1809 Deposed New South Wales Governor William Bligh arrives in Hobart and temporarily disrupts David Collins authority as lieutenant governor 1809 Floods in Derwent 1810 1819 edit nbsp Hobart Town chain gang nbsp Proclamation issued in 1816 to promote friendship between Aboriginal and white people though it had little effect 1810 David Collins dies suddenly Lieutenant Edward Lord takes over and first of three administrators pending appointment of second lieutenant governor 1810 First church St David s built 1810 Colony s first flour mill built beside Rivulet between Murray St and Elizabeth St operated by Edward Lord and William Collins 1810 Administration launches colony s first newspaper the Derwent Star and Van Diemen s Land Intelligencer 1810 Sealing expedition discovers Macquarie Island 1811 After arriving from Sydney Governor Lachlan Macquarie draws up plan for Hobart streets and orders construction of public buildings and Mount Nelson signal station 1812 Michael Howe later bushranging gang leader among first convicts to arrive directly from England in HMS Indefatigable 1812 Northern Tasmania s lieutenant governorship ceases Government House in Hobart takes control of whole island 1813 Schooner Unity not heard of again after convicts seize it in Derwent 1813 First Post Office opens in postmaster s house on corner of Argyle St and Macquarie St 1814 Work starts on Anglesea Barracks Australia s longest continuously occupied military building 1814 Colony s first horse races believed to have taken place at New Town 1814 Lieutenant governor s court created to deal with small personal financial disputes 1814 Governor Lachlan Macquarie offers amnesty to bushrangers 1814 Ship Argo disappears after seizure by convicts in Derwent 1815 Michael Howe s bushranging gang kills two settlers in New Norfolk raid 1815 Lieutenant Governor Thomas Davey declares martial law against all bushrangers mainly escaped convicts with some military deserters Governor Lachlan Macquarie later revokes order 1815 Captain James Kelly circumnavigates island in whaleboat 1815 First Van Diemen s Land wheat shipment to Sydney 1816 First emigrant ship arrives with free settlers from England 1817 Weekly mail service begins between Hobart and Launceston 1817 Work starts on new St David s Church replacing earlier structure blown down in storm 1817 First convict ships arrive directly from England 1817 New Government House occupied in Macquarie St on site of present Town Hall lower Elizabeth St and Franklin Square 1818 Government opens flour mill in Hobart 1818 Soldiers and convict kill bushranger Michael Howe on banks of Shannon River 1818 Government establishes nucleus of Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens 1819 First proper hospital opens 1819 Hobart New Norfolk road built 1819 St David s Church opens 1820 1829 edit In 1820 Tasmanian roads were first macadamised and carthorses began to replace bullocks In the same year the first substantial jail was completed on the corner of Macquarie Street and Murray Street and merino sheep arrived from John Macarthur s stud in New South Wales 1820 also saw the first Wesleyan Methodist meeting in the colony The following year marked the arrival of the first Catholic clergyman Father Phillip Conolly and on his second visit Governor Lachlan Macquarie chose sites for Perth Campbell Town Ross Oatlands Sorell and Brighton In 1821 officials and convicts left Port Dalrymple to establish Macquarie Harbour penal settlement at Sarah Island 1822 was the first year Van Diemen s Land Agricultural Society held a meeting in Hobart In 1823 the Presbyterian Church s first official ministry in Australia occurred in Hobart and the first Tasmanian bank Bank of Van Diemen s Land was established The inauguration of the Supreme Court occurred in 1824 as did the opening of Cascade Brewery Australia s longest continuously operating Brewery Convict Alexander Pearce was hanged after escaping twice from Macquarie Harbour and surviving by eating his companions Convict Matthew Brady began his bushranging career after escaping from Macquarie Harbour On 3 December 1825 Van Diemen s Land became independent from New South Wales with an appointed Executive Council its own judicial establishment and Legislative Council Also in that year the Richmond Bridge Australia s oldest existing bridge was opened and a party of soldiers and convicts established Maria Island penal settlementIn 1826 Van Diemen s Land Company launched the North West pastoral and agricultural development at Circular Head and the Tasmanian Turf Club was established Settler John Batman later one of Melbourne s founders helped capture bushranger Matthew Brady near Launceston Hobart experienced a disease epidemic which was blamed on rivulet pollution A courthouse was built on the corner of Macquarie Street and Murray Street and street lighting with oil lamps was introduced 1826 was also the year that the Legislative Council met formally for the first time 1827 saw the first regatta style events on Derwent River and Van Diemen s Land Company began settlement at Emu Bay now Burnie A proclamation made in 1828 by Lieutenant Governor George Arthur excluded Aboriginal people from settled areas and was the year of the Cape Grim massacre In 1828 martial law was also declared against Aboriginal people in settled areas after Van Diemen s Land Company shepherds killed 30 Aboriginal people at Cape Grim Regular mail services to and from Sydney began That year also saw widespread floods The following year a jail for women convicts female factory opened at Cascades Protector George Augustus Robinson started an Aboriginal mission at Bruny Island convicts seized the brig Cyprus at Recherche Bay and sailed to China Van Diemen s Land Scientific Society was formed under patronage of Lieutenant Governor George Arthur and a Hobart New Norfolk coach service began 1830 1839 edit nbsp A map of Tasmania from 1837 1830 George Augustus Robinson starts reconciliation efforts with Aboriginal people by visiting west coast 1830 Samuel Anderson Pioneer Settler arrives in Hobart aboard the Lang employed as book keeper with Van Diemens Land Co Will go on to establish the third permanent settlement in Victoria at Westernport 1830 Administration launches Black Line military campaign across most of colony to round up Aboriginal people in seven weeks two are shot and two are captured 1830 Port Arthur penal settlement established 1830 Convict chain gang starts work on causeway across Derwent at Bridgewater John Glover English landscape painter arrives in Van Diemen s Land on his 64th birthday 1831 Australia s first novel Quintus Servinton by Henry Savery published in Hobart 1831 New land regulations discontinue free land grants replacing them with sales 1832 George Augustus Robinson arrives in Hobart with Aboriginal people from Oyster Bay and Big River tribes the last Aboriginal people removed from European settled areas Wybalenna Flinders Island chosen for Aboriginal resettlement site 1832 Ends of martial law against Aboriginal people 1832 Work starts on Cascade Brewery 1832 Regular Hobart Launceston coach service begins 1832 Maria Island penal settlement closes 1832 Derwent Light Iron Pot lit for first time 1833 Robert Massie arrives in Tasmania takes up position as Engineer with Van Diemens Land Co 1833 First professional theatrical performance in Hobart 1833 Macquarie Harbour penal settlement closes convicts transferred to Port Arthur 1834 Convicts evacuating Macquarie Harbour capture brig Frederick and sail to Chile 1834 Stagecoaches begin daily Hobart New Norfolk weekly Hobart Launceston services 1834 Daily Hobart New Norfolk steamship trips begin 1834 Launceston female factory completed 1834 Point Puer boys convict establishment opens at Port Arthur 1834 First coal shipment leaves convict mines on Tasman Peninsula 1834 Jury trial system for all civil cases begins 1834 Horse drawn coaches begin taxi style service 1834 Henty brothers leave Launceston for Portland Bay to make first European settlement in Victoria 1835 Nearly all remaining Tasmanian Aboriginal people surrender to George Augustus Robinson and are moved to Flinders Island 1835 Transport George III sinks in D Entrecasteaux Channel with loss of 139 male convicts of 220 aboard 1835 In separate expeditions John Batman and John Pascoe Fawkner leave Launceston to launch first European settlements at Port Phillip which developed into Melbourne 1835 Samuel Anderson leaves Launceston to establish third permanent Victorian settlement at Bass in Western Port 1835 Colonial artist John Glover sends 35 paintings of Van Diemen s Land to London exhibition 1835 First meeting to establish Launceston Bank for Savings 1836 First Catholic Church was built St John the Evangelist s Church in Richmond It is the oldest running Catholic Church in Australia 1836 Charles Darwin visits Hobart during round the world voyage in HMS Beagle 1836 Hobart Post office moves to premises on corner of Elizabeth Street and Collins Street 1836 Eleven counties and some parishes therein proclaimed establishing the cadastral divisions of the colony 1837 Theatre Royal opens 1837 Lieutenant Governor Sir John Franklin founds Tasmanian Society for the Study of Natural Science 1837 Police office built on corner of Macquarie Street and Murray Street 1838 The first secular register of births deaths and marriages in the British colonies established 1838 First annual Hobart Regatta on Derwent 1838 Work begins on old Customs House which becomes Parliament House at start of responsible self government in 1856 1838 Sir John Franklin establishes board of education to introduce non denominational schools 1838 Bruny Island Lighthouse completed 1840 1849 edit 1840 Economic depression starts continues until 1845 1840 Captain James Ross arrives with Antarctic expedition in HMS Erebus and HMS Terror 1840 Sir John Franklin establishes Ross Bank meteorological observatory site named after explorer near present Government House site 1840 Dr William Bedford founds first Hobart private hospital in house near Theatre Royal after dispute at government hospital 1840 Transportation from Britain to NSW ends causing heavier influx of convicts to Tasmania 1842 Colony s first official census population 57 471 1842 The Weekly Examiner begins publication in Launceston 1842 Hobart proclaimed a city 1842 Tasmanian Journal of Natural Science first Australian scientific journal begins publication 1842 Peak year for convict arrivals 5329 1842 Maria Island s Darlington penitentiary reopened 1843 Arrival of Tasmania s first Anglican bishop Francis Russell Nixon 1843 Bushranger Martin Cash captured in Hobart his death sentence was commuted and he was later pardoned 1844 First Catholic bishop Robert Willson arrives 1844 Formation of Royal Society of Tasmania first branch outside Britain as development of society founded in 1837 by Sir John Franklin society branch takes over botanical gardens 1844 Norfolk Island formerly administered by NSW comes under Tasmanian control 1845 Emigrant ship Cataraqui wrecked near King Island 406 lives lost 1845 Hobart Savings Bank opens 1845 Jewish community consecrates Hobart Synagogue Australia s oldest 1845 Artist John Skinner Prout organises first known Australian exhibition of pictures in Hobart 1846 Absconding Act introduced to detain escaping convicts 7 1846 Foundation of the Hutchins School and Launceston Grammar School 1846 Lieutenant governor Sir John Eardley Wilmot dismissed allegedly for failure to suppress convict homosexuality 1846 Convict transportation to Tasmania suspended until 1848 1846 Tasmania becomes first Australian colony to enact legislation to protect native animals 1847 Britain orders closure of NSW convict establishment and transfer of remaining prisoners to Tasmania 1847 Big Hobart meeting petitions Queen Victoria for end to transportation 1847 Wybalenna Aboriginal settlement at Flinders Island closes and surviving 47 Aboriginal people move to Oyster Cove 1847 News of Sir John Franklin s death during Arctic exploration reaches Hobart 1847 Charles Davis founds hardware business 1847 Launceston doctor W R Pugh uses ether as general anaesthetic for first time in Tasmania 1848 Hobart peaks as whaling port with 1046 men aboard 37 ships 1848 Colony now only place of transportation in British Empire 1849 Young Irelanders Irish political prisoners including William Smith O Brien arrive at Port Arthur 1849 Anti transportation league formed after Launceston public meeting 1849 Tasmania gets first public library 1849 Tasmanian apple growers export to the United States of America and New Zealand 1850 1859 edit 1850 Prisoner Patrick O Donoghue starts publishing The Irish Exile first Irish Nationalist paper in Australia 1850 First secular high school built at Domain 1850 Constitution Dock officially opened 1851 O Donoghue sent to a chain gang released restarts his paper and sent again to a chain gang 1851 Black Thursday bushfires in February 1851 Influenza epidemic 1851 First election for 16 non appointed members of Legislative Council 1851 Hobart Chamber of Commerce established 1851 Launceston host for first intercolonial cricket match Van Diemen s Land v Port Phillip district 1851 Maria Island s Darlington penitentiary abandoned 1852 Elections for first Hobart and Launceston municipal councils 1852 Payable gold discovered near Fingal 1853 Jubilee festival in Hobart celebrates end of convict transportation after arrival of last ship the St Vincent 1853 First Tasmanian adhesive postage stamp issued 1854 Severe floods fires hit city 1854 The Mercury founded as bi weekly publication 1855 Horse drawn buses large carts begin services mainly on city New Town route they later become enclosed vehicles 1855 Henry Young becomes first vice regal representative to have title of Governor 1856 Name of Van Diemen s Land officially changed to Tasmania after grant of responsible self government 1856 New two house Parliament opens after elections William Champ becomes colony s first Premier 1856 Norfolk Island transferred from Tasmanian to NSW control 1857 Hobart s municipal Incorporation 1857 Hobart Launceston telegraph line opens 1857 Hobart customers start using coal gas streets get gas lighting 1858 First meeting of Hobarts Marine Board Australia s oldest port authority 1858 Hobart and Launceston councils form municipal police forces 1858 Council of Education established 1858 Hobart Savings Bank founded 1858 Parliament passes Rural Municipalities Act 1859 Worries about public health prompt Hobart Town Council to appoint health officer 1859 New Government House at Domain occupied for first time by Governor Henry Young and Lady Young 1860 1869 edit 1860 British troops sail from Hobart for Maori war in New Zealand 1860 Volunteer corps of infantry cavalry and artillery formed 1860 Economic depression 1860 The Mercury begins daily publication 1862 Tasmania adopts Torrens title land conveyancing and registration system 1862 Serious Derwent flooding 1862 Hobart s post office moves to rebuilt courthouse on corner of Macquarie St and Murray St 1863 Opening of Tasmanian Museum on present site 1864 First shipment of trout and salmon ova arrives from England 1866 Hobart Town Hall opened 1866 Hobart Philharmonic Society formed 1867 George Peacock launches one of Australia s first jam factories in Hobart later operated by Henry Jones and Co under the name IXL 1868 First royal visit during which Prince Alfred Duke of Edinburgh lays foundation stone for St David s Cathedral and turns first sod for Tasmania s first railway Launceston Deloraine line built by a private company 1868 With Education Act Tasmania becomes first Australian colony to have compulsory state education system administered by local school boards 1869 Death of William Lanne King Billy reputedly the last full blood Tasmanian Aboriginal man whose remains were disrespected horribly after disagreement over who should have his remains 1869 Submarine communications cable successfully establishes link between Tasmania and Melbourne 1870 1879 edit 1870 British troops leave 1870 Tasmanian Public Library formally constituted 1871 Opening of Launceston Deloraine railway Tasmania s first 1 600 mm 5 ft 3 in 1871 James Philosopher Smith discovers tin at Mount Bischoff 1872 Direct telegraphic communication begins between Tasmania and England 1873 Work begins on private operated Hobart Launceston rail link 1 067 mm 3 ft 6 in 1873 Government takes over Launceston Deloraine line 1874 St David s Cathedral consecrated 1874 Tasmanian Racing Club established 1874 Launceston rioters protest against rates levy for Deloraine railway 1874 First book publication of Marcus Clarke s For the Term of His Natural Life set mainly in Tasmania 1875 Hobart Hospital begins professional training of nurses 1875 Widespread flooding 1876 Truganini described as last Tasmanian full blooded Aboriginal person dies in Hobart 1876 Hobart Launceston railway opens 1877 Port Arthur penal settlement closed 1877 Gold discovered at Beaconsfield 1878 Mount Heemskirk tin mining begins 1880 1889 edit 1880 Earthquake hits Hobart 1880 Tasmania gets first telephone with line from city centre to Mount Nelson signal station 1880 Start of Derwent Sailing Boat Club later Royal Yacht Club of Tasmania 1880 Gold discovered at Pieman River on West Coast Tasmania 1881 William Shoobridge organises first trial shipment of apples from Hobart to Britain 1881 Hobart officially replaces Hobart Town as capital s name 1882 Married Women s Property Act allows wives to own property in their own right 1882 Silver lead discovered at Zeehan 1882 Hobart Stock Exchange opens 1883 Typhoid and diphtheria epidemic prompt public health legislation 1883 Government opens first Hobart and Launceston telephone exchanges 1883 Trades and Labor Council formed 1883 Discovery of gold at Iron Blow at Mount Lyell amidst increased West Coast Tasmania mineral prospecting 1885 Education Department created centralising control of schools 1885 Mersey and Deloraine Railway opened 4 6 gauge 1885 Oatlands to Parattah Railway opened 1885 Formation of the Mt Lyell Prospecting Association 1886 Copper found at Mount Lyell 1886 Government takes over Tasmanian Museum and Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens 1886 Federal Council of Australasia discusses Federation at its first assembly held in Hobart 1886 Public Health Act creates local boards of health 1887 Derwent Valley railway line to New Norfolk opens extended to Glenora within a year 1887 Establishment of The Friends School in Hobart by the Society of Friends Quakers 1887 Italian entrepreneur Diego Bernacchi floats company to develop Maria Island 1888 Hobart gets first technical school 1888 Reservoir water supply opened 1888 Launceston proclaimed a city 1889 Launceston Post Office built 1890 1899 edit 1890 University of Tasmania opens at the Domain 1890 Government takes over Hobart Launceston railway 1890 Legislation provides for payment of Tasmanian parliamentarians 1891 Bank of Van Diemen s Land collapses economic depression follows 1891 Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery opens in Launceston 1891 Apsley Railway opened 1892 George FitzGerald founds FitzGeralds department store chain now owned by Harris Scarfe 1893 Private company begins electric tramway in Hobart first in an Australian capital city 1893 Mount Lyell Mining and Railway Company formed 1893 Government establishes Tasmanian Tourist Association 1894 Hobart international exhibition opens 1894 Government introduces flat rate income tax system 1895 The premiers conference in Hobart discusses proposals for federal constitution and plebiscite 1895 Launceston becomes first southern hemisphere city to get electric light after first Tasmanian hydro electric station opens at Duck Reach on South Esk River 1895 All Tasmanian districts move to Australian Eastern Standard Time ending different time zones in colony 1896 Entrepreneur George Adams launches Tattersalls lottery venture in Hobart first lottery held to dispose of assets of failed Bank of Van Diemen s Land 1896 Ore smelting begins at Mount Lyell 1897 Hare Clark voting system used on trial basis for state polls in Hobart and Launceston six members in Hobart four in Launceston 8 1897 Formation of Southern Tasmania Football Association 1897 Serious bushfires start on New Year s Eve end with six lives lost 1898 Tasmanians vote four to one in favor of referendum on federation with mainland colonies 1898 Municipal police forces become part of new statewide government force 1898 Electric street lighting begins in Hobart 1898 Norwegian born Carsten Borchgrevink s Antarctic expedition arrives in Hobart on way south Tasmanian Louis Bernacchi joins as physicist 1899 First Tasmanian troops leave for Second Boer War in South Africa 1899 Federation of Australia wins overwhelming Tasmanian approval in the second referendum 1900 1909 edit nbsp Horace Watson recording the songs of Fanny Cochrane Smith considered to be the last fluent speaker of a Tasmanian language 1903 1900 More Tasmanian troops leave for Second Boer War 1900 Adult male suffrage for House of Assembly adopted with property qualifications abolished 1900 End of whaling operations from Hobart 1900 Bubonic plague scare grips Tasmania 1900 Macquarie Island becomes a Tasmanian dependency 1901 Administrator Sir John Dodds reads proclamation of Commonwealth of Australia from Tasmanian Supreme Court steps 1901 Visit by Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York future King George V and Queen Mary 1901 First elections for Federal Parliament 1901 Zeehan conference leads to formation of Tasmanian Workers Political League forerunner to Labor Party 1902 Last Tasmanian troops return from the Boer War 1902 Robert Carl Sticht completes world s first successful pyritic smelting at Mount Lyell 1903 Women get House of Assembly voting right the already had it for federal polls 1903 Hobart Launceston telephone line opens 1903 Two ships leave Hobart on relief expedition to free British explorer Robert Scott s Discovery from Antarctic ice 1903 Launceston smallpox epidemic forces cancellation of Tasmanian centenary celebrations some festivities a year later 1904 Legislation allows Tasmanian women to become lawyers 1904 Formation of Tasmanian National Association forerunner to Liberal Party 1904 Native flora and fauna reserve declared at Schouten Island and Freycinet Peninsula 1905 Wireless telegraphy experiments between Hobart and Tasman Island and between state and mainland 1905 Hobart General Post Office building opens 1906 Marconi Co demonstrated a wireless telegraphy service between Devonport and Queenscliff Victoria 1906 Tasman Lighthouse first lit 1907 New public library built with money from American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie opens in Hobart 1907 Hare Clark voting system extended to all of Tasmania 1908 State school fees abolished 1908 Queen Alexandra Maternity Hospital opens in Hobart 1908 First Scout troops formed 1909 Guy Fawkes Day 5 November fire destroy Hobart market City Hall later built on site 1909 First statewide use of Hare Clark voting system elects first Labor government led by John Earle government lasts only one week with return of conservatives 1909 Irish blight wipes out potato crop 1910 1919 edit 1910 Carters wage strike paralyses Hobart for a week ends with win for workers 1910 Legislation sets maximum 48 hour working week and minimum wages in several trades 1910 Great Lake hydro electric project starts 1911 The Christian Brothers founded and opened the St Virgil s College School in what is now Barrack Street in Hobart 1911 Douglas Mawson s ship Aurora docks in Hobart on way to Antarctic 1911 Philip Smith teachers college opens at Domain Electric trams begin running in Launceston 1912 Mount Lyell fire traps miners underground 42 die 1912 Norwegian Roald Amundsen first man to reach South Pole arrives in Hobart on return from Antarctic expedition 1912 Hobart City Council takes over tramway service 1912 First Tasmanian Girl Guide company formed 1913 First government high schools open in Hobart and Launceston 1913 Hobart City Council buys tram service 1913 Term free by servitude referring to ex convicts appears for last time in official documents after use for more than 100 years 1914 A Delfosse Badgery makes Tasmania s first flight from Elwick in a plane he built himself 1914 First Tasmanian troops leave to fight in World War I 1914 The town of Bismarck is renamed Collinsvale due to anti German sentiment inflamed by the war 1914 State government buys hydro electric company 1915 Tasmanian legislation establishes Australia s first special authority to create and manage parks and reserves 1915 Serious bushfires 1916 In Tasmania s worst rail disaster driver and six passengers die 31 survive injuries after Launceston Hobart express crashes near Campania 1916 First all Tasmanian battalion the 40th leaves for World War I 1916 Opening of Great Lakes hydro scheme s first stage Waddamana power station 1916 State s first national parks declared at Mount Field and Freycinet 1916 Daylight saving time first introduced as temporary wartime measure 1917 Electrolytic Zinc Company works at Risdon and Australian Commonwealth Carbide s plant at Electrona established 1917 Ridgeway reservoir completed 1919 Worldwide Spanish influenza epidemic reaches Tasmania affecting one third of the population and claiming 171 lives 1919 Ex World War I airman A L Long makes first flight over Bass Strait 1919 Frozen Tasmanian meat exported for the first time 1920 1929 edit 1920 Visit by Prince of Wales future King Edward VIII 1920 Miena dam completed 1920 Launceston born Hudson Fysh helps found Qantas 1922 Legislation enables women to stand in state elections 1922 Legacy movement starts with founding of Remembrance Club in Hobart by Major General Sir John Gellibrand 1922 Cradle Mountain Lake St Clair National Park proclaimed 1923 First concert by Hobart Symphony Orchestra 1923 Severe flooding in Hobart 1923 Labor s Joseph Lyons a future prime minister becomes state premier 1924 Private company starts first Tasmanian radio station 7ZL now part of ABC with regular broadcasts from The Mercury building 1924 Electrolytic Zinc Co makes first superphosphate at Risdon 1925 Workmen open David Collins grave during conversion of old St David s Cemetery into St David s Park 1925 Osmiridium fields discovered at Adamsfield in south west 1927 Inquiry into proposed bridge linking Hobart city with eastern shore 1927 Visit by Duke and Duchess of York future King George VI and Queen Elizabeth 1928 Cadbury s Claremont factory makes first chocolate 1928 Voting in Tasmanian state elections becomes compulsory federal voting became compulsory in 1924 1929 Disastrous floods mainly in Northern Tasmania take 22 lives dam burst damages Derby township and tin mines 1929 Hobart gets automatic telephone system 1929 Great Depression begins 1929 Legislation creates Hydro Electric Commission replacing government department 1930 1939 edit 1931 Tasmanian Harold Gatty and American Wiley Post make record round the world flight eight days 15 hours 1932 Ivan and Victor Holyman start air service between Launceston and Flinders Island 1932 Lyell Highway opens linking Hobart with West Coast 1932 Former premier Joseph Lyons becomes prime minister only Tasmanian to hold that office 1933 Commonwealth Grants Commission appointed to inquire into affairs of claimant states including Tasmania 1934 Holyman Airways a forerunner of Ansett launches Launceston Melbourne service within months company plane Miss Hobart disappears over Bass Strait with loss of 12 people including proprietor Victor Holyman 1934 Election of government led by Albert Ogilvie starts 35 years of continuous Labor governments 1935 Five die when Holyman Airways plane Loina crashes off Flinders Island 1935 Hobart gets first electric trolley buses 1935 Legislation for three year state parliament terms 1936 SS Paringa sinks in Bass Strait while towing tanker 31 die 1936 ABC forms orchestra 1936 7 September Last known Tasmanian tiger thylacine dies at Hobart s Beaumaris Zoo 1936 First commercial flights use federal aerodrome at Cambridge 1936 Submarine telephone cable service begins between Tasmania and Victoria via King Island 1936 First two area schools renamed district schools in 1973 open at Sheffield and Hagley 1937 Open of Mount Wellington summit road built as Depression relief work project 1937 Poliomyelitis epidemic 1937 Five year state parliamentary terms return 1938 Production starts at APPM s Burnie mill 1938 Work begins on a floating arch bridge across Derwent in Hobart 1939 World War II begins 1939 Death in office of prime minister Joseph Lyons 1939 Royal Hobart Hospital opens on present site 1940 1949 edit 1940 Tasmanian soldiers leave for North African campaign with Australian 6th Division 1940 German naval raiders Pinguin and Atlantis lay mines off Hobart and other Australian areas Hobart closed to shipping because of mine threat Bass Strait closed after mine sinks British steamer Cambridge 1941 Tasmanian soldiers leave for Malaya with Australian 8th Division 1941 Australian Newsprint Mills Boyer plant becomes first in world to produce newsprint from hardwood 1942 January March daylight saving time introduced as wartime measure 1942 Women 18 to 30 called up for war work 1943 Floating arch pontoon bridge Hobart Bridge opens 1943 Enid Lyons later Dame Enid widow of Joseph Lyons elected first woman member of House of Representatives winning seat of Darwin now Braddon 1944 University of Tasmania begins transfer to Sandy Bay site 1944 State Library established 1945 Rani wins first Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race 1946 Australian National Airways plane crashes at Seven Mile Beach killing 25 1946 Last horse drawn Hobart cab ceases operation 1946 Poliomyelitis epidemic 1947 War affected migrants begin arriving from Europe to work for Hydro Electric Commission 1947 Edward Brooker takes over as Labor premier after Robert Cosgrove s resignation to face corruption and bribery charges 1947 Major flooding in south of state 1948 Margaret McIntyre wins Legislative Council seat in May becoming the first woman member of Tasmanian Parliament airliner crash in NSW in September kills her and 12 others 1948 Robert Cosgrove resumes premiership after acquittal on corruption and bribery charges 1948 ABC forms Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra on permanent basis 1948 Fire destroys Ocean Pier 1948 Antarctic research station established on Macquarie Island 1949 Poliomyelitis epidemic 1949 Government introduces compulsory X rays in fight against tuberculosis 1949 Tasmanian politician Dame Enid Lyons widow of former prime minister Joseph Lyons becomes first woman to reach federal ministry rank as Executive Council vice president 1949 Government buys Theatre Royal 1950 1959 edit 1951 Brighton army camp gets first intake of national service trainees 1951 Hartz Mountains National Park proclaimed 1951 Tasmanian Historical Research Association commences 1951 Serious bushfires 1951 Italian and German migrants arrive to work under contract for Hydro Electric Commission 1952 First woman elected to Hobart City Council 1952 Severe floods 1952 Government ends free hospital scheme 1952 Single state licensing body formed for hotels and clubs 1953 Tasman Limited diesel train service begins between Hobart and northern towns 1953 Housing Department created to manage public housing 1953 Beaconsfield becomes first Australian centre to get fluoridated water 1954 Queen Elizabeth II becomes first reigning monarch to visit state accompanied by Prince Philip As part of 150th anniversary celebrations she unveils monument to pioneer British settlers 1954 Hobart Rivulet area damaged as severe floods affect southern and eastern Tasmania 1954 Metropolitan Transport Trust formed 1954 Tattersalls Lotteries moves headquarters from Hobart to Melbourne 1954 Spouses of property owners get right to vote in Legislative Council elections 1955 Royal commission appointed to inquire into University of Tasmania after request by Professor Sydney Orr 1955 House of Assembly gets first two women members Liberals Mabel Miller and Amelia Best 1955 Hobart becomes first Australian city to get parking meters 1955 Proclamation of Lake Pedder National Park later extended to form Southwest National Park 1955 First ingot poured at Bell Bay aluminium refinery 1955 Labor Party s federal conference in Hobart brings Australian Labor Party split over industrial groups to head leading to formation of Australian Labor Party Anti Communist later Democratic Labor Party 1955 Lactos cheese factory opens at Burnie 1956 University of Tasmania Council dismisses Professor Sydney Orr alleging improper conduct by him with female student Orr launches unsuccessful court action against university for wrongful dismissal 1956 Tasmania gets first woman mayor Dorothy Edwards of Launceston 1957 Water Act establishes Rivers and Water Supply Commission 1958 Hobart waterside works block two Australian Labor Party Anti Communist members father Frank Hursey and son Denis from working in dispute over their objection to paying union levy that would partly go to ALP police guard Hurseys after court order Supreme Court awards them damages 1959 MG Car Club of Tasmania formed 1959 Princess of Tasmania becomes first roll on roll off passenger ferry on Bass Strait run 1959 High Court verdict in Hursey case upholds unions right to levy members for political purposes expel those who refuse to pay 1959 Federal Government reduces claimant states to two Tasmania and Western Australia 1960 1969 edit 1960 Severe floods in Derwent Valley and Hobart with business basements under water and houses washed away 1960 Television stations ABT 2 ABC and TVT 6 now WIN start programs from Mount Wellington transmitters 1960 New jail opens at Risdon 1960 Hobart trams cease succeeded by electric trolley buses 1960 First meeting of Inland Fisheries Commission 1960 Opening of new State Library headquarters 1960 First city parking station opens in Argyle Street 1961 Construction of Hobart Sydney ferry terminal begins 1962 Australian Paper Makers Ltd s Port Huon mill opens 1962 TEMCO s Bell Bay ferro manganese plant begins production 1962 Government subsidises municipal fluoridation schemes 1963 University of Tasmania completes move to Sandy Bay site Universities Commission recommends medical school 1964 Tasman Bridge opens for traffic old pontoon bridge towed away 1964 Hobart s water supply fluoridated 1964 Glenorchy proclaimed city 1965 First Tasmanians leave for Vietnam War under national service scheme 1965 Ferry Empress of Australia makes first Sydney Hobart voyage 1965 Official opening of Tasmanian Conservatorium of Music 1965 Bass Strait oil drilling begins 1966 Huge copper reserves found in Mount Lyell area 1966 Savage River iron ore agreements involving 62 million signed 1967 February Black Tuesday bushfires claim 62 lives 53 in Hobart area and destroy more than 1300 homes 1967 Tasmanian joins other states in approving full constitutional rights for Aboriginal people 1967 Hydro Electric Commission tables plans in State Parliament to dam Lake Pedder in South West 1967 Daylight saving time and breathalyser tests introduced 1968 Full adult franchise introduced for Legislative Council elections 1968 Hobart trolley buses cease replaced by diesel vehicles 1968 State abolishes death penalty 1968 Savage River iron ore project officially opens 1968 Batman Bridge across lower Tamar River opens 1969 Tasmanians vote Labor Party out after 35 years in office Liberal Centre Party forms coalition government 1969 Worst floods in 40 years hit Launceston 1970 1979 edit source source source source track A video by the ABC about the introduction of daylight saving time 1970 Parliament legislates for permanent daylight saving time 1970 State marine research laboratories at Taroona open 1970 Electrolytic Zinc Company opens 6 million residue treatment plant 1971 First woodchip shipment leaves Tasmanian Pulp and Forest Holdings mill at Triabunna 1971 APPM Ltd s Wesley Vale paper plant opens 1971 First state Aboriginal conference held in Launceston 1972 Conservationists lose battle to prevent flooding of Lake Pedder in South West for hydro electric scheme 1972 Liberal Centre Party coalition government collapses 1972 Tasmanian College of Advanced Education opens in Hobart 1972 Ferry Princess of Tasmania makes last Tasmanian voyage 1972 Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre opens at Tasmanian Aboriginal Information Centre 1973 Coastal freighter Blythe Star sinks with loss of three men seven survivors spend eight days adrift in lifeboat before coming ashore on Forestier Peninsula 1973 Australia s first legal casino opens at Wrest Point Hotel Casino 1973 Sir Stanley Burbury formerly chief justice becomes first Australian born governor of Tasmania 1974 Three die when boiler explosion demolishes laundry at Mt St Canice Convent Sandy Bay 1974 Tasmanian workers under state wages board awards get four weeks annual leave woman awarded equal pay 1974 Hobart suburban rail services cease 1975 Freighter MV Lake Illawarra crashes into Tasman Bridge causing 12 deaths and bringing down part of bridge temporary Bailey bridge put across Derwent 1975 Police academy completed at Rokeby 1975 Hotels allowed to open for Sunday trading 1975 Totalizator Agency Board begins operating 1976 Members of Aboriginal community ritually cremate Truganini s remains scatter ashes in D Entrecasteaux Channel 1976 Tasmanian Wilderness Society formed 1976 Freight equalisation scheme subsidises sea cargo to and from state 1977 Repaired Tasman Bridge reopens to traffic 1977 Royal visit during which Aboriginal activist Michael Mansell presents the Queen with land rights claim 1977 Tasmanian Film Corporation launched 1978 Australian National Railways takes over Tasmanian rail system Tasman Limited ceases operations ending regular passenger train services in state 1978 Hydro Electric Commission proposes power scheme involving Gordon Franklin and King rivers 1979 Tasmanian College of Advanced Education moves to Launceston 1979 State s first ombudsman begins duties 1979 Hobart gets increased Saturday morning shopping 1979 Government expands South West conservation area to more than one fifth of state s total area 1980 1989 edit 1980 Australian Antarctic Division headquarters completed at Kingston 1980 Labor MHA Gillian James becomes first woman to become State Government minister 1980 Australian Maritime College opens at Beauty Point 1980 Australian Heritage Commission includes Tasmania on National Estate register 1981 Plebiscite on preferred new hydro electric power development scheme shows 47 of voters favour Gordon below Franklin development 8 prefer Gordon above Olga with 45 casting informal votes including no dams write ins 1981 Devonport proclaimed city 1981 Bushfires destroy 40 Zeehan homes 1982 Proclamation of Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area including South West Franklin Lower Gordon Wild Rivers and Cradle Mountain Lake St Clair national parks conservationists blockade Gordon below Franklin hydro electric dam work 1982 Tasmanians elect Liberals as government in their own right for first time in state s history 1983 Federal regulations block Franklin Dam construction High Court rules in favour of federal sovereignty ending the proposed Gordon below Franklin scheme 1983 Tasmanian Aboriginal Land Council established 1983 Visit by The Prince and Princess of Wales 1984 Official opening of Bowen Bridge 1984 Official opening of Wrest Point Convention Centre 1984 Fire damages Theatre Royal 1984 Atlantic salmon eggs introduced to Tasmania 1985 Four day cremation ceremony at Oyster Cove south of Hobart for Aboriginal remains recovered from museums 1985 CSIRO Marine Laboratories open in Hobart 1985 Last voyage by ferry Empress of Australia before replacement by Abel Tasman 1985 Last Tasmanian drive in theatres close in Hobart and Launceston 1985 Municipal rationalisation advances with Launceston taking over St Leonards and Lilydale 1986 Pope John Paul II holds mass for 32 000 people at Elwick racecourse during Hobart visit 1986 Archaeologists discover Aboriginal rock paintings in South West believed to be 20 000 years old 1987 Launching of Lady Nelson replica ship 1987 High Court decision bans logging in Lemonthyme southern forests 1987 Antarctic supply ship Nella Dan sinks off Macquarie Island 1988 International fleet of about 200 sailing cruise and naval ships from about 20 countries calls at Hobart as part of Australian Bicentennial celebrations more than 150 leave on race to Sydney 1988 Clarence and Burnie proclaimed cities 1988 Tasmanian Sporting Hall of Fame opens 1989 State election ends with Labor Green accord involving five independents their no confidence vote in Robin Gray s minority Liberal government gives Labor s Michael Field premiership 1990 1999 edit 1990 Sea Cat Tasmania built in Hobart by Incat begins summer crossings of Bass Strait 1990 King Island scheelite mine closes 1990 World Rowing Championships held on Lake Barrington near Sheffield 1991 Savings Bank of Tasmania and Tasmanian Bank amalgamate as Trust Bank 1991 Port Huon paper mill Electrona silicon smelter Renison tin mine and Devonport Ovaltine factory close 1992 Aboriginal people occupy Risdon Cove in protest over land claims 1992 Royal Hobart Hospital nursing school closes ending hospital based nursing training in Tasmania 1992 Seven women ordained as Anglican priests at St David s Cathedral 1992 State s unemployment rate reaches 12 2 as jobs decline in public and private sectors rallies of angry workers force temporary closure of House of Assembly 1993 Christine Milne Tasmanian Greens becomes first female leader of a Tasmanian political party 1993 Spirit of Tasmania replaces Abel Tasman on Bass Strait ferry service 1993 Tasmania s unemployment rate reaches 13 4 1993 State Government reduces total of municipalities from 46 to 29 number of departments from 17 to 12 1994 End to 80 years of dam building as state s last power station Tribute opens near Tullah 1994 HMAS Huon naval base decommissioned 1995 All day Saturday shop trading begins 1995 Government announces legislation to transfer 38 km2 of culturally significant land to Aboriginal community including Risdon Cove and Oyster Cove 1995 States unemployment rate falls to 9 6 as number of Tasmanians in work sets record 1996 28 April Gunman Martin Bryant kills 35 people and injures 20 more in shooting rampage at Port Arthur historic site Supreme Court sentences him to life imprisonment 1996 Former federal Liberal minister Peter Nixon heads Commonwealth state inquiry into Tasmanian economy 1997 Tasmania becomes first state to formally apologise to Aboriginal community for past actions connected with the stolen generation 1997 Hobart Ports Corporation succeeds marine board 1997 State Parliament repeals two century old laws that together made all male homosexual activity criminal 1997 Royal Hobart Hospital announces part privatisation 1997 Official opening of Hobart s Aquatic Centre 1997 Nixon report recommendations include single chamber State Parliament with 27 members government asset sales 1997 About 800 gaming machines introduced into 55 Tasmanian hotels clubs amid predictions of major social problems 1998 Federal Government sells Hobart and Launceston airports 1998 Subsidiary Kendell Airlines takes over Ansett s Tasmanian services 1998 Parliament reduced from 54 members to 40 25 Members of the House of Assembly and 15 Members of the Legislative Council 1998 Legislation passed to separate Hydro Electric Commission into three bodies Aurora Energy Transend Networks and Hydro Tasmania 1998 Bushfires destroy six houses in Hobart suburbs burn out 30 km2 1998 December Storms and massive seas claim six lives in Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race 1999 Wild winds and heavy rain caused chaos across Tasmania one casualty being the Ferris Wheel at the Royal Hobart Regatta which blew over onto the Gee Whizzer ride 113 km h winds in Hobart 158 km h winds on Mount Wellington 1999 Tasmanian cricketer David Boon announced his retirement from Sheffield Shield cricket March 1999 Tasmania is almost booked out for the millennium New Year s Eve party a once in 1000 year event for Tasmania s key resorts hotels motels and restaurants 1999 Albanian refugees from Kosovo housed at Brighton military camp renamed Tasmanian Peace Haven 1999 Legislation passed to give Aboriginal community control of Wybalenna Flinders Island 1999 Colonial State Bank of NSW takes over Trust Bank 1999 Official opening of Port Arthur Visitor Centre 1999 Queen Alexandra Hospital building leased to private operators 1999 25 October Labor part stalwart Eric Reece hailed as Tasmania s greatest premier died in Hobart aged 90 1999 Proclamation of Tasmanian Seamounts Marine Reserve Australia s first deep sea reserve 1999 Tasmania voted the best temperate island in the world by the world s largest travel magazine Conde Nast Traveler 2000 present edit 2000 1 January Tasmania beamed to 43 television networks around the world to herald the new millennium 2000 Elizabeth II Queen of Australia visits Hobart 2000 Tasmania hosts its first Sorry Day at Risdon Cove 2000 Olympic Torch comes to Tasmania 2000 New Federation Concert Hall opens in Hobart 2001 10 May Centenary of Federation celebrated 2001 For the first time in 120 years Tasmanian Australian rules football clubs take the national stage playing home and away VFL games 2001 Tasmanian company Gunns clinches 335 million deal to become one of the giants of the Australian forestry industry 2001 Impulse Airlines begins cutting one way Hobart Melbourne fares to 40 but is subsumed by Qantas 2001 10 Days on the Island begins It is Tasmania s biggest cultural festival in a century 2001 State Government announces 53 million jail to replace the old Risdon Jail 2001 New traffic laws introduced drivers face automatic disqualification if travelling 38 km h over the limit 2001 Meningoccocal hits Tasmania with the first of many deaths 2002 House and land boom begins with East Coast blocks selling for almost three times the town s previous record 2002 May Tasmania s suburban street speed limit dropped to 50 km h in a bid to increase road safety 2002 Tasmania hit by drought 2002 16 May Death of Australia s last ANZAC Tasmania s Alec Campbell aged 103 2002 3 August Tasmanian boxer Daniel Geale wins Tasmania s only gold medal at the Commonwealth Games in Manchester England 2002 Virgin Blue begins operating in Tasmania offering introductory 66 one way fares to Melbourne 2002 1 September Tasmania s fast ferries Spirit of Tasmania I and II replace original Spirit of Tasmania on Bass Strait trade 2002 12 October Tasmanian Tim Hawkins killed in Bali bombing 2002 Deregulated shop trading hours begin 2003 January People urged by Tasmanian Fire Service to abandon their Australia Day long weekend plans and prepare their homes for a potential firestorm as a number of fires pose the worst fire threat in 30 years 2003 Official opening of the restored Queenstown to Regatta Point railway line West Coast Wilderness Railway 1 067 mm 3 ft 6 in 2003 Attempted hijack of a Qantas flight from Melbourne to Launceston 2003 Federal Hotels gets exclusive control of state s gaming machines for 15 years with a further 5 year option 2003 Richard Butler becomes Tasmania s new governor 2003 Regina Bird wins reality TV show Big Brother becomes first Tasmanian to do so 2003 Tasmania passed some of the most progressive relationship laws in the world including same sex adoptions and registration of significant relationships 2003 Engagement of Tasmania s Mary Donaldson to Denmark s Crown Prince Frederik 2004 13 January Spirit of Tasmania III makes its first voyage from Sydney to Devonport 2004 State Government announces legislation to legalise brothels leading to a back flip in 2005 when the government chose to ban brothels altogether 2004 14 May Wedding of Tasmania s Mary Donaldson to Denmark s Crown Prince Frederik in Copenhagen 2004 20 May Premier Jim Bacon dies in Hobart of lung cancer 2004 8 August Tasmanian governor Richard Butler resigns at the request the premier who agreed to pay compensation of 600 000 in lost salary 2005 15 October Tasmanian Mary Donaldson and Crown Prince Frederik give birth to a male infant Prince Christian who will be in the line of succession to the Danish throne 2006 26 April Beaconsfield mine collapse One miner killed two trapped underground for a fortnight 2006 27 August Final crossing of the Spirit of Tasmania III from Sydney to Devonport 2011 22 January The Museum of Old and New Art MONA opens to the public 2012 Tasmania s largest company Gunns enters voluntary administration See also editHistory of Hobart Historical bibliographies of TasmaniaReferences and sources editReferences Ryan Lyndall 2012 Tasmanian Aborigines Sydney Allen amp Unwin pp 4 43 ISBN 978 1 74237 068 2 Clements Nicholas 2013 Frontier Conflict in Van Diemen s Land Ph D thesis PDF University of Tasmania pp 324 325 Clements Nicholas 2013 Frontier Conflict in Van Diemen s Land Ph D thesis PDF University of Tasmania pp 329 331 Bonwick James The Last of the Tasmanians p 270 295 Ryan Lyndall The Aboriginal Tasmanians 1991 Baker W T 1961 Adventure Bay explorers landfall retrieved 17 March 2020 Van Diemen s Land Legislative Council Barnard James fl 1839 1880 printer Tasmania Laws etc 1838 Collection of Acts passed by the Legislative Council of Van Diemen s Land concerning prisoners and prisons retrieved 17 March 2020 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Farrell David M The Australian Electoral System p 27 Sources Alexander Alison ed 2005 The Companion to Tasmanian History Hobart Tasmania Centre for Tasmanian Historical Studies University of Tasmania ISBN 1 86295 223 X OCLC 61888464 Robson L L 1983 A History of Tasmania Volume I Van Diemen s Land From the Earliest Times to 1855 Melbourne Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 554364 5 Robson L L 1991 A History of Tasmania Volume II Colony and State From 1856 to the 1980s Melbourne Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 553031 4 Fenton James A history of Tasmania from its discovery in 1642 to the present time London Macmillan and Co 1884 link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Tasmania amp oldid 1221232009, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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