Nashua is a former railway station and locality in the north-east of New South Wales, between Lismore and Byron Bay.
The Tooheys planned to grow sugar cane at Nashua, however frost destroyed their crops.
Today, the undulating countryside sustains dairy cattle, pecan nuts and other agriculture.
[4] The Ballina-Booyong railway line was opened in 1930, but damaged by floods in 1948 and officially closed in 1953.
The area was subtropical rainforest, part of the Bundjalung nation, before the Big Scrub was cleared in the late 19th century.