|
|
Shall I Build A House
after the War? Introduction No
army recruiting poster ever carried the slogan “Join the Army
and See How America Lives.” But in the months since Pearl Harbor millions
of men in uniform—traveling from camp to camp, on maneuvers, on furlough,
or perhaps taking a long last look on the way to a port of embarkation—have
had a chance to see their own country and how their countrymen live.
Staring
out of the windows of speeding trains or sauntering along the streets of strange
towns they have seen farm buildings of all kinds and city dwellings of every description.
Perhaps, thinking even then of coming back to a home of their own, they have taken
a closer look at the differences in the kinds of houses that Americans live in.
For there is no more striking contrast that meets the eye of the traveler
than the American crazy quilt of good and bad housing, of beauty and ugliness,
luxury and poverty almost side by side. In every part of the country there are
these same sharp contrasts between neighborhoods of neat, substantial dwellings
and districts of shabby, run-down houses. In the better areas, especially
in the suburbs of towns and cities, houses are generally good. They are mainly
one-family houses. Many are relatively new, in good condition, well insulated,
large enough to shelter the family with comfort and convenience. These
houses usually have central heating, electricity, both hot and cold running water,
tubs and showers, and a variety of labor-saving gadgets, such as automatic refrigerators,
electric washing machines, mangles, and so on. Usually they have wide lawns, shrubs
and flowers. Shady trees overhang the streets, and each house has its own single
or double garage. The neighborhoods are quiet and restful, with plenty of space
for adults to enjoy and children to play in. This is the way a part of
America lives. But millions of families have no such comfortable homes. They live
in the slums of our cities, towns, and villages, and in run-down, rickety farmhouses.
Slum houses in towns and smaller cities are usually shabby and unpainted,
crowded on small lots, often without yards, lawns, or green surroundings. There
are few or no trees to shade the dwellings. Many have leaky roofs, broken floors,
or poor plumbing. Many have no indoor plumbing at all. In smaller communities
they are often lighted by kerosene lamps or candles and heated by wood stoves.
Many of the slum dwellings are drafty in winter and unbearably hot in summer,
dangerous to health and comfort, and too small and dingy for the large families
that often live in them. In large cities, the slums are usually crowded tenement
districts. Americans live in different kinds of houses partly because
they like different kinds of houses. Some like old houses that have rich
family memories or are historically or architecturally interesting. To many people,
houses, like music and books, are a part of our American culture, tied in with
a lot of other things that add variety to life. And there are people who are not
greatly interested in gadgets. It is true that many people dwelling in
what housing experts consider “substandard” homes-whether on farms,
in villages or small towns, or in large cities-are well adjusted to their environment
and lead happy, healthy, and useful lives. But it is also true that the spirit
of bettering one’s living conditions is characteristic of most Americans.
Certainly many families now going without the conveniences and comforts of modern
housing hope one day to have them-and are doing what they can to make the hope
come true. Nobody would argue that gadgets and conveniences are the measures
of human happiness. On the other hand, many rural housewives who draw water from
a well, cook on a wood stove, and work by kerosene lamps look forward to the time
when they will have an indoor water system, electric lights, and a gas or electric
stove. Many city slum dwellers, cramped in dingy, airless flats, dream of
apartments from which they can see the sun and a bit of greenery. Probably they
would also like a good plumbing system and room enough to house their families
more adequately. Many experts who have investigated housing say that a
considerable part-perhaps as many as a third-of the American people live under
housing conditions that greatly need improvement. The census of 1940 collected
a lot of figures that seem to bear out this picture. According to the census definition
a “dwelling unit” means a detached house, a tenement, a flat, or an
apartment, even an automobile trailer or a boat if the people who live in it have
no other residence; in short, any kind of shelter for a separate household. There
were about 37 million such dwelling units in the United States at the time of
the 1940 census. Large numbers of them were in bad condition or had few
of the comforts for good modern living. Nearly 7 million dwellings needed major
repairs; over 16 million had no private bath; almost 8 million no gas or electricity;
about 10 million no refrigeration equipment; and about 4 million no central heating
or stoves. In country towns the houses seemed to be, on the whole, in worse condition
than in the cities. And on the farms they were worse still because farmers have
had on the average lower incomes than city folk and must also maintain barns and
outbuildings on which their business depends. These figures suggest in
a general way how inadequately housed a portion of the American people are. They
do not tell, however, how old many of the dwelling units are, how out of date
their design, or how poorly equipped with labor-saving devices. Since
1940 American housing has grown worse. Except for defense areas, house building
virtually stopped when we got into the war. The War Production Board limits the
amount which a home owner may spend on repairs or alterations. Materials like
lumber, pipe, hardware, and electrical equipment are hard to get, and even in
defense areas, house building has not kept up with growing needs. Thousands of
war workers have not found decent shelter. They have had to live in trailers,
tourist camps, stores converted into flats, and other makeshift homes. This picture
suggests that after the war we may possibly have the biggest housing boom in American
history. Millions of families not satisfied with their present homes probably
will be seeking better ones: soldiers back from the war; people who have been
in the market for houses but couldn’t find what they wanted; people tired
of living in inadequate houses; families that have doubled up; folks who have
lived in trailers, camps, and other temporary shelters and will be looking for
places of their own; and home owners who will want to make repairs and alterations
that were put off during the war. Next:
How Many Houses Will We Need? |