
Welcome to Williamsburg, Indiana.
Some of you are saying, “You got it wrong. You meant to say, ‘Welcome to Williamsburg, Virginia’.”
No. This is the small town of Williamsburg in the U.S. state of Indiana. It is not like its Virginia counterpart of Colonial Williamsburg but a small town in the eastern part of the state just west of the U.S. state of Ohio. When you visit the town, you will pretty much see a ghost town… but it was not always that way.

The town was named after William Johnson, the man who settled the town in 1830. Like many small towns, it flourished, but something happened in 1901. What happened? The Chesapeake and Ohio Railway came to town. Connecting the Indiana cities of Richmond to the south with Muncie, the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway brought massive growth of business and population to the town. The town had its own train station. Like many small towns in the United States of America, Williamsburg went into a decline and began beginning to be the ghost town it is today.

Today, the railroad line that passed through the town of Williamsburg, Indiana became a rail trail known as the Cardinal Greenway, the longest rail trail in the U.S. state of Indiana running to Richmond to the south and Marion to the north. As you visit the rail trail, you will not notice that this was once a busy place. Located north of the town center just a short drive of U.S. Route 35, you will experience a quiet place at a place that was once the centerpiece of the town.
Welcome to Williamsburg, Indiana. You will not see people dress in colonial attire, but you will be in a small town where a railroad made history.




