The first subdivisions in the area occurred in 1864. Wolston Estate was the property of M. B. Goggs, whose father obtained the land forty years previously in the 1860s and after whom Goggs Road is named. The name
Darra comes from the
Darra railway station, which in turn was named in mid-1876 by the
Queensland Railways Department. In 1884 Darra was the scene of a serious collision between two trains; James Griffith, the driver of the passenger train, was fatally injured, and several passengers also suffered. In 1879, the local government area of
Yeerongpilly Division was created. In 1891, parts of Yeerongpilly Division were excised to create
Sherwood Division becoming a Shire in 1903 which contained the area of Wolston Estate. A portion of Darra comes from the Wolston Estate, consisting of 54 farms on an area of 3000 acres, offered for auction at Centennial Hall, Brisbane, on 16 October 1901. Only three of the farms sold at the original auction. Darra Methodist Church opened on Saturday 13 March 1915 by Reverend William Smith, President of the Queensland Methodist Conference. When the Methodist Church amalgamated into the
Uniting Church in Australia, it became the Darra Uniting Church. In 1914,
Queensland Cement and Lime Company was formed established a cement manufacturing plant in Darra. The company (by then known as Queensland Cement Limited) closed the Darra plant in 1998 after losing its right to dredge
Moreton Bay for
coral from which
lime was extracted to make cement. Darra State School opened on 1 June 1916. In 1925, the
Shire of Sherwood was amalgamated into the
City of Brisbane. Our Lady of the Sacred Heart School was established on 5 April 1937 by the Sisters of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart. In 1987 the school opened a pre-school at Jindalee and the school's name became Darra-Jindalee Catholic School. The Jindalee site was closed in 2003. On 14 July 2008 the school was again renamed to be Our Lady of the Sacred Heart School Darra. The Anglican Church of the Holy Spirit was dedicated in 1955 by Venerable Harold John Richards. Its closure about 28 October 2010 was approved by
Archbishop Phillip Aspinall. The houses are mainly of the
Queenslander style built in the 1940s and 1950s. The majority of blocks in Darra are large enough to be subdivided, which is becoming popular in the suburb, hence making room for more modern homes. In the last few years, a property developer bought a vast tract of vacant,
government land. As a result, there are now many new homes and
townhouses built in Darra, which has increased its population and its geographical boundaries. ==Demographics==