The European establishment of Ballina begun in the 1840s on the northern shore of the Richmond River, 20 kilometres south of
Cape Byron, Australia's most easterly point. HMS
Rainbow, commanded by Capt. Henry Rous, first sailed into the Richmond River in 1828, followed by overland settlers from the
Clarence River. In 1842, more settlers arrived on a ship called
Sally, forming a settlement at what is now East Ballina on Shaws Bay. A branch railway line connected Ballina with the
Murwillumbah railway line railway at Booyong. The line was opened on 24 August 1930 and closed on 12 January 1949.
Landfalls Ballina has a number of famous "landfalls" associated with it. In 1928,
Charles Kingsford Smith's plane, the
Southern Cross, crossed the coast over Ballina after its epic journey across the
Pacific Ocean. Ballina had a festival associated with the event during the 1970s and 1980s, and a school in East Ballina bears the name "Southern Cross". In 1973, the
Las Balsas rafts were towed into Ballina by fishing trawlers after their journey from
Ecuador. One of the rafts is preserved at the
Ballina Naval & Maritime Museum. They had planned to arrive in
Mooloolaba in
Queensland, but currents forced them off their course. Their journey was almost twice as long as the
Kon-Tiki expeditions of 1947 and proved that people could have travelled across the Pacific in ancient times. == Heritage listings ==