The stop attracted a small settlement; an 1887 history notes that Hazelrigg Station had been "a stopping and shipping point of some note for the last twenty years" and possessed a store, public hall, blacksmith, and residences.[6] It also had a post office, established 10 September 1873, with James Driskill serving as its first post master.[7]
Later identified simply as Hazelrigg,[8] the town in the early 20th century had a church, school, and roughly 20 lots.;[9] a 1914 history notes that it was "a stopping and shipping point of some note since its inception."[5] The town had at some point a small grocery.[10]
The post office closed in 1935.[12] On 11 April 1965 during the Palm Sunday tornado outbreak a tornado caused considerable damage to Hazelrigg and nearby areas of Boone County, with Indiana Governor Roger Branigin arriving to survey the destruction.[13]
The town has a grain elevator but otherwise is entirely residential.
The Big 4 Trail (previously the Farm Heritage Trail) which passes along with southwest side of Hazelrigg stretches south to Lebanon and north to Colfax in Tippecanoe County along the path of the defunct railroad.[14][15]
^ abCrist, Leander Mead (1914). History of Boone County, Indiana. Vol. I. Indianapolis: A. W. Bowen. p. 402. Upon the organization of the LaFayette & Indianapolis Railroad Company, Major Hazelrigg became a stockholder and was immediately chosen as one of the directors... [Hazelrigg] has been a stopping and shipping point of some note since its inception.
^Harden, Samuel (May 1887). Early Life and Times in Boone County, Indiana. Indianapolis: Carlon & Hollenbeck. pp. 34-35, 63-64. This town is located on the Indianapolis, Cincinnati & Lafayette Railroad, six miles northwest of Lebanon, in the southeast corner of Washington Township. It was laid out on the land originally owned by the late H. G. Hazlerigg, and names in honor of him. It has been a stopping and shipping point of some note for the last twenty years.
^Stark, Ralph W. (May 1974). "Early Hamlets, Villages, Towns, and Post Offices of Boone County". Boone, Your County Magazine. Lebanon, Indiana: John R. Parsons. pp. 23–24. ISSN0161-7958. Hazelrigg, five miles northwest of Lebanon and on the Big Four railroad, was commissioned a post office, September 10, 1873... Its first postmaster was James Driskill.
^Mavity, Mary Louise Byers (October 1976). "Journey to Hazelrigg". Boone, Your County Magazine. Whitestown, Indiana: Bob and Pat Heidemeich. pp. 8–9. ISSN0161-7958.