How to take transit to see vintage trains around greater Washington

Cabin John miniature train located in Cabin John Regional Park in Montgomery County, Maryland. Image by John Sonderman used with permission.

Greater Washington has almost two centuries of railroad heritage, and plenty of places to watch trains rumble by. Yet if you’re interested in learning more about that heritage, you’ll find that most railroad museums were established on surplus railroad properties, far from major cities and rarely near modern transit.

Luckily, there are ways to easily, and not-so-easily, visit several fascinating museums around the region that should interest railfans of all ages. Information below is current as of June 2024.

B&O Railroad Museum, a century of progress. Image by Payton Chung used with permission.

B&O Railroad Museum

Baltimore Streetcar Museum. Image by Payton Chung used with permission.

Baltimore Streetcar Museum

National Capital Trolley Museum. Image by Payton Chung used with permission.

National Capital Trolley Museum

"America on the Move" at the National Museum of American History. Image by Smithsonian National Museum of American History.

National Museum of American History

Richmond Railroad Museum model layout. Image by the author.

Richmond Railroad Museum

Suburban depots

Three small museums in the Maryland and Virginia suburbs offer a glimpse into historic railroad stations and operations buildings, plus exhibits about local life. Some are inconvenient to get to, though.

Signal exhibit, Bowie Railroad Museum. Image by the author.

Bowie Railroad Museum

Railroad Crossing at the Fairfax Station Railroad Museum. Image by Stephen Repetski used with permission.

Fairfax Station Railroad Museum

Buffalo Creek & Gauley 2-8-0 Consolidation 14 at Gaithersburg Community Museum.  Image by  Dave MacKenzie used with permission.

Gaithersburg Community Museum