A Baltimore Landmark

When workers laid the foundation in 1849, no one could imagine the amazing history that would play out in and around President Street Station. From Lincoln’s secret passage through the station under pre-dawn stars to the first bloodshed of the Civil War, President Street Station was an eye witness to key events in our nation’s history.

Today the oldest surviving railroad station in an urban setting, President Street Station stands proudly among new skyscrapers and a redeveloped waterfront. Sited near Baltimore’s Inner Harbor, Harbor East, and Little Italy neighborhoods, the station welcomes visitors to learn about Baltimore’s 19th century railroads, perilous journeys to freedom along the Underground Railroad, President Lincoln’s travels through the city, and how Massachusetts soldiers traveling through in 1861 confronted danger and death just steps away from the station’s grand entrance.

Read the National Park Service report on the President Street Station —  National Significance Evaluation for Inclusion into the National Park System.

Location and Hours

601 President Street
Baltimore MD

443 220 0290

Friday 10 – 4
Saturday 10 – 4
Sunday 10 – 4
Monday 10 – 4

Admission fees

Ages 1-12: free
Ages 13-18: $2
Ages 19+: $3