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Walkersville Southern Railroad
Maryland Dinner Train Rides At Walkersville (2026)
Published: April 17, 2026
By: Adam Burns
The Walkersville Southern Railroad (WSRR) offers one of those rare heritage-rail experiences that feels both intimate and authentic—an honest-to-goodness railroad yard, historic depot atmosphere, and a short line that slips quickly from small-town scenery into quiet farm country. It’s the kind of place where you can hear the jointed rail sing, watch volunteers and staff keeping vintage equipment alive, and—depending on the event—turn a simple excursion into a full evening out.
While WSRR runs a variety of seasonal and special trains, one of its most appealing “date night” offerings is the Valentine’s Dinner Train, a romantic two-hour ride built around classic railroad ambiance and a plated, three-course meal. For couples who want something different than the usual restaurant reservation—something with motion, mood, and a little old-fashioned magic—this is a standout.
Today's Walkersville Southern
The WSRR is a heritage railway operating in Frederick County. It runs on a historic corridor tied closely to the region’s Pennsylvania Railroad-era railroading, and it pairs its train rides with an on-site museum mission dedicated to local railroad history.
Practically speaking, WSRR is set up perfectly for a half-day family outing or an evening event:
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A station area you can explore before departure (yard, buildings, equipment on display, photo angles).
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Multiple seating experiences—from standard coaches to open-air cars and premium options on select runs.
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A calendar full of themed trains throughout the year, from family events to dining-oriented trips.
And because it’s close to Frederick—one of Maryland’s best historic downtowns for dining, shops, and nightlife—it’s easy to build a full itinerary around your ride.
A Brief History
One of the most enjoyable parts of riding WSRR is realizing you’re not on a “park train” or a freshly built tourist loop—you’re traveling a corridor with genuine 19th-century DNA.
WSRR’s route traces back to a rail line that opened in the early 1870s and later became associated with the Pennsylvania Railroad’s Frederick-area operations. The railroad emphasizes that it runs trains on the same trackbed in use when the railroad first opened in 1872, giving passengers a “step back in time” feel not just through the equipment, but through the very geography of the line.
Over time, this corridor passed through a succession of corporate and operational chapters typical of many Mid-Atlantic branches—prosperity, consolidation, decline, and ultimately a period of disuse after natural disaster and shifting transportation patterns. A key turning point came in the early 1970s when Hurricane Agnes caused major damage in the region and is associated with washouts that sidelined portions of the route for years.
The Walkersville Southern story as we know it today begins with preservation-minded volunteers and local rail advocates who started restoring the line in the early 1990s. According to historical summaries, volunteers began serious restoration efforts in 1991, and tourist operations followed a few years later—helped by rebuilding projects that returned trains across the Monocacy River corridor.
That arc—neglected branch to revived heritage line—is the heartbeat of WSRR. You’re not just buying a ticket for a ride; you’re participating in the ongoing act of keeping a real piece of Maryland rail infrastructure alive.
The Route
Walkersville Southern’s appeal is how quickly it transitions from “railroad museum and depot” into “Maryland landscape.” The railroad’s own visitor guidance points out that you’ll see a mix of historic structures and equipment—much of it dating from the early-to-mid 20th century—before the train heads out past local landmarks and into open scenery.
On many excursions, riders can choose between traditional enclosed seating and more open-air options depending on the event and consist. The railroad lists multiple seating types (passenger car/coach seating, open-air car seating, and parlor-style options in some cases), which is great for tailoring the experience—especially if you’re chasing photographs, fall foliage, or simply want a breeze and unobstructed views.
WSRR also leans into special-event variety. Even outside Valentine’s weekend, the calendar often includes themed trains and limited steam weekends, which helps keep the railroad feeling “alive” rather than static.
Valentine’s Dinner Train
The Valentine’s Dinner Train is designed specifically as a couples’ night out—part scenic ride, part rolling restaurant, part old-fashioned romance. For February 2026, Walkersville Southern lists two departures:
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Friday, February 13, 2026 (6:00–8:00 PM)
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Saturday, February 14, 2026 (6:00–8:00 PM)
The format is simple and very appealing: a two-hour evening journey paired with a three-course meal prepared by Bollinger’s Restaurant of Thurmont.
A fun bonus is that each evening has its own onboard tasting partner:
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Friday the 13th: Rosie Cheeks onboard with free moonshine samples, with the option to purchase.
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Saturday the 14th: Uncle Dirty’s Brew onboard with beer samples, with the option to purchase.
And an important ticketing detail (especially if you’re used to buying one seat at a time): WSRR notes that Valentine’s tickets are sold “per couple,” meaning you generally purchase one ticket for two people. Why a Valentine’s dinner train just hits different
A dinner train isn’t just “dinner somewhere else.” The motion of the train, the rhythm of the rails, and the changing view out the windows do something a stationary dining room can’t. Conversations flow easier. The outside world feels a little farther away. Even the pacing of courses feels more like a shared experience than a rushed reservation.
On WSRR, that’s amplified by the line’s vintage atmosphere. You’re departing from a place that still looks and feels like a small railroad—because it is one. Add winter-night ambience, soft lighting, the gentle sway of the consist, and a catered three-course meal, and you’ve got a Valentine’s outing that feels intentionally crafted.
It also works beautifully for different kinds of couples:
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Railfans who appreciate the “real railroad” setting.
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Food-and-experience people who want something beyond the typical dinner spot.
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Local explorers who love Frederick County’s history and scenery.
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Gift-givers looking for a memorable, schedule-worthy surprise.
Supporting Preservation With Every Ticket
Heritage railroads thrive because communities decide they matter. Walkersville Southern emphasizes that it works to preserve and interpret local railroad history through both its operations and museum mission, with the museum component structured to support preservation, exhibits, and educational programming.
So when you board that Valentine’s Dinner Train, you’re not just buying dinner with a view—you’re helping keep historic equipment rolling, maintaining a real corridor of Maryland rail history, and ensuring that future riders can experience the sights, sounds, and textures of railroading that once defined this region.
If you’re looking for a Valentine’s plan that’s romantic without being cliché—nostalgic without being dusty—Walkersville Southern’s dinner train is exactly the kind of “only in railroading” experience that turns into a tradition. To learn more about this excursion please click here to visit the railroad's website.
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