Mount Samson is about halfway between Samford and Dayboro located in South East Queensland. It is roughly north west of Brisbane. Mount Samson is a mix of acreage properties and small farms. The area was most recently dominated by agriculture such as dairy farming. Access to Mount Samson from Brisbane is along Samford Road and Mount Samson Road.
History
Mt Samson was occupied by the indigenous people who named it Buran, which means wind. The suburb takes its name from the reasonably dominant Mount Samson which is part of the D'Aguilar Range. Samson Creek Provisional School opened on 9 August 1880. On 1 Oct 1909 it became Samson Creek State School. In 1925 the school was moved and renamed Mount Samson State School. In the Mount Samson had a population of 566 people.
Climate
Mount Samson has a sub-tropical climate with very hot humid summers and mild, dry, sunny winters. Most rain falls during the height of summer, between November and February. Whilst summer maximum average temperatures generally linger around 30C, the summer months, like most of South EastQueensland have some extremely hot days, sometimes as high as 40C.
Mount Samson State School is a government primary school for boys and girls at 1060 Winn Road. In 2017, the school had an enrolment of 313 students with 26 teachers and 16 non-teaching staff. It includes a special education program. The school has been described as a 'school without a town' due to the fact that it serves residents of nearby areas but indeed has no township. Despite this - or perhaps because of it - the school community is very close knit and supportive. Directly in front of Mount Samson State School sits Sparrow Early Learning, a long day care centre catering for children birth to school age, and Songbirds, a small music learning centre.
Demographics
In the, Mount Samson recorded a population of 566 people, 49.8% female and 50.2% male. The median age of the Mount Samson population was 38 years, 1 year above the national median of 37. 77.5% of people living in Mount Samson were born in Australia. The other top responses for country of birth were England 9.8%, New Zealand 3%, Germany 0.5%, Canada 0.5%, Ireland 0.5%. 95.8% of people spoke only English at home; the next most common languages were 0.9% Greek, 0.7% Mandarin, 0% Welsh, 0% Irish, 0% Gaelic.