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Sharpsburg, MD Road Trips

Plan drives from Sharpsburg, MD with practical route pages for distance, drive time, fuel cost, road character, and places to stop along the way.

Downtown Sharpsburg, MD, MD

Photo: Jonathan Borba

Trip Routes

4

Longest Drive

37.5 mi

Stanley, MD

Quickest Drive

23m

El Rancho Mobile Home Park, MD

Plan Around Sharpsburg, MD

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Trips from Sharpsburg, MD

Sharpsburg, MD by the Numbers

Recent demographic snapshot from the US Census Bureau's American Community Survey.

Population

596

Median Income

$71,029

Median Home Value

$231,400

Median Age

51.7

Source: US Census Bureau ACS 5-year (public domain). See our methodology for details.

Sharpsburg, MD at a Glance

Founded

1763

Elevation

420 ft

Area

0 mi²

Landmarks & Historic Sites

Attractions and heritage-registered places located in Sharpsburg, MD.

Tolson's Chapel and School

Tolson's Chapel and School

historic church in Maryland, United States

National Historic Landmark National Register of Historic Places listed place

City data from Wikidata (Q754473), available under CC0. Photos from Wikimedia Commons under their respective licenses. See our methodology for details.

Traveler Guide to Sharpsburg, MD

Sharpsburg is a small historic American village in Washington County in Western Maryland, home to Antietam National Battlefield.

Sharpsburg is a small town, founded by a settler in 1763 after the French and Indian War, who named the settlement after then Maryland governor Sharpe. With less than 1,000 residents, it would be an overlooked quaint village if not for hosting one momentous and terribly bloody day in American history. The Battle of Antietam was the bloodiest day in American Military History. 23,000 soldiers were killed, wounded or missing after twelve hours of savage combat on 17 September 1862. The Battle of Antietam ended the first Confederate invasion into the North and led to Abraham Lincoln's issuance of the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation. The Battle of Antietam was the culmination of the Maryland Campaign of 1862, the first invasion of the North by Confederate General Robert E. Lee and the Army of Northern Virginia. Following a defeat at South Mountain, General Lee considered ending his campaign in the North and withdrawing to Virginia, but upon hearing of General Stonewall Jackson's victory at Harpers Ferry, he decided to make a stand at Sharpsburg. The Confederate commander gathered his forces on the high ground west of Antietam Creek with Gen. James Longstreet's command holding the center and the right while Stonewall Jackson's men filled in on the left. Union General George McClellan focused the Union forces upon the left flank of the Confederate Army along the Sunken Road, and hammered away in brutal stalemate.

Antietam National Battlefield Visitor Center, 5831 Dunker Church Road, ☏ +1 301 432-5124. 26 Oct-8 May: daily 8:30AM-5PM, 9 May-29 May: daily 8:30AM-6PM, 30 May-20 Sep: daily 8AM-7PM, 21 Sep-25 Oct: daily 8:30AM-6PM. $4/person, $6/family, valid for three days. The battlefield is maintained by the National Park Service, and you can experience it in a number of ways: Explore the museum exhibits in the 1 Visitor Center View the 26-minute introductory film "Antietam Visit" which is shown on the hour and the half-hour, except from noon to 1PM Join a Park Ranger for a battlefield talk Browse the 2 Museum Store Take the self-guided 8.5-mile auto tour through the battlefield. The tour has 11 stops and begins at the 3 Dunker Church Take a self-guided hike on the 1 Cornfield Trail, 2 Final Attack Trail, 3 Union Advance Trail, 4 Antietam Remembered Trail, 5 Sherrick Farm Trail, or 6 Snavely Ford Trail Visit the 4 Pry House Field Hospital Museum, +1 301 416-2395, summer: daily noon-5PM. 5 Jacob Highbarger House, 201 W Main St. Built around 1832, this building was constructed with limestone with Greek Revival influences. There is a log workshop attached, which was built with corner-post log construction with diagonal bracing. The building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. (updated Sep 2021) 6 Joseph C. Hays House, 103-105 W Main St. On the National Register of Historic Places, this three-bay side-hall double-parlor house was built in 1823. It was later expanded. During the mid-19th century, Benjamin F. Cronise had a dry goods store here.

Sharpsburg is not a town full of activities for travelers beyond visiting the battlefield, but it is right by the 7 C&O Canal, which is a great place for biking, walks, camping, canoeing, and kayaking. 8 Antietam Battle Anniversary, Antietam National Battlefield, ☏ +1 301 432-5124. 12-14 September. The most busy weekend in Sharpsburg every year hosts musical performances, including Civil War field music, vendors, a full-day guided hike of the battlefield, special lectures, and a whole host of other activities.

1 Battleview Market - Diner, 5331 Sharpsburg Pike (1/2 mile south of Antietam Battlefield), ☏ +1 301 432-2676. Daily 6AM-10PM. Homemade soups, subs, sandwiches, wraps, fresh fried chicken. Burgers fresh from the local meat market daily. Serving breakfast, lunch and dinner. Eat in or carry out. Box lunches are available for large groups touring the Battlefield. 2 Nutter's Ice Cream, 100 E Main St, ☏ +1 301 432-5809. Extremely high quality ice cream, and an incredible bargain for high class ice cream if you are used to city prices! Cash only.

1 Antietam Creek Vineyard, 4835 Branch Ave, ☏ +1 240 490-2851. F 3-8PM, Sa Su noon-6PM, closed M-Th. This abandoned dairy farm was bought by a group of people who tested its soil, and planted vineyards. It has been producing wine since 2015. (updated Sep 2021) 2 Captain Benders, 111 E Main St, ☏ +1 301 432-5813. M 4PM-midnight, Tu-Sa 11:30AM-1AM, Su noon-midnight. Pretty much the only bar in town is actually one of the best in the region. It's no tourist trap, has some really good cocktails, and a full pub menu. 3 Pete's Tavern, 144 W Main St, ☏ +1 301 432-2591. Daily 8AM-1AM. Small town gem. Daily specials on homemade soups and sandwiches. Pool, Shuffle Board, on and off sale liquor and beer. Cash only.

1 Jacob Rohrbach Inn, 138 W Main Street, ☏ +1 301 432-5079, toll-free: +1-877-839-4242, fax: +1-877-839-4242, [email protected]. An exceptionally charming, historic Bed & Breakfast (1804), offering a multi-course daily breakfast, free WiFi, and antique furnishings. Double $130-185.

Sharpsburg and Antietam National Battlefield are accessible only by car, although once you're there, the village itself is very easy to cover by foot. Sharpsburg is on MD-34, which connects with US Interstate 70 via MD-64 and US-40.

Travel tips adapted from Sharpsburg on Wikivoyage, licensed CC BY-SA 4.0. Content summarized; visit the source for the full article. See our methodology for how we use it.

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