Showing posts with label Mississippi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mississippi. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

DAY 110- Lighthouses & Confederate Presidents…

I woke up to a wall of fog looking out my hotel window in Gulfport, MS which is a small town about 10 miles west of Biloxi.  Yesterday I had seen a couple of lighthouses along the beach when I was driving.  One of them I had seen a tour sign next to it.  I called the number for the local tourist information and checked to see if they would be open for the day; the brochure said weather permitting.  I couldn’t see anything pass the fog.  I went down for the continental breakfast and knew I was in the Deep South by the offered hot biscuits and gravy and the packages of instant grits.
Photo- The view from inside the Biloxi,MS Lighthouse.

An hour later the fog cleared up somewhat and I took off to the lighthouse.  I arrived right at 9AM when the lighthouse opened.  I went to the middle island of highway 90 where it’s located to learn I needed to go all the way across the street to purchase a ticket.  I waited for the light and walked to a large southern plantation looking house that was the tourist center for Biloxi.  I walked to the front desk inside the door.  Hun, you need to go to the gift shop down the hall to your right.  I purchased the ticket for the lighthouse and walked back to the middle island; feeling like I had just jumped through some hoops.
Photos- Inside the Lighthouse Upstairs the lamp
and downstairs... the waterlines from Hurricanes past.

The gal at the bottom looked at my ticket and said to go ahead and head up.  There’s a low section watch you head at the top of the stairs and then there’s a ladder.  As I walked in there were waterline markers from past hurricanes on the inside brick; the tallest one being about 20 feet up from Hurricane Katrina.  I walked around and around up the metal grid stairs; you could see through the grid to the bottom floor of the lighthouse.  I told myself not to look down (me being just a bit afraid of heights); though it was hard because I had to see where the stairs were.  I came to a small landing with a low overhead clearance and a ladder.  Just a little bit more, I told myself to breathe.
Photo- The outside of the Biloxi, MS Lighthouse.

I got to the top and Wow!  What a view it was.  The husband of the gal who checked my receipt was up on top.  He welcomed me and he apologized for the extra walk across the street.  I started to ask him a couple of questions about the lighthouse and he enthusiastically told me all kinds of information about the lighthouse.  It’s 60 ft. tall and one of two of the original lighthouses along the Gulf Coast that is still active.  I guess this same lighthouse is featured on the Mississippi license plate too. He went on to explain about how after the hurricanes someone always climbs in the still standing lighthouse and hung a flag from the railing of the lighthouse.  It was like a sign that says it’s still here and we can recover.  It was a wonderful thought.
Photo- A statue of Jeffereson Davis.

Next I wondered down the street to Beauvoir which means good view in French and was the last home of Jefferson Davis.  He was the first and only Confederate President of the US.  They have made a museum of the home and are currently rebuilding the Jefferson Davis Presidential Library a second time.  Hurricane Katrina wiped it out.  She also did a number on the main house and other buildings on the property.  But when you consider the beach is right across the street; it’s amazing that more damage wasn’t done.  It is a National Historic Landmark that is privately owned and maintained by the Mississippi Division of the United Sons of Confederate Veterans.
Photos- The Main house where Jefferson lived and the view from the porch which led to its name...

At current, the gift shop and tour center is in a couple of linked up trailers on the property.  I walked in and found out I was about 6 minutes until the next tour of the main house.  I paid my discounted AAA entrance fee and started to walk over to the main house’s front doors where the house tour started.  I was the only one on the porch.  A short while later a woman came out and asked if I was the only one; I told her that it appeared to be so.  We started the tour.

The house was originally built by a Mr. Brown who had more money than what he knew what to do with wanted to show it off.  He built this house as a second home on the beach.  It was meant as a vacation home but he rather over built and made it sturdy which was a good thing because it survived pretty well against Katrina.  The woman pointed out different things inside the house that had to be refurbished or restored or located after Katrina. Hurricane Katrina had taken part of the roof and most of the furniture had been scattered around the area by her winds.
Photo- The main foyer/hallway area of the house.

My tour guide told me that the home had changed ownership from Mr. Brown who passed away to a wealthy single woman who was somehow related to Jefferson Davis’ wife.  That’s how he came to become familiar with the home and was asked to be a guest a couple of times.  Then he came to be a tenant and he paid rent to stay in one of the other houses on the property.  The wealthy woman passed away leaving it to him.  Warning- THIS is the shortened version of the tale.  These southerns love to tell their tales.  Jefferson Davis wrote his memoirs in this house and stayed here till the end of his life.  He is buried somewhere on the property.
Photo- The parlour where a painting of Mr. Brown, the original owner, hangs over the fireplace.

They had tried to bring the house back to what it would have looked like in the year 1890. It was a lovely interior with painted walls that looked more like wall paper but were not.  A great deal of the woodwork was cypress wood; the pullout French doors and wooden floors.  There was a center foyer hall area that went through to a back door and then there were four large rooms off of that.  Two of the rooms were used as bedrooms; another was used as a parlor, and another as a den.  The tour guide showed me the large covered back porch that was semi-enclosed by trellis where there were two additional wings where there were two more bedrooms on one side and two dining rooms on the other side.  One of the dining rooms was for the adults and was larger while the other was quite a bit smaller and was for the children.
Photo- The large back porch area that has two wings off of it;
one with bedrooms and another with dining rooms.

The house tour was over but she pointed out the way out to the Civil War Cemetery in the back of the property.  She also pointed out an area there was a rose garden and said that Katrina didn’t like it so she ripped it out.  She went on to say that they keep on promising to replant it but they move a little slow on something’s in Mississippi.  She also teased me about a friendly alligator out by the bridge I would walk over to get to the cemetery.  She said they did feed him on a regular basis.  I guess this is some of that Mississippi humor.
Photo- The cemetery in the back of the property of Beauvoir.

I walked out through what would have been a rose garden and over a bridge to the cemetery in the rear of the property.  There was also a front gate back there that Katrina didn’t like that they laid to rest to.  It was an interesting cemetery to visit among large trees with Spanish moss hanging.  Some of the graves just had the names with the position they held in the army; while others had the years of birth and death with a statement of how old they were when they passed.  I found that interesting that they put how old they were when they passed.  It was like the math was already done for you which I found a bit amusing.  I wandered back to trailers and bought a couple of postcards.
Photo- The Jefferson Davis Presidential Library still being rebuilt
with the area where the rose garden was at one time. Now it's just
a field area with a sun dial in the middle of it. 

Next I drove further along the shoreline to another lighthouse.  This one was more for looks and I had been told by the other guy at the top of the lighthouse that Hancock Bank was instrumental in having this one rebuilt.  Part of the reason they did that he said was that it is Hancock’s symbol for their bank.  This lighthouse was in a park area with a marina on the beach in front of it.  I walked around the area and took some pictures.

Photo- The now non-active lighthouse that's used for the Hankock Bank symbol.

Then, I was on down the road to Mobile, AL.  I drove along the interstate and crossed the state line.  Yeah, another state I had never been in!  Shortly after that I saw a rest stop sign with a Welcome Center.  I was hoping for something like the experience I had in Mississippi.  Nope!  This Welcome Center was closed but they did have free state road maps and Sweet Home Alabama brochures of the state.  I used the rest room and continued on down the road. I hit Mobile just as rush hour traffic was getting into full swing and there was an accident just off of the exit I had to take to get to my hotel.  Oh joy!  I opted to stay put for the night after that.  I was staying at a Drury Inn which advertises including everything.  They have a kick back social hour from 5:30-7PM where they serve food and three free drinks.  I also managed to catch up on laundry too.

Sunday, December 9, 2012

DAY 109- New Orleans to Biloxi...

I woke up early to wonder around the French Quarter.  The only people I saw out were on their way to work, out doing their early morning runs, walking their dogs, or on their way home after a very long night.  The latter group threw me a quizzical look when I cheerfully wished them a good morning.  I think the hangovers were starting to set in.  The streets were wet and later as a street cleaner drove by on another street I saw why.  I think they wash the streets every morning here.  I imagine that otherwise there could be quite the “build-up” on these streets.  Shop owners were also hosing down the sidewalk areas too.
Photos- Cute little houses in the French Quarter of New Orleans.



Photo- The front of the St. Pierre Hotel where I stayed in the French Quarter.
I walked over to the river area and walked along it for a while.  I then decided to be fair and compare Café de Monde’s beignet to the Café Beignet’s beignet.  So I sat at a table and ordered coffee and beignet from a paper hatted woman.  Well, truth be told, I think I like the Café Beignet’s beignet. (Try saying THAT five times fast. Ha!)  But I will say that the view from the Café de Monde is better.
Photo- A foggy misty morning along the Mississippi River near the French Quarter.
 
Photos- Beignets and coffee and below the view from Cafe de Monde of street artists that sale their wares.

 
After a coffee and beignet, I wandered around the French Quarter some more.  I was mostly window shopping; most of the places don’t open until 10AM and I was early by about 2 hours.  I went over to the French Market which is an outdoor open air market.  Some of those vendors were just barely starting to uncover or put out their goods.  I was amazed at how many little restaurants there were where you could get breakfast.   I just wandered around and window shopped.  I also admired some of the houses in the French Quarter.  I had heard the day before that the average home in the French Quarter went for $400 per square foot; very pricey and parking would be a REAL pain. 
Photo- The French Market within the French Quarter where you can pick up all sorts of things.
Photo- The Cornfield Fence Hotel where the original owner had
the fence put in to make his Iowan wife feel more at home in New Orleans.

I eventually wandered into a souvenir shop and got some postcards but couldn’t find a bumper sticker that I liked.  I was hoping to find a bumper sticker that said something unique like…”New Orleans We Put the FUN in Funerals!”  But I didn’t see anything like that but there were tons of Fleur de Lis in either the Saints football team colors or the Mardi Gras colors.  I was disappointed.  There were a lot of good things said on t-shirts but not much for bumper stickers. 

With my big purchase of two postcards, I wandered back to my hotel with about 25 minutes to spare before check out time.  I loaded up the car and then went to the front desk to see about getting my car out of the parking lot.  A hotel employee needed to move his car and then he offered to back my car out for me.  I took him up on that because frankly I suck at backing up.  I gave him and the other guy that did hand signals for him a little tip and I was off.

I drove over to the Garden District of New Orleans.  I just drove through the big houses with the tree lined streets.  It was a wonderful area but I was unsure as to where to park so I just took my time and drove through the area.  It made for a nice late morning drive.

Next, I found I-10 and started heading east towards Biloxi which would be the next stop on my BIG adventure.  I passed the state line announcing that I was now in Mississippi.  Wow!  It’s the first time I had been in this state!  Shortly after that there was a rest stop with a Mississippi Welcome Center.  I decided I would stop and see if I could get a brochure or information about different areas of the state. 

I walked into the center and was immediately welcomed.  There were people taking pictures, singing, dancing, and handing out treats with coffee.  There was a huge hanging sign announcing that Mississippi was showing its southern hospitality.  I walked through all this to a bank of brochures along a wall.  As I was looking at them a gal in a wheel chair asked if she could help me find something in particular.  I talked with her for a bit and she was very helpful.  She even suggested a back way to my hotel that would be more scenic; giving me a map in the process.  I left with brochures and the map; rather looking forward to checking out the area and possibly visiting more of the state.  It was a positive experience which surprised me.
Photo- The beach front about 10 miles south of Biloxi, MS.

Another 15 miles down the road and I found myself driving along a white sandy beach.  I stopped for a bit and just sat on a bench to admire the beach.  It was rather windy and a bit on the chilly side but it was a wonderful view to admire.  I eventually got to my hotel and got checked in.  I went out after a bit and just drove along in the city areas of Gulfport and Biloxi.  There were a few casinos along the shore and it looked like there was an Air force Base nearby.