Visitors to the B&O Trail now have a new way to experience Brownsburg’s railroad history.
On July 4, the B&O Trail Association officially dedicated a new outdoor railroad museum located west of the Green Street crossing. Created in celebration of America’s 250th anniversary, the museum honors the railroad heritage that helped shape Brownsburg. The B&O Trail was a former Baltimore & Ohio Railroad corridor that was transformed into a community trail in the late 90s thanks to Diana Virgil.

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Made possible through an America250 grant from the Duke Energy Foundation, the museum’s first phase features historic railroad artifacts discovered during the development of the B&O Trail. Visitors can see an original whistle post and an iron bridge plaque. The centerpiece of the exhibit is an early 20th-century railroad telephone hut, which was once used by railroad crews to communicate before locomotives were equipped with onboard radios.



The open-air museum is the first of its kind in Hendricks County.
Looking ahead, the B&O Trail Association plans to continue expanding the museum in future phases, adding railroad artifacts and interpretive elements that tell the story of the corridor’s past while celebrating the B&O Trail’s legacy.
The outdoor railroad museum is open year-round during regular trail hours and is located along the B&O Trail, west of the Green Street crossing in Brownsburg. Parking is available at the nearby Green Street trailhead.




