Before the
Moreton Bay penal settlement, Mount Coot-tha was the home of the
Yugara Aboriginal people. The
Aboriginal people came to the area to collect
ku-ta, the
Yugarabul word for
honey that was produced by the
native stingless bee. In 1873, the forests on the mountain were declared a timber reserve to supply timber for
Queensland's growing railway network. The name
Coot-tha replaced the name
One Tree Hill when the area was declared a park in August 1883. The name was suggested by Henry Wyatt Radford, the Clerk of the
Queensland Legislative Council,
Coot-tha has been suggested as an Aboriginal word for
honey.
Archibald Meston (
Protector of Aborigines, 1898–1903) wrote in 1923 that
Gootcha is a more accurate transcription, and that
Coot-tha is a separate word translating to an obscenity; supposedly a joke played on Radford by Kerwalli. In the mid 1890s, the
Shire of Toowong (then the local government for the area) established a quarry on the side of the mountain. Following the 1925 amalgamation of local government areas that created the City of Brisbane, the ownership and operation of the quarry was acquired by the Brisbane City Council. Mount Coot-tha was also the site of US Naval Ammunition Depot (Navy 134) supplying submarines at the
Capricorn Wharf at
New Farm (
Teneriffe) in Brisbane. In 1970,
Brisbane City Council established new botanic gardens at the base of the mountain with the intention of replacing the then Brisbane Botanic Gardens at
Gardens Point in the
Brisbane CBD, which was prone to flooding and lacked space for expansion. The new gardens were originally called the Mount Coot-tha Botanic Gardens and were officially opened in 1976, becoming the Brisbane Botanic Gardens with the gardens in the CBD being renamed the
City Botanic Gardens) .The new gardens cover . The Mount Coot-tha Library opened in 1975 at the
Brisbane Botanic Gardens. Unlike most branches of the Brisbane City Libraries, this library specialises in botany, horticulture, gardening and landscape design. On 24 May 1978,
Sir Thomas Brisbane Planetarium officially opened in the grounds of the
Brisbane Botanic Gardens. Brisbane community television channel
31 Digital broadcast from the mountain from 1994 to 2017, after which it shifted to
internet streaming under the new name of
Hitchhike TV. On 20 November 2005, one of the Mount Coot-tha more difficult trails, the
Currawong trail, was renamed the
Kokoda trail in honour of the Australian soldiers who marched the
Kokoda Track in
Papua New Guinea during
World War II. In 2017, it was proposed to build Australia's longest
flying fox from the summit of Mount Coot-tha down to the
Brisbane Botanic Gardens. Despite initially being approved by the
Brisbane City Council, in April 2019 the new
Mayor of Brisbane Adrian Schrinner decided to cancel the project due to public protests. == Demographics ==