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![]() Hurricane Camille -- The Big Storm | Lighthouses and Islands -- of the Gulf Coast | Gulf Coast -- Sails, Trails & Rails | Gulf Coast Watering Places | Bay St. Louis Discovered | Kiln Kountry -- Home of Brett Favre | Diamondhead Jubilee | Gulfport Discovered | Pass Christian Discovered | Pass Christian � Historic District and Lost Mansions | Pass Christian -- Images of America | St. Paul Parish Jubilee 3 | Christmas in the Pass | Trinity and Live Oak | Gulf Coast Panorama | Slidell � Camellia City
![]() ![]() ![]() Gulf Coast Watering Places
![]() History of Gulf Coast hotels and Watering Places -- $20
![]() Watering Places � what a wonderful term to apply to the original towns and villages that were strung out one after the other along the Mississippi Gulf Coast with beginnings in 1699. Watering Places is actually an antebellum name that most adequately termed the tourist attractions that could only be reached by water. Before the Civil War, it was truly a �water-world� that was navigated in catering to the monied gentry of New Orleans and river plantation owners.
It became chic to establish a summer cottage on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. As New Orleans became over-crowded, crime-ridden, noisy, dirty, and unhealthy � more and more of the wealthy sought out coastal havens � first by boat � later, after 1872, by train; and after 1920, by automobile.
The Watering Places were inviting to those able to make the trips. They beckoned the wealthy who were able to live in seclusive environs. They beckoned the young who while visiting, met and married their spouses. They beckoned the ailing, infirmed, and crippled who sought cures from the restful waters proclaimed by the health spa resorts.
The Watering Places endured the plague of yellow fever, the destructions of hurricanes, the pangs of conflagrations, the trials of Civil War, the tides of economic depressions, and the throes of demolition through aging and lack of maintenance.
Although not called the Gold Coast today, the Mississippi Gulf Coast was particularly referred to as the Gold Coast during the 1940s through 1960s because of its open bars and open gambling.
More than two hundred photographs are shown of the very first hotels that were built along the Mississippi Gulf Coast.
Dan Ellis' Gulf Coast Quadrilogy:
All About Camille � the Great Storm
Lighthouses and Islands of the Gulf Coast
The Great Gulf Coast � Sails, Trails, and Rails
Gold Coast Watering Places
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