By Ranger Lisa
Imagine living in 'Merry Peep O Day', 'Buffalo Wallow' or 'Eel Pot'. Do they evoke images of a cheerful sun peeping over Catoctin Mountain, buffalo cooling off in the mud flats of present day Route 17, or of Native Americans hauling eel pots from the Potomac River? These were all names once used to identify Brunswick.
What about 'Coxson Rest' or 'Tankersville'? How would you like to live in a town named after the local landowners? Although less visually descriptive, both tell a story of status and influence.
Around the Civil War, Brunswick was referred to as 'Berlin'. However, this was changed to 'Barry' by the U.S. Postal Service because of another Berlin on Maryland's Eastern Shore. Can you imagine being told that you had to change your name because someone else already had it?
In the 1890's, the B&O Railroad built its eastern switching center in Barry. Thousands of immigrants working on the project came from Brunswick, Germany. Imagine how proud they felt when the town was renamed 'Brunswick' after their homeland.
Today, Brunswick continues to preserve its rich transportation heritage not only in its name, but also through the Brunswick Railroad Museum, the C&O Canal Visitor Center, annual festivals, and by revitalizing the historic downtown area.
But next time you visit Brunswick, imagine living in 'Merry Peep O Day', 'Eel Pot' or Brunswick's other previous names and ponder their legacies too.
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Plan Your Trip to Brunswick
Itinerary 1 | Itinerary 2 -

Located at 40 West Potomac Street, the Visitor Center's exhibits depict canal history. Two free movies are available for viewing - Charles Kuralt's overview of the canal, and "Down the Old Potomac," ... Read More
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Located next door to the C&O Canal Visitor Center, the Railroad Museum features a working model railroad exhibit, history of the B&O Railroad, and Victorian clothes available for dressing up. Fee re... Read More
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Follow the footpath down to the river to see the beginning of the Weverton millrace and the dam location. Businesses here included a sawmill, and later the General Henderson Steel and File Manufactur... Read More
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Lander Lockhouse is furnished and available for tours on Saturday afternoons.
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The Appalachian Trail follows the C&O Canal Towpath for three miles between Weverton, heading north, and the railroad bridge that crosses from the towpath over the Potomac River to Harpers Ferry, hea... Read More
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Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the newly rebuilt Catoctin Aqueduct is a site to see. It was built with two semicircle arches on either side of an elliptical arch. The elliptica... Read More
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Of the 74 lockhouses built along the C&O Canal, Lockhouse 28 is one of 26 left standing. As part of the Canal ... Read More







