1962 in New Zealand
List of events
The following lists events that happened during 1962 in New Zealand .
Population
Estimated population as of 31 December: 2,515,800.[1]
Increase since 31 December 1961: 54,500 (2.21%).[1]
Males per 100 females: 101.0.[1]
Incumbents
Regal and viceregal
Government
Parliamentary opposition
Main centre leaders
Events
January
1 January: Samoa (then called Western Samoa ) attains full independence, becoming the first independent Polynesian territory.
February
5 February: Dunedin lawyer James Patrick Ward was killed by a letter bomb sent to his office in what police described as "one of the most callous murders in the history of New Zealand crime".[5]
March
April
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
Arts and literature
See 1962 in art , 1962 in literature , Category:1962 books
Music
See: 1962 in music
Radio and television
New Zealand Broadcasting Service (NZBS) is restructured on 1 April to form New Zealand Broadcasting Corporation .
An outside broadcast van is in use in Auckland, and similar vans are ordered for Wellington and Christchurch.
Dunedin gets television service with the launch of DNTV2 on 31 July.
There are 23,343 licensed television sets in New Zealand.[7]
See: 1962 in New Zealand television , 1962 in television , List of TVNZ television programming , Category:Television in New Zealand , Public broadcasting in New Zealand
Film
See: Category:1962 film awards , 1962 in film , List of New Zealand feature films , Cinema of New Zealand , Category:1962 films
Sport
Athletics
British Empire and Commonwealth Games
Gold
Silver
Bronze
Total
10
12
10
32
Chess
The 69th National Chess Championship was held in Auckland, and was won by G.G. Haase of Dunedin.[9]
Horse racing
Harness racing
Lawn bowls
The national outdoor lawn bowls championships are held in Christchurch.[12]
Men's singles champion – Jeff Barron (Miramar Bowling Club)
Men's pair champions – Frank Livingstone , Bob McDonald (skip) (Onehunga Bowling Club)
Men's fours champions – W. Humphreys, S. Barlow, H.W. Todd, R. Brown (skip) (Marlborough Bowling Club)
Soccer
The Chatham Cup is won by Hamilton Technical Old Boys who beat Northern of Dunedin 4–1 in the final.[13]
Provincial league champions: [14]
Auckland: Eastern Suburbs AFC
Bay of Plenty: Rangers
Buller: Waimangaroa Utd
Canterbury: Western
Franklin: Manurewa AFC
Hawke's Bay: Napier Rovers
Manawatu: Thistle
Marlborough: Woodbourne
Nelson: Rangers
Northland: Otangarei United
Otago: Northern AFC
Poverty Bay: Eastern Union
South Canterbury: Thistle
Southland: Invercargill Thistle
Taranaki: Moturoa
Waikato: Hamilton Technical OB
Wairarapa: Lansdowne United
Wanganui: Wanganui Athletic
Wellington: Northern
West Coast: Runanga
The inaugural Rothmans Cup was played between the champion clubs from Auckland, Wellington, Canterbury and Otago as a de facto national championship. The final was won by Northern AFC of Dunedin 3-2 on aggregate.[15]
Births
12 January (in England): Terry Wiles , thalidomide survivor.
4 February: Frank Bunce , rugby union player.
17 February: Tony Blain , cricketer.
1 March: Russell Coutts , yachtsman.
4 March: John Young , composer.
15 March: Trevor Franklin , cricketer.
6 June: Grant Fox , rugby player.
8 June: John Cutler , yachtsman.
16 June Jonathan Temm , lawyer.
22 July: Rena Owen , actress.
5 August: Richard de Groen , cricketer.
13 September: Brian Fowler , cyclist.
21 September: Kelly Evernden , tennis player.
22 September: Martin Crowe , cricketer.
27 September: Gavin Larsen , cricketer.
9 October: Paul Radisich , racing driver.
12 October: Mark S. Olsen , painter.
7 November: Debbie Hockley , cricketer.
29 December: Wynton Rufer , soccer player.
Tim Chadwick , artist and writer.
Jon Stevens , singer.
Category:1962 births
Deaths
See also
References
1962 in Oceania
Sovereign states Associated states of New Zealand