Founded in the 19th century, the Nuxalbari Tea Estate was one of the many gardens owned by Khan Bahadur Musharraf Husain, the Nawab of Jalpaiguri. It lay in the Himalayan foothills of Bengal, an area known for its forests, tea estates and timber. But in the 1960s, following a crash in the global tea trade, the family too lost many of the estates in the following two decades. Nuxalbari too would have followed suit if it was not for Dolly Jabbar, wife of Sayeed Jabbar, grandson of the Nawab of Jalpaiguri. Despite being warned by family and friends that the garden was debt ridden and in dire straits, Dolly refused to sell it. Taking up the reins in 1981 as the managing director of 1200 acre garden, she turned it around, paid off the debts, refurbished the old factory, and upgraded the garden by planting vast acres of young tea and hundreds of trees. Nuxalbari soon became popular among tea connoisseurs as one of the best maintained gardens. Dolly was so fond of her garden that after she passed away (May 2011), her children, according to her wishes, cremated her at her favourite spot on the estate and scattered her ashes among the tea bushes.