The following lists events that happened during 1977 in Australia.
Incumbents
Monarch – Elizabeth II
Governor-General – Sir John Kerr (until 8 December), then Sir Zelman Cowen
Prime Minister – Malcolm Fraser
Deputy Prime Minister – Doug Anthony
Opposition Leader – Gough Whitlam (until 22 December), then Bill Hayden
Chief Justice – Sir Garfield Barwick
State and territory leaders
Premier of New South Wales – Neville Wran
Opposition Leader – Sir Eric Willis (until 16 December), then Peter Coleman
Premier of Queensland – Joh Bjelke-Petersen
Opposition Leader – Tom Burns
Premier of South Australia – Don Dunstan
Opposition Leader – David Tonkin
Premier of Tasmania – Bill Neilson (until 1 December), then Doug Lowe
Opposition Leader – Max Bingham
Premier of Victoria – Rupert Hamer
Opposition Leader – Clyde Holding (until 29 June), then Frank Wilkes
Premier of Western Australia – Sir Charles Court
Opposition Leader – Colin Jamieson
Majority Leader of the Northern Territory – Goff Letts (until 12 August), then Paul Everingham
Opposition Leader – Jon Isaacs (from 21 September)
Governors and administrators
Governor of New South Wales – Sir Roden Cutler
Governor of Queensland – Sir Colin Hannah (until 20 March), then Sir James Ramsay (from 22 April)
Governor of South Australia – Sir Douglas Nicholls (until 30 April), then Sir Keith Seaman (from 1 September)
Governor of Tasmania – Sir Stanley Burbury
Governor of Victoria – Sir Henry Winneke
Governor of Western Australia – Sir Wallace Kyle
Administrator of Norfolk Island – Desmond O'Leary
Events
January
1 January – Six hikers who went missing in Lamington National Park on 27 December 1976 are found safe and well. They had been attempting to locate the site of the 1937 Airlines of Australia Stinson crash which occurred on 18 February 1937.
5 January – The Connellan air disaster takes place which is Australia's only aircraft suicide attack. Carried out by a disgruntled former employee of Connellan Airways, the attack claims the lives of five people including the pilot.
10 January – The Easey Street murders take place, an unsolved crime in which two women were brutally raped and stabbed to death in their home in the inner-Melbourne suburb of Collingwood.
18 January – Australia experiences its worst railway disaster at Granville, near Sydney, in which 83 people died.
February
1 February – The Federal Court of Australia began to exercise its jurisdiction.
6 February – Silver Jubilee of Elizabeth II's accession as Queen of Australia.
7 February - 418 refugees of the Vietnam War arrive in Melbourne. The refugees, from Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos, left refugee camps around Bangkok for the largest airlift of war victims from Thailand.
27 February - ABBA arrive in Australia for their live concert tour around the country starting at the Sydney Showground.
March
8 March - The Federal Government holds a reception in Canberra for Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh as they begin the Silver Jubilee tour of Australia.
9 March - Queen Elizabeth II arrives in Brisbane as part of her Silver Jubilee goodwill tour.
13 March - ABBA In Australia tour concludes.
15 March -
The former Australian consul to Timor Jim Dunn prepares to testify to the United States Congress on Indonesian atrocities. The Indonesian Foreign Minister Adam Malik responds by threatening that his Government would allow "demonstrations and other mass actions" against the Australian Embassy to continue if further agitation against alleged Indonesian atrocities were allowed.
Foreign Minister Andrew Peacock presents a 24-page speech to Federal Parliament in which he outlines a new direction in foreign policies based on Australia's richness in a world of want. He says population and resources would be central future policies, as well as making attacks on Soviet Union military expansion.
Federal Cabinet approves an agreement with the United States for the construction of the controversial Omega navigation station at a predicted cost of $15 million.
31 March - The Conciliation and Arbitration Commission’s wage decision is handed down. The Commission indicates it would hold an inquiry into various aspects of wage fixation. The Commission introduces a $5.70 a week increase on prices, prompting Federal Treasurer Phillip Lynch to say that the decision would retard the fight against inflation.
April
13 April - The Premiers' Conference is held in Canberra where all governments commit to a three-month prices and wages freeze.
May
15 May – The Australian Democrats is launched by former Liberal MP Don Chipp at Melbourne Town Hall.
21 May – The 1977 Australian referendum is held. Questions on Senate casual vacancies, referendums and retirement of judges are passed. A question on simultaneous elections for the House of Representatives and the Senate fails. A plebiscite to decide Australia's national song is won by "Advance Australia Fair".
24 May -
United States president Jimmy Carter gives the Australian Government his personal assurance that US agencies (in particular the Central Intelligence Agency) were not engaged in improper activities in Australia, an issue that had resurfaced in the espionage trial of Christopher Boyce in the United States. Fraser included this information in a statement to the House of Representatives on 24 May.
John Howard tables a white paper on the future of the manufacturing industry in parliament. The paper noted that despite the growth of mining, manufacturing still employed more than 1.3 million people in 1975, of whom 0.5 million had been born overseas. Manufacturing depended substantially on tariff protection and other government assistance, as well as facing ever-increasing competition from other countries, particularly in Asia.
June
15 June - The Gleneagles Agreement is unanimously approved by the Commonwealth of Nations at a meeting at Gleneagles, Auchterarder, Scotland. Commonwealth Presidents and Prime Ministers agree, as part of their support for the international campaign against apartheid, to discourage contact and competition between their sportsmen and sporting organisations, teams or individuals from South Africa.
22 June -
The Uniting Church in Australia is formed following the union of the majority of Presbyterian, Methodist and Congregational Union churches in Australia.
Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser meets with United States president Jimmy Carter in Washington. Fraser is impressed by Carter 'as a decisive man' who would be 'setting American objectives in the great humanitarian issues'. Carter undertakes to consult Australia before any agreement was concluded with the Soviet Union on arms limitation in the Indian Ocean.
July
1 July – The Office of the Commonwealth Ombudsman is established.
15 July – Anti-drugs campaigner Donald Mackay disappears near Griffith, New South Wales. He is presumed to have been murdered.
August
7 August - At the Association of South-East Asian Nations meeting in Kuala Lumpur, prime minister Malcolm Fraser offers ASEAN leaders a package of increased bilateral aid of $250 million, as well as an extra $10 million for joint development projects, but claimed Australia could do nothing in its present economic circumstances to reduce trade barriers against their countries' products.
9 August - A board of inquiry into Housing Commission land deals is appointed by the Victorian Government with the power to investigate Cabinet decisions and to call Ministers to give evidence.
11 August - A 24-hour strike by postal staff at Melbourne's two biggest parcel centres stops more than 25,000 parcels being handled.
15 August - Cabinet decided that Australia would negotiate bilateral safeguards agreements with purchasers covering both present and future use of the uranium. Australia would seek an understanding with other exporters on the application and enforcement of safeguards, but this would not constitute a commercial cartel to control price or quantity.
16 August - Federal Treasurer Philip Lynch presents the 1977–78 budget, with a predicted deficit of $2.21 billion. It reduces personal income tax scales from seven to three (32 per cent, 46 per cent and 60 per cent) and also provides personal tax cuts to operate from 1 February 1978.
17 August - Federal Treasurer Phillip Lynch addresses the National Press Club of Australia and blames the Arbitration Commission for the lack of improvement in unemployment for its failure to restrain wages through its decisions.
21 August - Mail services returns to normal following the end of a national postal dispute.
23 August - Cabinet makes its final decisions on uranium mining in Australia, endorsing the main findings of the Fox inquiry unless there were 'compelling reasons' for departing from them. It was agreed that mining could proceed, subject to environmental controls and a stringent nuclear safeguards regime. The Ranger Uranium Mine could be developed without further environmental assessment, but the other two mines in the Alligator River region – Jabiluka and Koongarra – would not be approved for a considerable time. Cabinet also agreed on the staged establishment of Kakadu National Park, although the Ranger, Jabiluka and Koongarra uranium leases were to be excluded from it.
24 August – Australia's first 7-Eleven convenience store opens in the Melbourne suburb of Oakleigh.
September
4 September – The Queensland Government bans street marches and demonstrations.
6 September -
Victoria experiences a statewide 24-hour stoppage of train, tram and tramway bus services due to a strike by 20,000 public transport workers - the third strike in a month.
Federal Attorney-General Bob Ellicott quits the Fraser ministry after a row with Cabinet over the conspiracy case against former Labor Ministers. Senator Peter Durack is appointed in his place.
15 September -
The ACTU congress resolves to ban the mining and export of uranium from mid-November unless the Government agrees to hold a referendum on the issue. The referendum proposal is not favoured by the Australian Labor Party, most of whose parliamentary leaders are inclined to support mining.
The Indian High Commissioner Shri Jagdish Chand Ajmani's military attaché Colonel Iqbal Singh and his wife are attacked by a member of the Indian Ananda Marga sect.
17 September – The 1977 South Australian state election is held. The incumbent Australian Labor Party led by Don Dunstan is returned to power.
October
8 October – The Tasman Bridge in Hobart re-opens after repair to the damage sustained in the Tasman Bridge disaster when the bridge was struck by the bulk ore carrier MV Lake Illawarra on 5 January 1975.
19 October -
An employee of Air India’s Melbourne office is stabbed by a man who left a threatening letter, allegedly from the Ananda Marga-affiliated Universal Proutist Revolutionary Federation.
Cabinet decides to review the management of explosives by Commonwealth agencies and to provide 203 more Commonwealth police for diplomatic security work, while foreign missions in Australia are urged to upgrade their security.
27 October - Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser announces that the 1977 Australian federal election will be held on 10 December.
November
12 November – The 1977 Queensland state election is held, with the Liberal-National coalition led by Joh Bjelke-Petersen gaining their fourth successive victory.
18 November - Phillip Lynch resigns as the federal treasurer and is succeeded by John Howard.
30 November – The High Court of Australia rules in the case of Cridland v Federal Commissioner of Taxation that a group of university students avoiding tax by claiming to be farmers were acting legally under provisions of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936.
December
1 December – Bill Neilson resigns as Premier of Tasmania to become Australia's agent-general in London and is succeeded by Doug Lowe.
8 December - Sir Zelman Cowen replaced Sir John Kerr as Governor-General of Australia.
10 December – The 1977 Australian federal election is held. Malcolm Fraser's Liberal/National Country coalition government is re-elected with a slightly reduced majority, defeating the Labor Party led by former Prime Minister Gough Whitlam.
22 December - Bill Hayden and Lionel Bowen replace Gough Whitlam and Tom Uren in the ALP leadership.
Science and technology
Arts and literature
16 December 1977 – Kevin Connor wins the Archibald Prize with Robert Klippel.
26 April 1978 – Ruth Park's novel Swords and Crowns and Rings wins the 1977 Miles Franklin Award.
Film
17 August – The Getting of Wisdom
Television
3 April - When Countdown celebrated 100 episodes, host Molly Meldrum feels tired and emotional prompting regulars Daryl Braithwaite and John Paul Young to both step in and host the remainder of the show.
Soap operas Bellbird, Number 96, and The Box, are all cancelled.
19 November - On Countdown, Molly Meldrum interviews Prince Charles.
28 November - The first episode of Cop Shop airs on the Seven Network.
6 December - The first episode of The Restless Years airs on the 0-10 Network.
22 December - The final episode of the 0-10 Network's long-running drama Number 96 airs for the final time in Melbourne (note: 11 August in Sydney), having first aired in 1972.
23 December - The final episode of ABC TV's long running drama Bellbird airs for the final time, having first aired in 1967.
Sport
28 February – Western Australia win the 1976–77 Sheffield Shield season.
12 March – The Centenary Test commences between England and Australia at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.
20 March – Australia is represented by nine long-distance runners (all men), including Robert de Castella, at the fifth IAAF World Cross Country Championships in Düsseldorf, West Germany. Steve Austin is Australia's best finisher, claiming the 15th spot (38:26.0) in the race over 12,3 kilometres.
2 April – The National Soccer League kicks off, as the first league of any football code to become national with West Adelaide defeating Canberra City 3–1 in the opening game at Manuka Oval in Canberra.
7 May - Hawthorn set two VFL records when they kick 41 behinds and have a total of 66 scoring shots against St Kilda. These totals remain six ahead of the second-most behinds and scoring shots.
6 August – Robert Wallace wins the men's national marathon title, clocking 2:20:11.2 in Cressy, Tasmania.
England defeat a weakened Australia team 3–0 in The Ashes test series
17 September - St. George and minor premiers Parramatta play a 9–9 draw after 100 minutes in the 1977 NSWRL Grand Final. It is the first Grand Final to be tied after 100 minutes including extra time. Newtown finish in last position, claiming their second straight wooden spoon.
24 September
St. George thrash Parramatta 22–0 in the 1977 NSWRL Grand Final replay.
North Melbourne and Collingwood play in the 1977 VFL grand final which becomes only the second VFL Grand Final draw in history.
1 October - North Melbourne defeat Collingwood in the 1977 Grand Final replay.
2 October – In motor racing Ford team-mates Allan Moffat and Colin Bond finish side by side to complete a 1–2 Formation Finish at the Bathurst 1000.
1 November – Gold and Black wins the Melbourne Cup.
29 December – Kialoa II wins the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race.
Births
1 January – Craig Reucassel, comedian and television host
2 January – Jai Rowell, politician
6 January – Shane Rigon, rugby league player
17 January – Leigh Whannell, actor, filmmaker
8 February – Barry Hall, footballer
14 February – Cadel Evans, cyclist
14 February- Jim Jefferies, comedian
21 February – Ben Ikin, rugby league player
24 February – Jason Akermanis, Australian Rules footballer
25 February – Joanne Banning, field hockey striker
1 March – Fiona Scott, politician
15 March – Adrian Burnside, baseball player
24 March – Darren Lockyer, Rugby league footballer
31 March – Garth Tander, racing driver
12 April – Sarah Monahan, actress
6 May – Chantelle Newbery, Olympic champion diver
10 May – Chas Licciardello, comedian
14 May – Ada Nicodemou, actress
24 May – Katie Noonan, new age musician/soprano (george)
7 June – Preston Campbell, rugby league player
11 June – Geoff Ogilvy, golfer
20 June – Aaron Moule, rugby league player
6 July – Con Blatsis, Australian footballer
10 July – Schapelle Corby, drug trafficker
12 July – Soa Palelei, mixed martial artist
26 July – Rebecca St. James, Australian-born Christian musician
6 August – Rebecca Maddern, journalist and television host
11 August – Byron Pickett, Australian Rules footballer
13 August – Michael Klim, swimmer
14 August – Justin Anlezark, shot putter
15 August – Anthony Rocca, Australian Rules footballer
25 August – Lawrence Leung, comedian, writer, and director
31 August – Craig Nicholls, rock musician and songwriter
1 September – Henry Collins, boxer
6 September – Peter Wakefield, boxer
23 October – Brad Haddin, cricketer
30 October – Charmian Faulkner, missing toddler
11 November – Ben Hollioake, Australian-born England cricketer (d. 2002)
16 November – Gigi Edgley, actress
6 December – Peta Gallagher, field hockey striker
30 December
Grant Balfour, Major League Baseball pitcher
Scott Lucas, Australian rules footballer
Deaths
14 January – Peter Finch (born 1916), actor
18 April – Ernest Henry Woollacott (born 1888), minister, social welfare analyst and temperance advocate
23 April – John McDonald (born 1898), Premier of Victoria (1950–1952)