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Houma relies mainly on roads and personal vehicles as the main form of transportation. The major roads in Houma are: US Route 90 (Future I-49) LA HWY 311; Tunnel Boulevard ; LA 24 (locally called West Park Avenue (westbound) and Main Street (eastbound)) LA 182 (New Orleans Boulevard) South and North Hollywood Road; St. Louis Canal Road; Savanne ...
515 W. Main St. Houma: 5: Daigleville School: October 21, 2020 ... 1 mile southwest of Houma on Louisiana Highway 311 Houma: 21: Wesley House: Wesley House ...
KFOL-CD's studios are located on Main Street/LA 24 in downtown Houma, and its transmitter is located on Hunley Court (southwest of the Saint Louis Bayou) in the city's northeast side. KFOL's programming is simulcast on translator station KJUN-CD ( VHF digital channel 7) in Morgan City , whose transmitter is located on LA 70 in rural southern St ...
From 2015 to 2016, the Louisiana State Department of Education score for this school declined from 100.1 to 99.3; as an "A" level school makes 100 points or more, Terrebonne's rank fell from A to B. [4] In the fall of 2017, the 9th grade was scheduled to be moved from Houma Junior High School to Terrebonne High.
Curving to the northwest, LA 56 skirts the Houma city limits and becomes known as East Main Street. The route proceeds a short distance further to a T-intersection with LA 24 next to the Houma–Terrebonne Airport in an area known as Presque Isle. LA 56 is an undivided two-lane highway for its entire length. [52] [61] [62] [63]
Additionally, the junction of LA 24 and US 90, the region's main highway, was moved from what is now LA 182 in Downtown Houma to the present freeway interchange near Gray. The interchange was constructed in 1980, [29] [30] [31] but the freeway existed under the temporary designation of LA 3052 until being completed west to Morgan City in 1999.
Bishop Warren Boudreaux, the first Bishop of the Diocese of Houma-Thibodaux is interred under the marble raised altar near the Statue of the Blessed Mother. [8] Bishop Michael Jarrel was the second bishop of the Diocese of Houma-Thibodaux and reigned from this cathedral for a decade from March 4, 1993 until October 10, 2003.
WGUO (94.9 MHz "Gumbo 94.9"), is a commercial FM radio station, licensed to Reserve, Louisiana, and serving the New Orleans area. The station is owned by Dowdy Broadcasting and airs a Classic Country radio format. The studios and offices are on West Main Street in Houma, Louisiana. [1] WGUO has an effective radiated power (ERP) of 50,000 watts.