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The Ocean Gallery is an art gallery on the Ocean City Boardwalk in Worcester County, Maryland. The gallery was founded by Joe KroArt in 1972. [1] He had moved to Ocean City in 1964. [1] The gallery is owned by Joe KroArt along with his wife Adele and daughter Leslie.
Movie Gallery originally had its headquarters in Dothan, Alabama. [24] [25] In Dothan, the company had 70,000 square feet (6,500 m 2) of space in the Porter Square Mall. [26] Later in its life the company's headquarters were in Wilsonville, Oregon. [27] In 2005 Movie Gallery bought Hollywood Video, gaining Hollywood's office space in Oregon. [25]
Trimper Rides Of Ocean City is a amusement park located near the inlet at South First Street and the boardwalk in Ocean City, Maryland, United States. It was founded in 1893 as The Windsor Resort. It is located at the south end of the boardwalk and consists of three outdoor lots and an indoor section.
Parkway was hailed at its opening as Rankin County’s first modern multiplex theater and was the only one in the county until 1998 when the competing 17-screen Cinemark Tinseltown (now called ...
Ocean One interior in 1985. Ocean One was a three-story $40 million shopping mall and restaurant complex that was shaped like an ocean liner, featuring portholes, masts, and sailor-uniformed employees. The mall was to provide 750 permanent jobs and 750 seasonal jobs. At opening, Ocean One contained 60 shops, a German restaurant, and 20 fast ...
Gillian's Wonderland Pier was a historic amusement park in Ocean City, New Jersey. It was founded in 1929 by Roy Gillian, son of David Gillian who first came to Ocean City in 1914. [2] It was located near the beginning of the commercial boardwalk on 6th street.
Ocean City, [oʊʃɪn sɪtiː] officially the Town of Ocean City, is an Atlantic resort town in Worcester County, Maryland, along the East Coast of the United States. The population was 6,844 at the 2020 U.S. census , although during summer weekends the city hosts between 320,000 and 345,000 vacationers and up to eight million visitors annually.
The hotel was built in 1923 by the Ocean Front Hotel Corporation. The architect Vivian B. Smith designed the building in the Spanish Colonial Revival style. [3] The building was constructed using steel girders and concrete. [4] The hotel was originally managed by J. Howard Slocum until 1932, when Elwood F. Kirkman took over ownership of the hotel.