The
Lynn Meadows Discovery Center expands a childs world
by encouraging shared learning experiences to enrich the
minds and hearts of children and adults through interactive
and entertaining exhibitions and programs.
Through
activities designed to simulate the real world of South
Mississippi, children have the opportunity to learn about
the past and the present; it is with a better understanding
of themselves and their community that children can grow
to be responsible, global citizens.
History
Today,
more than 400 childrens museums throughout the United
States break the rules of traditional museums encouraging
visitors to touch, talk, have fun and learn. In a childrens
museum, the audience rather than the objects are key. The
exhibits are catalysts for questions, exploration and discovery
and the entire experience is a playground for the mind.
The Lynn Meadows Discovery Center is the first childrens
museum in Mississippi.
From
its inception, The Lynn Meadows Discovery Center has been
a community project. With initial funding in 1991 from
Gulfport Junior Auxiliary, co-founders Rose Alman and Carole
Lynn Meadows have lead the team to make the dream a reality.
The Mississippi City Elementary School, constructed in
1915 and an architectural exhibition itself, offers 15,000
square feet of indoor exhibit space, six acres of outdoor
play space including a tree house village, a woodsy cabin on a stream and meeting rooms for workshops
as well as camps and birthday parties.
On August 29, 2005, Hurricane Katrina devastated the MS Gulf Coast resulting in the “worst natural disaster in US history”. The Lynn Meadows Discovery Center stood defiantly among the old live oaks, but the storm surge reduced the entire first floor of exhibitions, Artist Studio and staff office to rubble. The Education Building was destroyed, the gymnasium multi purpose spaces were flooded and the pavilion was left a shell.
The first floor exhibits have been replaced, the office refurbished and repaired and the main museum building reopened on June 6, 2006. The Education Building was demolished and construction is underway to convert the gymnasium into a performing arts center for youth. The Pavilion has been renovated and provides three multi purpose rooms.