Ottaba, Queensland

Ottaba is a rural locality in the Somerset Region, Queensland, Australia. In the, Ottaba had a population of 52 people.

Geography
The mountain Ottaba is in the (-27.1448°N, 152.396°W) rises to 316 m in the east of the locality.

The Brisbane Valley Highway enters the locality from the south (Biarra) and exits to the north (Toogoolawah).

Ottaba railway station is an abandoned railway station (-27.15°N, 152.3904°W) on the dismantled Brisbane Valley railway line.

History
On 26 February 1904, the Queensland Railways Department named the former railway station in the area Ottaba, which is a Wakawaka language word in the Dungibara dialect meaning come on. Anthropologist Walter Edmund Roth is believed to have suggested the name. The locality takes its name from the former railway station.

Newton Provisional School opened on 15 September 1898. In 1905, it was renamed Ottaba Provisional School. On 1 January 1909, it became Ottaba State School. It closed temporarily in 1924. It permanently closed circa 1936.

Demographics
In the, Ottaba had a population of 54 people.

In the, Ottaba had a population of 52 people.

Education
There are no schools in Ottaba. The nearest government primary and secondary schools are Toogoolawah State School and Toogoolawah State High School, both in neighbouring Toogoolawah to the north.