The Housing of the Unskilled Wage Earner: America's Next ProblemMacmillan, 1919 - 321 pages |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
63rd Congress activity Alfred Corning Clark alleys amendment American apartments authorities bad housing bath Belgian bon marché borrower Bournville built Bulletin 158 Bureau cellar cent constructive housing legislation cost cottage flats cottages courts dark rooms death-rate districts dwellings Eclipse Park employers enterprises erected families Federal feet four rooms francs garden city garden suburb German Guinness Trust hous House Act Housing Association Housing Commission housing companies housing conditions housing fund housing loans housing problem housing reform improvement Jacob Riis Labor land living Loan Associations London County Council Massachusetts ment model housing model law model tenements municipal housing Octavia Hill organized overcrowding permitted persons Philadelphia philanthropic planning boards population Port Sunlight rent restrictive housing legislation result sanitary schools sewers standards street tenants tenement house law tion toilets town planning United Veiller Western Australia workers workingmen yard York tenement house Zealand
Popular passages
Page 222 - The maintenance and distribution at reasonable rates, during time of war, public exigency, emergency or distress, of a sufficient supply of food and other common necessaries of life and the providing of shelter, are public functions, and the commonwealth and the cities and towns therein may take and mav provide the same for their inhabitants in such manner as the general court shall determine.
Page 24 - A tenement house is any house or building, or portion thereof, which is rented, leased, let or hired out, to be occupied, or is occupied as the home or residence of three families or more living independently of each other, and doing their cooking upon the premises...
Page 220 - The general court shall have power to authorize the commonwealth to take land and to hold, improve, Sub-divide, build upon and sell the same, for the purpose of relieving congestion of population and providing homes for citizens...
Page 72 - Every dwelling and all the parts thereof shall be kept in good repair, and the roof shall be kept so as not to leak, and all rain water shall be so drained and conveyed therefrom as to prevent its dripping onto the ground or causing dampness in the walls, ceilings, yards, or areas.
Page 71 - TWENTY square feet in area, open to the sky without roof or skylight, unless such room is located on the top floor and is adequately lighted and ventilated by a skylight opening directly to the outer air.
Page 10 - Social welfare demands for every family a safe and sanitary home; healthful surroundings; ample and pure running water inside the house; modern and sanitary toilet conveniences for its exclusive use, located inside the building; adequate sunlight and ventilation; reasonable fire protection; privacy; rooms of sufficient size and number to decently house the members of the family; freedom from dampness; prompt, adequate collection of all waste materials. These fundamental requirements for normal living...
Page 215 - ... make careful studies of the resources, possibilities and needs of the city or town, particularly with respect to conditions which may be injurious to the public health or otherwise injurious in and about rented dwellings, and to make plans for the development of the municipality with special reference to the proper housing of its people.
Page 210 - ... dollars, as shall be approved by the Governor and Council. It shall be the duty of the Commission to consider whether it would be expedient for the Commonwealth to acquire or open for settlement lands in country districts with the view of aiding honest, industrious, and ambitious families of wage-earners to remove thereto from congested tenement districts of the various large cities and towns of the Commonwealth, to the end that such lands may ultimately pass into the possession of the families...
Page 213 - The homestead commission, created by chapter six hundred and seven of the acts of the year nineteen hundred and eleven, is hereby directed to call the attention of the mayor and city governments in cities and the selectmen in each town...
Page 70 - No room in a dwelling erected prior to the passage of this act shall hereafter be occupied for living purposes unless it shall have a window of an area of not less than eight square feet opening directly upon...