Old Maps of New Brunswick, Indiana

Explore 10 old maps of New Brunswick, spanning from 1938 to today. These high-resolution historic maps reveal how streets, neighborhoods, landmarks, and natural features evolved over time — perfect for genealogy, metal detecting, research, and local history exploration.

What you can do with these maps:

  • See how New Brunswick changed over time: Compare historical maps to modern-day views to trace roads, homesites, rail lines & more.
  • View detailed metadata: Each map includes creators, publishers, year, scale, and archive source.
  • Overlay maps with satellite & LiDAR: Visualize the past alongside modern tools to explore terrain & human change.
  • Trusted historical sources: Maps sourced from the USGS, Library of Congress, and other archives.
  • Access maps your way: View online, download high-res files, or order prints for personal or research use.

Start exploring old maps of New Brunswick to uncover forgotten places, hidden landmarks, and the deep history beneath your feet.


New Brunswick, IN maps

(10)
  1. 1938 Map of Coal City
    1938 Map of Coal City
    1938 Coal City
    1938 Print · USGS
    Southern Indiana at the end of the 1930s shows a landscape of small coal-mining towns and rural crossroads between the forks of the Eel River. Researchers can trace the path of the Wabash and Erie Canal and locate family roots at Coal City, Sink Cem, or Scaffold Prairie Ch.

  2. 1948 Map of Coal City
    1948 Map of Coal City
    1948 Coal City
    1948 Print · USGS
    The rural borderlands of Owen, Clay, and Greene Counties are shown here during the late 1940s, showcasing a landscape shaped by coal mining and transport. Researchers can trace the path of the Wabash and Erie Canal (Abandoned) and locate vanished landmarks like Stockton, Sink Cem, and the College Hill Sch.
    2 unique versions available

  3. 1953 Map of Coal City
    1953 Map of Coal City
    1953 Coal City
    1953 Print · USGS
    Mid-century Owen and Clay counties are shown here during a peak era of surface mining and rail transport. Researchers can trace the Wabash and Erie Canal or locate rural landmarks like New Hope Ch and Tapawingo Lake.

  4. 1953 Map of Indianapolis, 1965 Print
    1953 Map of Indianapolis, 1965 Print
    1953 Indianapolis
    1965 Print · USGS
    Central Indiana and the Illinois borderlands are captured in the mid-sixties, showing the growth of Indianapolis and its industrial rail corridors. Genealogists and historians can trace the development of outlying towns like Zionsville or Beech Grove and find landmarks such as Atterbury AAF and Turkey Run State Park.
    4 unique versions available

  5. 1956 Map of Indianapolis
    1956 Map of Indianapolis
    1956 Indianapolis
    1956 Print · USGS
    Central Indiana in the mid-fifties is captured during a period of industrial growth and military presence. Genealogists and historians can trace the rail networks of the New York Central or locate regional landmarks like Fort Benjamin Harrison and Camp Atterbury.

  6. 1957 Map of Indianapolis
    1957 Map of Indianapolis
    1957 Indianapolis
    1957 Print · USGS
    Central Indiana in the mid-fifties is captured here as a crossroads of major rail lines and nascent federal highways. Genealogists and historians can trace family-named ridges like Poplar Ridge or locate strategic sites like Camp Atterbury and Speedway.
    2 unique versions available

  7. 1962 Map of Indianapolis
    1962 Map of Indianapolis
    1962 Indianapolis
    1962 Print · USGS
    Central Indiana and the Illinois borderlands are captured here in the early sixties, showing the region's dense rail networks and growing urban centers. Genealogists and historians can locate family-named landmarks and institutions like Crown Hill Cem, Indiana University, and the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

  8. 1963 Map of Coal City, 1964 Print
    1963 Map of Coal City, 1964 Print
    1963 Coal City
    1964 Print · USGS
    Indiana's western coal country is revealed in the early 1960s as a landscape of extraction and deep local roots. You can trace the New York Central rail line through Coal City or find family history at Winters Cem and the New Hope Ch.
    4 unique versions available

  9. 1986 Map of Terre Haute
    1986 Map of Terre Haute
    1986 Terre Haute
    1986 Print · USGS
    The Wabash River valley and the coal-rich hills of West-Central Indiana and East-Central Illinois are shown here in the mid-eighties. Genealogists and local historians can trace family-named corners like Barrick Corner, find rural churches like New Hope Ch, and locate industrial landmarks such as the Thunderbird Mine.
    2 unique versions available

  10. 2022 Map of Coal City, 2022 Print
    2022 Map of Coal City, 2022 Print
    2022 Coal City
    2022 Print · USGS
    The tri-county borderlands of Clay, Owen, and Greene counties are documented here in the early 2020s. Genealogists and local historians can trace the legacy of early settlements through sites like Scaffold Prairie Cem, Coal City, and the Wabash and Erie Canal.

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