The Brighton Hotel located along Beaconsfield Terrace was believed to be built by David Rowntree Somerset. An early settler, Captain William Townsend, bought the Brighton Hotel and used it as his home and, once sold in 1893, it was used as an orphanage. It resumed being a hotel in 1912. The suburb takes its name from the hotel, which is believed to be named after
Brighton in
Sussex, England. On Saturday 2 December 1939, 500 people attended the opening of a new church building by Reverend F. A. Malcolm, the President of the Methodist Conference. The previous church was relocated to the rear of the site to be used as a Sunday school hall. In 1977, the church joined in the amalgamation that created the
Uniting Church in Australia becoming the Brighton Uniting Church. The church at 41 Deagon Street () was closed circa 1999, and was later sold and the church and hall (the former church) were converted into a house. It is now within the suburb boundaries of
Sandgate. Brighton State School opened on 27 January 1920. Since 1935, three bridges have connected
Brisbane to
Redcliffe Peninsula between Brighton at their southern end and
Clontarf on the peninsula at their northern end. The first of these to be built was the
Hornibrook Bridge, which opened on 4 October 1935. On 20 December 1979 , a second bridge known as the Houghton Highway was opened and the Hornibrook Bridge was closed to traffic, but could still be used by pedestrians, cyclists, and for fishing. On 11 July 2010, the third bridge, the
Ted Smout Memorial Bridge, opened, enabling the Houghton Highway to be used for northbound traffic and the Ted Smout Memorial Bridge to be used for southbound traffic. Due to the deteriorating condition of the Hornibrook Bridge and the cost to maintain it, most of the bridge was demolished in 2010 with only the southern portal remaining at the Brighton end and the northern portal and a small section of the bridge (following some reconstruction) remaining at the Clontarf end; both are available for recreational use. Brighton was the site of the
Second World War barracks of the
RAAF Air Training School between December 1940 and May 1946; it was built on reclaimed land. It later became Eventide, a large
nursing home run by the
Queensland Government. More than 700 patients were transferred from
Dunwich on
North Stradbroke Island to the facility. It was announced in late 2012 that the nursing home would close because the government did not wish to continue to provide aged care facilities. The site was redeveloped as the Brighton Health Campus, which provides a range of rehabilitation services and some aged care. Brighton Baptist church at 77 North Road () opened in 1958. It is now in private ownership and has been converted into a residence. Nashville State School opened on 25 January 1960. The Autism Therapy & Education Centre opened on 27 January 1991. == Demographics ==