- Better Homes in America Movement
In 1922
United States of America embraced a nationwide campaign of home ownership,modernization , andbeautification because of a critical shortage of homes in the years right afterWorld War I – America’s “Great War”. This was the Better Homes Movement. The Better Homes Movement was initiated in 1922 in the pages of theButterick Publishing Company 's household magazine,The Delineator [The Library of Congress American Memory Website: http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?ammem/coolbib:@field(NUMBER+@band(amrlgs+dl1))] . The campaign celebrated home ownership, home maintenance and improvement, and home decoration as means of motivating responsibleconsumer behavior that also expanded the market for consumer products. In cities and towns across the country, annual campaigns --or "better homes demonstration weeks"— encouraged citizens to own, build, remodel, and improve their homes and distributed advice on creating home furnishings and decorations.President
Warren G. Harding and Secretary of CommerceHerbert Hoover kicked-off the first Better Homes Week in October 1922 for the National Better Homes Advisory Council. The campaign centered around national promotion of the 100th anniversary of song-writerJohn Howard Payne ’s famous song "Home! Sweet Home! ".To commemorate the Better Homes Movement, the federal government built a
replica of Payne’s colonialLong Island ,New York home on theWhite House lawn inWashington, D.C. Over 1,000,000 people visited the Payne House on the Capitol lawn and newspapers across America promoted other small Colonial Revival cottages like the [http://kensingtonterrace.info/15601/17301.html 1923 Roy and Dora Bennett Home in San Diego] at the National Better Homes Demonstration of “Home Sweet Home.”of building materials had virtually halted new home construction across America. This was America’s “Housing Problem.”
Because of the patriotic and national sentiment behind these years so soon after WWI, many of the homes built exhibited various Colonial Revival architectural elements. Newspapers often published designs of modest homes that were affordable and attractive to encourage new home construction under the Better Homes program.
The "Guidebook for Better Homes Campaigns in Rural Communities and Small Towns" [The Library of Congress American Memory Website: http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?ammem/coolbib:@field(NUMBER+@band(amrlg+lg58))] shows how the campaign sought to communicate its ideas. "School Cottages for Training in Home-making" [The Library of Congress American Memory Website: http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?ammem/coolbib:@field(NUMBER+@band(amrlg+lg55))] shows how high-school courses incorporated the ideas of the campaign. The Better Homes Movement received broad support from both government and industry. President
Calvin Coolidge served as honorary chairman of the Advisory Council of Better Homes in America, and Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover, a prime mover in that organization's formation, was president of its board of directors. The movement sought to educate consumers, but it also served the interests of powerful groups and organizations. The connection between the campaign's educational and commercial concerns is illustrated by Herbert Hoover's essay "The Home as an Investment," in the "Better Homes in America Plan Book for Demonstration Week, October 9 to 14, 1922" [The Library of Congress American Memory Website: http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?ammem/coolbib:@field(NUMBER+@band(amrlg+lg03))] . See also: "Homemaker-Consumer Life in Washington, D.C., 1922-23" [The Library of Congress American Memory Website: http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?ammem/coolbib:@field(NUMBER+@band(amrlm+mk03))] from the Anna Kelton Wiley Papers.References
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