Match the Ocean City PICTURE PAIRS as a fun diversion (game).
To play this game simply match pairs of Ocean City photos, just as in the original game of “Concentration.” The timer is set to 2 1/2 minutes. Try to complete the grid by matching all of the pairs of small photographs in the allotted time. Click the “game board” image below to get started.
The Fenwick Island Light began protecting mariners on August 1, 1859.
Fenwick Island Lighthouse began protecting mariners on August 1, 1859. The Fenwick shoals that extend more than 5 miles out from the Delaware coast were a hazard to shipping; which prompted the building of this beacon of safety.
The only reason this might be considered in the “day-trip” category in this website is that the Fenwick Island Light is located in Delaware. However, it couldn’t be much closer to the Town of Ocean City – the sidewalk in front of the lighthouse is in Maryland. The location of the lighthouse is unique. It was built on the eastern edge of the Mason-Dixon Line – the border between Delaware and Maryland. The stone marker (above) at the “end of the line,” has the south side of the marker inscribed with the coat of arms of the Calvert family and the north side with the coat of arms of the Penn family. The Maryland side is shown in the photo. Remember, the lighthouse, itself, is actually in the State of Delaware and the Town of Fenwick Island.
The two informational plaques pictures below are found on the grounds of the lighthouse.
The Fenwick Island Lighthouse Erected 1858 In operation from 1859 to 1978 as an official aid to navigation Transferred to Delaware, 1981 Restored, 1982 – 1983, by The Friends of the Fenwick Island Lighthouse under the leadership of W. Paul Pepper, President With the assistance of: The State of Delaware The Fenwick Island Women’s Club Senator Richard S. Cordrey Richard B. Carter Randy Murray Earl R. Strausbaugh John Cziraki, Steeplejack Oliver Cropper, Vice-President Herla Lobo, Treasurer Claire Pritchett, Secretary A.D. 1983
FENWICK ISLAND LIGHTHOUSE (historical plaque)
The Fenwick Island Lighthouse was listed with the National Register of Historic Places by the Department of the Interior in 1979 in recognition of its significance to the rich maritime history of Delaware.
In 1852, responding to pressure to improve the lighthouse service, Congress established a nine member Lighthouse board. The Board was responsible for putting Fenwick Island Lighthouse in service in 1858 with the latest lighthouse technology to warn ships of the dangerous Fenwick Shoals. The Bureau of Lighthouses replaced the Board in 1910 and ran the service until 1931 when it was turned over to the US Coast Guard.
On September 12, 1981, after the Coast Guard decommissioned the Fenwick Island Lighthouse, the ownership was transferred to the State of Delaware. The management of the lighthouse was then immediately turned over to the private non-profit Friends of the Fenwick Island Lighthouse.
THE FRIENDS OF THE FENWICK ISLAND LIGHTHOUSE is open to all and depends on dues and contributions to manage and maintain this significant cultural resource. Your participation is welcome.
Shows how our ancestors were taught in the days of one-room schools.
The Mt. Zion One Room School House, formerly located on Ironshire Street in Snow Hill, was built in 1869 near Whiton, MD and used as a school until 1931.
It stood empty until Dr. Paul Cooper, Superintendent of Schools, had the building moved to Snow Hill. It was opened to the public in 1964 and has since demonstrated to students and visitors how their forebears were taught in the days of one room schools.
NOTE that this building was moved to Furnace Town in 2016.
Donations of 19th century texts and furnishings make a visit to the school a leap back in time. McGuffy readers, quill pens, inkwells slates and a water bucket are in place just as if the students had been dismissed yesterday.
Mt. Zion One Room School Museum, Snow Hill, Worcester County, Maryland
Furnace Town Living Heritage Museum 3816 Old Furnace Road, P.O. Box 207 Snow Hill, MD 21863