Originally called Springvale. However,
James and John Toohey named their property
Nashua, a word borrowed from a tribe of
New England American Indians, meaning
"land between two rivers" or
"river with the pebbled bottom". It is not well understood why the Irish brothers so named their property. 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. The New South Wales government used the property name for the railway station, and the name has persisted to this day. ==Construction==