The area once belonged to Mrs. Griffin of
Whiteside west of
Petrie, and was acquired by the son of a Scottish migrant by the name of
Thomas Petrie in 1855. The name Kallangur originates from the
Indigenous Australian word
kalangoor, meaning a goodly or satisfactory place. Kallangur is situated in the
Yugarabul traditional Indigenous Australian country of the Brisbane and surrounding regions, however, the word
kalangoor is from the Kabi dialect, from the traditional Indigenous Australian
Gubbi Gubbi (Kabi) country of the
Sunshine Coast and surrounding regions. Gympie Road (now
Old Gympie Road) passed through Kallangur from
Brisbane to
Gympie. It was a route travelled by
Cobb & Co coaches. Kallangur grew in the early twentieth century as it was on the main road route to the
Redcliffe peninsula before the construction of the
Hornibrook Bridge in the 1930s. Kallangur State School opened on 9 June 1930. More recent development has been in response to the general housing demand in the northern growth corridor. Space City was built on Anzac Avenue in 1978 before being demolished in 1985. Dakabin State School opened on 28 January 1992. An
ANZAC memorial gate was erected along with a bronze statue on the corner of Anzac Avenue and Goodfellows Road. The new Memorial Gardens was unveiled in front of the North's Leagues and Services Club in 2005 by the former
Minister for Veterans' Affairs De-Anne Kelly.
Kallangur railway station was completed in 2016. Charlotte Mason College was a private primary and secondary (Prep–10) school for boys and girls at 30 Narangba Road (). It opened in 2017. In 2018, the school had an enrolment of 214 students with 9 teachers (7 full-time equivalent) and 7 non-teaching staff. In December 2023, the school suddenly closed following a series of financial audits. Pinnacle Academic College opened in July 2020. == Demographics ==