Ohio History Journal

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ROBERT B

ROBERT B. FAIRBANKS

 

Housing the City: The Better Housing

League and Cincinnati, 1916-1939

 

 

A varity of historians have dealt with the housing movement

in America prior to the Great Depression, examining how the

reformers viewed the housing needs around them. Robert H.

Bremner in From the Depths explained how the environmental

emphasis of Progressive housing reform reflected the changing

view of poverty from the mid-nineteenth century notion which

had blamed individual moral breakdown. Roy Lubove emphasized

the leadership and influence of Lawrence Veiller, stressing his

narrow definition of the issue as one of poor sanitary conditions

needing sanitary and structural regulatory improvement. And in

his study of housing reform in Chicago, Thomas L. Philpott em-

phasized how the reformers' concern with order and stability

colored their perception of the problem.1

Despite these various approaches to housing reform, little

effort has been made to analyze the housing reformers by examin-

ing their changing conception of the city.2 Such an inquiry might

 

 

Robert B. Fairbanks is a Ph.D. candidate in history at the University

of Cincinnati. The author wishes to acknowledge and thank Professor Zane

L. Miller, University of Cincinnati, for helping the author clarify the

argument of this essay.

 

 

1. Robert H. Bremmer, From the Depths: The Discovery of Poverty in

the United States (New York, 1956); Roy Lubove, The Progressives and

the Slums: Tenement House Reform in New York City: 1890-1917 (Pitts-

burgh, 1963); Thomas L. Philpott, The Slum and the Ghetto: Neighborhood

Deterioration and Middle-Class Reform in Chicago, 1890-1930 (New York,

1978). Also see Lawrence M. Friedman, Government and Slum Housing:

A Century of Frustration (Chicago, 1968); Mark I. Gelfand, A Nation of

Cities: The Federal Government and Urban America, 1933-1965 (New

York, 1975); Anthony Jackson, A Place Called Home: A History of Low

Cost Housing in Manhattan (Cambridge, 1976).

2. Examples of how the public's changing conception of the city in-

fluence the way they perceive specific urban problems can be found in