Home
 


New Orleans and Hurricane Katrina
Domain Keyword High Priority :: Historical Combination

Aerial imagery of the Biloxi, Mississippi New Orleans 2005 Hurricane Katrina.
Page1 ~ P2 ~ P3 ~ P4



Aerial imagery of the Biloxi, Mississippi. Comparative imagery maps of Biloxi, Mississippi. Comparative overview imagery of pre- and post-Katrina.

Hurricane Katrina
New Orleans Imagery
New Orleans Flooding Overview
New Orleans Levees Imagery
Superdome Imagery
New Orleans Maps
Avondale Shipyard, LA, Imagery
Michoud Air Products Imagery
Michoud Assembly Facility Imagery
Biloxi, MS, Imagery
Pascagoula, MS, Imagery
Ingalls Shipyard, MS, Imagery
Katrina Overview Imagery

Biloxi, Mississippi :: http://www.gulfcoast.org/gpt/

Due to Hurricane Katrina The Biloxi, Gulfport, Long Beach, Pass Christian, & Coast Chambers of Commerce are temporarily located at the Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College, Jefferson Davis Campus

2226 Switzer Road, V111 & V112, Gulfport, MS 39501

PH: 228-897-3980 or 228-897-3981

Due to our chambers being destroyed our resources are limited

For over one hundred years, the Biloxi Chamber of Commerce has turned the wheels of business and industry in the city in a way that has reverberated across the region. The Chamber has always been important in Biloxi and for that reason has enjoyed a membership of leaders in business, government and the military.

Organizing in 1893 as the Iroquois Business Club, a group of businessmen, merchants, seafood processors and hoteliers changed the name a year later as the Biloxi Commercial Club. Around 1919, the group opted to become the Biloxi Chamber of Commerce.

After Hurricane Katrina Biloxi finds great destruction but resolve to rebuild.

From the City of Biloxi web site:

This site has been created to keep you up to date on the City of Biloxi’s recovery from Hurricane Katrina.

And make no mistake: Biloxi is on the way back.

In the trying and hectic days since this storm devastated our city, I have found comfort in the manner in which Biloxians have handled this crisis. I’m proud of the work our city work force is doing and I’m just as proud of determined manner in which the people of Biloxi have labored through this period.

I’ve also been deeply moved by the many calls of support and encouragement, including the visit from President Bush.

Biloxi has weathered many a storm during its 300-year history, and our people have proven their resiliency time and again. We’ll meet this unprecedented natural disaster with an unprecedented response. We’ll overcome this setback, and we’ll be defined not so much by the devastation of this storm, but how we rebuilt our community.

It’s going to be a long process, but Biloxi is on the way back.

God bless you, God bless Biloxi, and God bless America.
http://www.gulfcoast.org/gpt/

 
Top
© 2005 neworleans-hurricanekatrina.com