04/09/2026
FRIDAY FROM THE ROAD…
The National Road & Interurban Rides Again
Indiana’s Interurban system, boasted over 1,800 miles of track, and a central hub known as the Indianapolis Traction Terminal station, which was the largest interurban station in the nation at its peak.
The Indianapolis and Greenfield Rapid Transit Company began service from Greenfield on June 19, 1900. This interurban train would stop in Cumberland on its way to Indianapolis.
The town of Cumberland, Indiana celebrates their interurban stop on their new self-guided history tour “Along the National Road”, which highlights 16 historic places in town that are all along the National Road. The site of the Cumberland Interurban is located on Walking Stop #11, Driving Stop #4.
The interurban arrived in Cumberland in 1900.
• Tracks ran directly down the middle of the National Road, connecting our community to cities like Indianapolis, Greenfield, and eventually Richmond, Indiana. A speed of 50 mph was possible, but the average rate was 35 mph.
• Cumberland was known as Stop 17 on the Terre Haute, Indianapolis & Eastern (THI&E) line. German Church was stop 16, and this stop is what caused German Church Rd to be named after the church; however, at that time, German Church was not yet a part of Cumberland.
• The line ran nine trains a day, six for passengers and three for freight.
• W.A. Caylor served as the local station agent.
• The Interurban was an electric rail system that was groundbreaking in transportation technology. While it made travel much easier, it was not without its dangers. Horses were often frightened by the Interurbans' shrill whistle, and multiple accidents occurred in Cumberland.
• Because constructing and running interurbans was expensive when the automobile became popular, with declining ridership in the aftermath of the great depression, strikes, and bankruptcy, the interurban disappeared from Warren Township by 1940.
Today the interurban rides again!
• The IndyGo “Blue Line” will once again offer rapid transit from Cumberland to Indianapolis. The entire line will provide transit along the former interurban route of Washington Street (US 40 / National Road) to Indianapolis International Airport.
• The far-reaching transit-system is a re-engineering project that is known as “Bus Rapid Transit” (BRT).
• Blue Line transit riders start and end every trip as pedestrians. The Blue Line project includes sidewalk construction and improvement, upgraded curb ramps, new crosswalks and traffic and pedestrian signal.
• BRT Blue Line construction is currently underway on US 40 / National Road and in Cumberland they have begun clearing areas for the Cumberland pedistrian platform/station.
• When completed in 2028, the Blue Line will have 30 bus stations along the entire route.
• The 24-mile Blue Line rapid transit route will stretch from the Indianapolis International Airport to Cumberland, Indiana.
We encourage you to visit the current exhibit at the Indiana Historical Society: “The Electric Railway: Indiana’s Interurbans”, now thru August 1, 2026.
• https://indianahistory.org/events/the-electric-railway-indianas-interurbans/
We encourage you to visit the town of Cumberland and take the new historic tour: “Along the National Road: Cumberland’s Historic Story”.
https://www.town.cumberland.in.us/about/history_walking_tour/index.php
We welcome your comments, stories, experiences and memories!
As the Indiana National Road Association tagline reads: "MAKE HISTORY. DRIVE IT."
Credits: History of Warren Township, 1976 pg. 42, Cumberland Conservation District, Pg. 8-11, The Hancock County Democrat, 1930, The Indianapolis News, March 8, 1900, Indiana Historical Society, W.H. Bass Photo Collection, IndyGo, Town of Cumberland, Indiana, Mirror Indy, Hoosier State Chronicles, The Indiana Album (Ray Hinz Collection).