Maple Leaf Trains/Train Robbery
Starting date:
Ending date:
Event Details
Maple Leaf Trains/Train Robbery. Take a trip back in time to the days of the cowgirls, cowboys and a train robbery! Thats right! A TRAIN ROBBERY! Hold on to your goods folks, the Wild Women of the Frontier are going to be stomping around the tracks we have been told! Riders on horseback, gun fire (blanks of course!) and even a few surprises!! Sure sounds like a ton of fun you don't want to miss out on! Maple Leaf Train Robbery Rides leave the depot every 2 hours, on the hour on Saturday and Sunday at 10:00am and the last train runs at 4:00pm each day! Train Tickets are $8.00 per person, no matter what age! So come out and add a little excitement to your day! Also enjoy a whole weekend worth of activity, arts and crafts at the Maple Leaf Festival!
Maple Leaf Trains/Train Robbery
Phone : 785-594-6982 (Always call and confirm events.)
Email Address : info@baldwincitychamber.com
Web: www.midlandrailway.org
Family Fun
Attractions and Upcoming Events
Baldwin, Historical Marker
Here, and for the next 300 miles west, Highway 56 roughly follows the old Santa Fe Trail, and frequently crosses it. White settlement began in this area in 1854, the year Kansas became a territory, and in 1855
Baldwin City, KS Pioneer LifeKibbee Cabin
[Kibbee Cabin] The Kibbee Cabin is a reproduction of a log cabin which stood on the crest of the Santa Fe Ridge (commonly called "Big Hill") north of Baldwin where a group of Methodist ministers met to form Baker University in 1857
Baldwin City, KS Pioneer LifeWomen's Bridge
The native stone and brick bridge over Tauy Creek was erected in 1890 at the request of Baldwin's first female mayor, Lucy Sullivan. Mrs. Sullivan, one of the nation's earliest woman mayors, and her all-female council distinguished themselves with community improvements such as this bridge "
Baldwin City, KS Pioneer LifeThe Midland Historic Railroad
The Midland Historic Railroad began operation August 8, 1987 with a restored diesel engine, a 1923 Rock Island commuter coach and a 1950
Baldwin City, KS Railroad HistoryBattle of Black Jack
This battle was part of the struggle to make Kansas a free state. In May, 1856, Pro-slavery men destroyed buildings and newspaper presses in Lawrence, Free-State headquarters. John Brown's company then killed 5
Baldwin City, KS Battlesites