February 19: 128 Japanese aircraft bomb Darwin resulting in 243 deaths
and devastation of the airfield, city area and harbour where eight ships
were sunk.
February: Prime
Minister John Curtin defies Churchill and recalls Australian troops home
from the Middle East as fears grow that Japan is preparing to invade Australia.
National defence becomes the main activity of the Commonwealth government.
March: American
General Douglas MacArthur and American troops arrive in Australia. General
Macarthur takes command of all allied land, air and naval forces in the
Pacific west of Singapore.
May 8: Prime
Minister Curtin announces in parliament the Battle of the Coral Sea:
"I
ask the people of Australia, having regard to the grave consequences
implicit in this engagement, to make a sober and realistic estimate
of their duty to the nation ... Men are fighting for Australia
today; those who are not fighting have no excuse for not working."
May 31: Three
Japanese midget submarines enter Sydney Harbour - 19 lives are lost
when a torpedo sinks a ferry.
Following
petrol rationing, the rationing of tea, sugar, butter, meat and clothing
is introduced. Civilians carry identity cards, train as air raid
wardens and foremen, support war loans and salvage drives and otherwise
work long hours for the war effort.
July
15: The Volunteer Defence Corps is formed - Australia's "Home Guard".
The power
to levy personal income tax is passed to the Commonwealth Government
through enactment of the Income Tax (War-time Arrangements) Act.