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Octavia Hills Philosophy of Housing Reform: From British Roots to American SoilUniversity of Virginia Victorian tenement manager Octavia Hill significantly influenced nineteenth-century British and U.S. housing reform. She provided clean tenements for Londons poor that generated a modest profit for her first investor, social philosopher John Ruskin. Hills success depended on regular personal contact with tenants and insistence on prompt rent payment. The migration of Hills system from British roots to American soil involved a network of settlement house workers in which Ruskin, the settlement movements originator, played a central role. American histories of housing reform often identify Lawrence Veillers Tenement House Exhibition of 1899 as a milestone, and American settlement house histories typically feature Jane Addams and Chicagos Hull House. The purpose of this article is to highlight, and identify connections among, lesser known other settlement pioneers who fought for British and U.S. housing reform. The article describes Hills philosophy, documents how it reached the United States, and illustrates how Hill, Henrietta Barnett, and Vida Scudder significantly contributed to the production and dissemination of housing reform ideas.
Key Words: Octavia Hill John Ruskin Henrietta Barnett Vida Scudder
Journal of Planning History, Vol. 5, No. 2,
106-125 (2006) |
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