The town takes its name from the river which, in turn, is reportedly a word from the
Yugambeh language meaning
small river or the
Bundjalung language meaning
shovel nosed shark. The township of Nerang was surveyed by Martin Lavelle in June 1865. Lavelle named a street after himself and others after local pioneers like William White the local squatter, and Edmund Price the local planter. Nerang has focused very much on the river crossing and the head of navigation. Land was first sold here in 1871. Daily
Cobb & Co coach services from
Brisbane began the same year and river transport to the settlement became more regular. Benjamin Cockerill erected the first hotel, The Nerang, in early 1872. The population of the 'town' of Nerang in the 1871 census was too small even to be included in the list of towns in the region. A thrice weekly Cobb & Co coach service provided the incentive for the opening of a second hotel called the Southern Cross, followed by the Royal Mail in 1873. With an abundant supply of
red cedar amongst other tree species, the first industry to flourish in the area was timber cutting. Nerang State School opened on 1 November 1875 with 47 students under teacher Thomas Johnson. With the establishment of a telegraph office, two stores, a butcher, a saddler, a baker and a boot maker it was clear that a township was forming. By 1881 the population reached 95. On 30 September 1885 J. Howard Maynard auctioned 34 allotments on the bank of Mooyumbin Creek, bound by Martin Street, Tibbing Street and Price Street. At the time the amenities advertised included the Commercial Hotel, agricultural and saw-milling district and a railway station was promised. By 1888 there were three schools in Nerang and the population had grown to 343 by 1901. By 1905 Nerang was becoming a centre for dairying. Maize was the main industry with arrowroot and potato crops also becoming more important. Although the economic focus of the Gold Coast today is tourism, in the 19th century the South Coast (as it was then known) was an agricultural area.
Sugar and
maize were grown by farmers along the upper reaches of the Nerang River. At that time, Nerang was the one of those townships in the Gold Coast hinterland that reflected that the economic focus of the area was agriculture. The
South Coast railway arrived in Nerang in 1887 with the town being serviced by the old Nerang railway station . The railway linked these rural towns together and gave impetus to their development. Subdivision was conventional and buildings were traditional rural or rural commercial. In 1927, a timber building was the first built specifically for use as the Nerang Council Chambers. During
World War II the Australian Army's
4th Armoured Brigade operated a tank training centre at Nerang. The
Shire of Nerang became part of the
Shire of Albert in 1950 and the Nerang Council Chambers became a post office. Nerang State High School opened on 28 January 1986. In the 1990s, it was realised that the Gold Coast needed a railway leading to the construction of the
Gold Coast railway line which reached Nerang in 1997, although the new railway line had to follow a different route and the new
Nerang railway station was in a different location to the former station on the South Coast line. This railway line was not to service agriculture but for workers and tourists to commute between the Gold Coast and
Brisbane (including connection to
Brisbane Airport for business and leisure travelers). Like other Gold Coast hinterland towns, Nerang began to change from being a service centre for agriculture to becoming increasingly residential suburbs for workers in the coastal tourism industries. This was officially recognised in 2003 when Nerang was re-designated a suburb rather than a
locality. == Demographics ==