| The National Historic Landmark Baltimore & Ohio Transportation
Museum and Mount Clare Station is a collection of three interrelated buildings
standing on the oldest railroad terminal site in the country. The fledgling
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad established its headquarters at Mount Clare
in the 1830s, and the first regularly scheduled passenger trains in the
nation carried customers from here to Ellicott Mills, 13 miles west. The
Mount Blare Station, the oldest building, is a two-story, brick polygonal
example of early railroad buildings. On May 24, 1844, the nation's first
telegraph message passed through the station. The brick Passenger Car
Roundhouse, designed by Ephrim Francis Baldwin, is one-story with a central
monitor surmounted by a central cupola. The youngest of the three buildings
is currently referred to as the Museum Annex Building. Baldwin designed
the Museum Annex Building to be a library and printing office. The two-story,
brick building features a three-story tower, with gabled dormers, and
corbeled brickwork. The Baltimore & Ohio Transportation Museum and
Mount Clare Station is an institution dedicated to the preservation of
historic railroad equipment. Some of the exhibits include locomotives
from all eras of railroad history; including the "Tom Thumb",
the "John Hancock", and the "Thatcher Perkins Locomotive
No. 117."
The Baltimore and Ohio Transportation Museum and Mount Clare Station is located at the junction of Pratt and Poppleton Sts. The Museum is open daily from 10:00am to 5:00pm (closed Easter, Thanksgiving, Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, New Year's Eve, & New Year's Day), there is an entrance fee. More information is available at 410-752-2490 or visit their website. |
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