The locality is entirely within a number of protected areas, mostly within the Djiru National Park but with a small area in the south-east of the locality being within the Tam O'Shanter Forest Reserve.[5]
History
The locality presumably takes its name from Tam O'Shanter Point on the coastline nearby. The point was named by Captain Owen Stanley of HMS Rattlesnake after the barqueTam O'Shanter, which carried Edmund Kennedy's ill-fated expedition to North Queensland in 1848.[6] TheTam O'Shanter, of 270 tons (bm) and homeport Liverpool, had been launched at Workington in 1836.[7]
Demographics
In the 2016 census, Tam O'Shanter had "no people or a very low population".[8]
In the 2021 census, Tam O'Shanter had "no people or a very low population".[1]
Mackness, Constance; Mission Beach - Bingil Bay Progress Association (1983), Clump Point and district : an historical record of Tom O'Shanter, South Mission Beach, Mission Beach, Bingil Bay, Garner's Beach and Kurrimine, G.K. Bolton, ISBN978-0-9591796-0-6