Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ocean Springs was severely damaged on August 29, 2005, by Hurricane Katrina, which destroyed many buildings along the shoreline, including the Ocean Springs Yacht Club, and the wooden replica of Fort Maurepas. Katrina's 28 ft (8.5 m) storm surge also destroyed the Biloxi Bay Bridge, which connected Biloxi to Ocean Springs. [7]
Ocean Springs: Constructed circa 1850 49: Ocean Springs Community Center: Ocean Springs Community Center: August 24, 1989 : Washington Avenue: Ocean Springs: Constructed 1945-48. Contains original murals by Walter Anderson. 50
Mississippi Highway 609 (MS 609) is a 20.5-mile-long (33.0 km) north-south state highway in Jackson County in the Mississippi Gulf Coast region of Mississippi, consisting of two sections. The first is signed along Washington Avenue between US Highway 90 (US 90) and Interstate 10 (I-10), and the second is unsigned and continues north from ...
The first online edition of The Ocean Springs Weekly Record launched March 1 and will update online every Friday morning.
Biloxi is located in southeastern Harrison County, bordered to the south by Mississippi Sound (part of the Gulf of Mexico) and to the northeast partially by Biloxi Bay, which forms part of the Jackson County line. To the northeast, across Biloxi Bay, are the Jackson County city of Ocean Springs and the unincorporated community of St. Martin.
Ocean Lakes campground nearly broke a world record with one of its activities, gathering 1,277 campers for a group hug in 2001 as part of its 30th anniversary celebration.
Gulf Park Estates is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) located south of Ocean Springs in Jackson County, Mississippi, United States. It is part of the Pascagoula Metropolitan Statistical Area. The population was 5,719 at the 2010 census, [2] up from 4,272 at the 2000 census.
The Charnley-Norwood House is a summer (winter) cottage designed by architects Louis Sullivan and Frank Lloyd Wright in 1890 in Ocean Springs, Mississippi on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. The home was built as a vacation residence for James Charnley, a wealthy Chicago lumber baron, and its style represents an important change in American ...