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The Growth of Suburbia
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Suburbanization What does suburbanization mean? The process of residential, commercial, and industrial growth and development beyond a central city The movement of people out of the cities into new neighborhoods surrounding the cities
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Do Now Listen to the song that is playing, Little Boxes by Malvina Reynolds, and follow along with the lyrics. When the song ends, record information about Reynolds’ views of suburbanization in the left hand column of Resource Sheet #2
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Factors leading to Suburbanization Legacy of the Depression and WWII Housing shortage Involvement of the federal government Growth of technology
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Legacy of the Depression and WWII Economic hardships of the Great Depression lead Americans to cut down their spending WWII brought a growth in available jobs, BUT rationing of goods limited the ability of Americans to spend the money they were earning
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Housing Shortages The Baby Boom Change in housing mortgages: Before: 10 year mortgages with 80% down payment After: 30 years mortgages with 10% down payment
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G.I. Bill Federal legislation which was intended to help veterans transition from wartime service to peacetime life Subsidized: Education – tuition, fees, books, and living expenses Housing – low interest loans to veterans wanting to buy single family homes
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Technology Automobiles became a necessity This allowed people to move out of the city and commute to work With the National Interstate and Defense Highways Act of 1956 road construction boomed – Federally funded the construction of 41,000 miles of roads an highways
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Examining Views on Suburbia
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“Suburbia is becoming the most important single market in the country. It is the suburbanite who starts the mass fashions- for children,…dungarees, vodka martinis, outdoor barbecues, functional furniture…All suburbs are not alike, but they are more alike than different.” William H. Whyte, Organization man
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“ Those who lambasted suburbia…tended to ignore several basic facts: the boom in building energized important sectors of the economy, providing a good deal of employment; it lessened the housing shortage that had diminished the lives of millions during the Depression and war; and it enabled people to enjoy conveniences, such as modern bathrooms and kitchens, that they had not before.” - James Patterson, Grand Expectations
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“ Levittown represented the worst vision in American future: bland people in bland houses leading bland lives. The houses were physically similar; an entire community was being made from a cookie cutter…a multitude of uniform, unidentifiable houses, lined un inflexibly, at uniform distances on uniform roads, in a treeless command waste, inhabited by people of the same class, the same incomes, the same age group, witnessing the same television performances, eating the same tasteless prefabricated foods, from the same freezers, conforming in every outward and inward respect to the same common mold.” - Lewis Mumford, The City in History: Its Origins, Its Transformations, and its Prospects
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