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+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75837 ***
+
+
+
+
+
+ HOUSE PROPERTY
+ & ITS MANAGEMENT
+SOME PAPERS ON THE METHODS OF MANAGEMENT INTRODUCED BY MISS OCTAVIA HILL
+ AND ADAPTED TO MODERN CONDITIONS
+
+[Illustration: [Logo]]
+
+ LONDON: GEORGE ALLEN & UNWIN LTD.
+ RUSKIN HOUSE, 40 MUSEUM STREET, W.C. 1
+
+
+
+
+ _First published in 1921_
+
+
+ (_All rights reserved_)
+
+
+
+
+ INTRODUCTION
+
+ By I. G. GIBBON, D.Sc., C.B.E., Ministry of Health.
+
+
+Of standards we have heard much in connection with new housing, and,
+quite naturally, nearly always of material standards—of the number of
+houses to the acre, the size and the number of rooms, the provision of
+baths and the like; but of personal standards little, although persons
+of experience know full well that, where there are difficulties, half
+the trouble, at a moderate estimate, could be removed by personal
+action. The experiment of the ownership and management of large numbers
+of houses by Local Authorities is not free from the hazards of
+democratic control; some in full sympathy with the experiment view it
+not without some misgivings, and the misgivings will not be without
+place if adequate measures are not taken for proper management.
+
+It is timely, therefore, that we should be reminded of the most
+instructive experiment made during the last century in the management of
+house property, the work of Octavia Hill. Her experiment in house
+management would probably have by now won her many more practical
+followers had she been less of a social worker; but had she been less of
+a social worker she would never have made the experiment. There may
+still be a few of the comparatively small number of persons who know of
+her work who look upon it as an attempt to insinuate a District Visitor
+under the disguise of a rent collector. District Visitors doubtless have
+their place and season; but the aim of those who would follow in the
+footsteps of Octavia Hill, the Women Property Managers, is to manage
+property on a firm business basis, to make it pay (and they have shown
+that they can make it pay, more so in difficult circumstances than
+business management of a dull routine kind), and to carry out the work
+with knowledge and experience, with sympathy and tact, and with as
+reasonable a regard to the genuine interests of the tenants as of the
+owner. This is their aim, and, where person and place fit, their
+achievement.
+
+Octavia Hill’s influence was great in this country; but it passed beyond
+its borders. One of the most interesting reports issued in recent years
+on the management of house property has been that of the Octavia Hill
+Association, at Philadelphia, who report the uniform success of
+management on the lines laid down by Octavia Hill.[1] In Holland, also,
+her influence has been great; and at Amsterdam, for instance, all
+municipal house property, which is extensive, is managed by women who
+have been trained in her methods.
+
+Footnote 1:
+
+ See _Good Housing that Pays_, by Fullerton L. Waldo. Philadelphia: The
+ Harper Press, 1012-20 Chancellor Street. 1917.
+
+The ideal in these matters, I think, is self-management, where the
+tenants in a group of houses manage their own affairs with a social
+regard to their own real interests, an almost impossible result at the
+present time unless the tenants have a substantial financial stake in
+the property. We are very far indeed from this solution as yet, though
+every effort is needed towards achieving it; and one disappointing
+result of the State-assisted scheme of houses is the very poor showing
+made by Public Utility Societies. But a large measure of self-management
+is not precluded from the scheme of management on Octavia Hill’s lines,
+as, indeed, has been demonstrated in practice.
+
+There should be no spirit of patronage in management; if, as happens,
+the tenant comes to look upon the property manager as a counsellor and
+friend, this should grow out of the business management and as an
+incident to it.
+
+Octavia Hill and her successors did not work simply by the light of
+nature, or believe that women, as such, had a God-given aptitude for
+this business, though, house management being primarily a matter for the
+wife and mother, it naturally opens a field for which women should be
+well fitted. But the same need of instruction arises whether the
+management be by men or by women. The pupil has to be put through a
+severe course of training; she has to be versed in the most important
+facts of the law as to rents, landlord and tenant, and sanitation; she
+has to be acquainted with the defects which occur in houses, and how
+most economically to remedy them. Above all, she has to acquire that
+measure of firmness, tact and sympathy without which success is not
+likely to be attained. A pupil who is likely to be fully successful must
+have a goodly measure of that personal aptitude which, though difficult
+to test by any system of examination, is as vitally necessary as are the
+essential technical qualifications.
+
+If the manager of house property is to give of her best, she must be
+trusted with ample responsibility and authority. If hampered by
+restrictions, if limited in authority, if not granted powers for
+selecting and dealing with tenants and the control of repairs, if she
+has to refer to superior authority, whether an employer or an official
+or a Committee, before action can be taken, there is not much hope, even
+under favourable conditions, of more than a bare success. Here lies one
+principal danger, equally of autocracy or democracy. It is not good
+business or sound sense to pay a person for duties and to relieve her of
+the real responsibility attached to them, including the risk of
+dismissal for failure.
+
+In dealing with slum property the lessons of Octavia Hill’s work are
+exceedingly encouraging. Weary years must pass before there can be
+extensive demolition and rebuilding of slum areas. Are we therefore to
+lie resigned and allow these grievous sores to fester in our cities and
+towns?
+
+In properly qualified management we have one at least of the keys to a
+temporary, if not a permanent, solution of the problem; and in this way
+we may effectively deal with the real evil. The ordinary method of
+clearance and rebuilding has often resulted too much in the shifting of
+the evil to another quarter, though it may be, happily, in a less
+concentrated form.
+
+One incidental gleam from the reading of the papers in this volume is of
+the great advances which have really been made in housing conditions. We
+are apt at times, not without reason, to gird at the slowness with which
+the manifest evils around us are being removed, but it is well
+occasionally, for a proper sense of proportion and for reform itself, to
+be reminded of the great improvements which have been achieved.
+
+It is important to bear in mind that the principles of trained
+management apply as much to privately owned as to public property. If
+the owners of properties in areas which are now classed as slums would
+but join together and employ for the common management of their property
+persons trained and with aptitude for the work, it is no exaggeration to
+say that within a few years a great transformation would be effected in
+the slum problem of London and of other towns, a transformation which
+would not only ease the manifold burdens of public authorities, but
+would be less irksome to the owners of the property and of untold
+benefit to its occupiers.
+
+Equally important is it to remember that the methods of management
+associated with Octavia Hill are as pertinent for new property as for
+old—indeed, in some ways more so, for prevention is better than cure.
+She learnt her secrets in dealing with bad property, just as the
+scientist wrests his secrets from the pathological. Management of house
+property on the general lines laid down by her, adapted and developed,
+and, as I believe, with increasing emphasis on co-operative
+self-management, will help materially not only in the minor achievement
+of preventing property from degenerating into slums—and this, as
+experience shows, may well happen even with good and well-planned
+property—but in the greater achievement of attaining that higher
+standard of contentment and of pride of home and locality which should
+be the aim of all those who have the interests of the country at heart.
+
+
+The following are some papers written by Miss Octavia Hill in connection
+with her housing work.
+
+They are republished in the hope that her methods may be widely adopted
+in the efforts that are now being made to improve the very defective
+housing conditions in our cities.
+
+ M. M. JEFFERY.
+ EDITH NEVILLE.
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+
+ PAGE
+ INTRODUCTION. By I. G. Gibbon, D.Sc., C.B.E., Ministry of
+ Health 5
+
+ SELECTIONS FROM OCTAVIA HILL’S WRITINGS
+ I. MANAGEMENT OF HOUSES FOR THE POOR 15
+ II. COTTAGE PROPERTY IN LONDON 20
+ III. BLANK COURT 31
+ IV. THE INFLUENCE OF MODEL DWELLINGS UPON CHARACTER 39
+ V. SMALL HOUSES IN LONDON 50
+ VI. LETTERS TO FELLOW-WORKERS 52
+
+ OTHER PAPERS
+ VII. WOMEN MANAGERS—A CROWN ESTATE 72
+ VIII. MANAGEMENT OF MUNICIPAL HOUSES IN AMSTERDAM 78
+ IX. REPORT ON HOUSE PROPERTY MANAGEMENT BY A SUB-COMMITTEE OF
+ THE WOMEN’S SECTION OF THE GARDEN CITIES AND TOWN PLANNING
+ ASSOCIATION 83
+
+
+
+
+ House Property and its Management
+
+
+
+
+ I
+ MANAGEMENT OF HOUSES FOR THE POOR
+ (1899)
+
+
+Thirty-four years ago, when I first began to manage houses inhabited by
+working people, London was in a very different state from what it is
+now, and it is useful and interesting to review the changes, their
+effects, and their bearing on the special work we are considering
+to-day.
+
+(1) The standard of comfort was far lower then than now. In Marylebone,
+where I began work, nearly every family rented but one room; now there
+are hundreds of two- and three-roomed tenements. There were no
+cooking-ranges in the rooms; water was hardly ever carried up higher
+than the parlours. There were hardly any amusements open to the people;
+there was no underground railway, no trams, few cheap omnibuses; there
+were no free libraries, no Education Act, no Board schools. Wages were
+very decidedly lower, hours of work were longer. The bright oil-lamps
+did not exist. Food was not so cheap or so various. Flowers were never
+sold in the streets to the poor. The people stood in those days far more
+in need of cheer and of help.
+
+(2) The knowledge of sanitary matters had penetrated hardly at all;
+gross ignorance prevailed. There were, moreover, few, if any,
+Convalescent Homes, no country holiday arrangements. The Building Acts
+took cognizance of very few of the requirements for health, and hardly
+any sanitary measures were enforcible—fewer were enforced. Few hospitals
+for infectious diseases existed. Many excellent appliances for drainage
+were not invented.
+
+(3) There was not one-tenth part of the sympathy and interest in the
+welfare of the people which permeates all classes now.
+
+From these and many other causes a London court in 1864 was a far more
+degraded and desolate place than it can be now, even in the remotest and
+forlornest region, and in taking charge of it one had to do a variety of
+things oneself, where now one finds the intelligent and willing
+co-operation of many other agencies.
+
+Again, there were next to no “model” dwellings and little power of cheap
+locomotion, so that a court in those days was subject to little change
+of population; the same families clung to it, lived, married and died in
+it. Cheap locomotion and facilities in reading have brought the
+different parts of London into much closer communication.
+
+Many of these facts made the necessity for preserving and regulating the
+old courts and houses far more important than is the case now. The old
+courts are rapidly disappearing, and numerous blocks of buildings with
+modern appliances are now scattered over most neighbourhoods. But in
+1864 tenants were neither routed out of foul and close courts nor would
+they have been received into the rare and select model dwellings.
+Moreover, in the rough courts they were little meddled with, and could
+pursue in ignorance their insanitary habits further than would be
+possible now.
+
+It was very natural, therefore, that my first efforts should have been
+directed to rough courts and the inhabitants as I found them there.
+Steady and gradual improvement of the people of the houses, without
+selection of the former or sudden reconstruction of the latter, was our
+first duty, and my little book on _Homes of the London Poor_ tells the
+history of that early work. But if there is one duty more incumbent on
+us than another in such efforts, it is to be quick to see where advance
+is possible, how higher standards can be realized, and how much old
+forms may be rightly superseded. With certain exceptions in regard to
+small old houses, our work of late years has been increasingly in new
+houses and with chosen tenants.
+
+The principles, however, are the same, and there is one great fact which
+the changing form has only brought out more and more clearly, and that
+is that the conduct of houses or blocks, old or new, so as to secure
+health and comfort and homelike feeling, depends on management. One can
+see any day excellent buildings execrably managed, and one may see
+tumble-down old places of wretched construction both healthier and far
+more homelike because well managed. And I may confidently say that the
+distinctive feature of our work has been that of devoting our full
+strength to management. It will be realized at once how much more this
+implies than “rent collecting.” An ordinary clerk will go from door to
+door for rents; that is a very different matter from managing houses. We
+have tried, so far as possible, to enlist ladies, who would have an idea
+of how—by diligent attention to all business which devolves on a
+landlord, by wise rule with regard to all duties which a tenant should
+fulfil, by sympathetic and just decisions with a view to the common
+good—a high standard of management could be attained: repairs promptly
+and efficiently attended to, references carefully taken up, cleaning
+sedulously supervised, overcrowding put an end to, the blessing of
+ready-money payments enforced, accounts strictly kept, and, above all,
+tenants so sorted as to be helpful to one another.
+
+
+
+
+ II
+ COTTAGE PROPERTY IN LONDON
+ (1866)
+
+
+Two years ago I first had an opportunity of carrying out the plan I had
+long contemplated, that of obtaining possession of houses to be let in
+weekly tenements to the poor. That the spiritual elevation of a large
+class depended to a considerable extent on sanitary reform was, I
+considered, proved, but I was equally certain that sanitary improvement
+itself depended upon educational work among grown-up people; that they
+must be urged to rouse themselves from the lethargy and indolent habits
+into which they have fallen, and freed from all that hinders them from
+doing so. I further believed that any lady who would help them to obtain
+things, the need of which they felt themselves, and would sympathize
+with them in their desire for such, would soon find them eager to learn
+her view of what was best for them; that whether this was so or not, her
+duty was to keep alive their own best hopes and intentions, which come
+at rare intervals, but fade too often for want of encouragement.
+
+I laid the plan before Mr. Ruskin, who entered into it most warmly. He
+at once came forward with all the money necessary, and took the whole
+risk of the undertaking upon himself. He showed me, however, that it
+would be far more useful if it could be made to pay; that a working man
+ought to be able to pay for his own house; that the outlay upon it
+ought, therefore, to yield a fair percentage upon the capital invested.
+Thus empowered and directed, I purchased three houses in my own
+immediate neighbourhood. They were leasehold, subject to a small
+ground-rent. The unexpired term of the lease was for fifty-six years;
+this we purchased for £750. We spent £78 additional in making a large
+room at the back of my own house, where I could meet the tenants from
+time to time. The plan has now been in operation about a year and a
+half; the financial result is that the scheme has paid 5 per cent.
+interest on all the capital (it should be remembered that 5 per cent.
+interest in England on house property is equivalent to at least 8 per
+cent. in the United States), has repaid £48 of the capital; sets of two
+rooms have been let for little more than the rent of one, the houses
+have been kept in repair, all expenses have been met for taxes,
+ground-rent and insurance. In this case there is no expense for
+collecting rents, as I do it myself, finding it most important work; but
+in all the estimates I put aside the usual percentage for it, in case
+hereafter I may require help, and also to prove practically that it can
+be afforded in other cases. It should be observed that well-built houses
+were chosen, but they were in a dreadful state of dirt and neglect. The
+repairs required were mainly of a superficial and slight character;
+slight in regard to expense—vital as to health and comfort. The place
+swarmed with vermin; the papers, black with dirt, hung in long strips
+from the walls; the drains were stopped, the water supply out of order.
+All these things were put in order, but no new appliances of any kind
+were added, as we had determined that our tenants should wait for these
+until they had proved themselves capable of taking care of them. A
+regular sum is set aside for repairs, and this is equally divided
+between the three houses; if any of it remains, after breakage and
+damage have been repaired, at the end of the quarter, each tenant
+decides in turn in what way the surplus shall be spent, so as to add to
+the comfort of the house. This plan has worked admirably; the loss from
+carelessness has decreased to an amazing extent, and the lodgers prize
+the little comforts which they have waited for, and seem in a measure to
+have earned by their care, much more than those bought with more lavish
+expenditure. The bad debts during the whole time the plan has been in
+operation have only amounted to £2 11s. 3d. Extreme punctuality and
+diligence in collecting rents, and a strict determination that they
+shall be paid regularly, have accomplished this; as a proof of which it
+is curious to observe that £1 3s. 3d. of the bad debts accumulated
+during two months that I was away in the country. I have tried to
+remember, when it seemed hardest, that the fulfilment of their duties
+was the best education for the tenants in every way. It has given them a
+dignity and glad feeling of honourable behaviour which has much more
+than compensated for the apparent harshness of the rule.
+
+Nothing has impressed me more than the people’s perception of an
+underlying current of sympathy through all dealings that have seemed
+harsh. Somehow, love and care have made themselves felt. It is also
+wonderful that they should prize as they do the evenness of the law that
+is over them. They are accustomed to alternate violence of passion and
+toleration of vice. They expected a greater toleration, ignorant
+indulgence and frequent almsgiving; but in spite of this have recognized
+as a blessing a rule which is very strict, but the demands of which they
+know, and a government which is true in word and deed. The plan of
+substituting a lady for a resident landlady of the same class as her
+tenants is not wholly gain. The lady will probably have subtler sympathy
+and clearer comprehension of their needs, but she cannot give the same
+minute supervision that a resident landlady can. Unhappily, the
+advantage of such a change is, however, at present unquestionable. The
+influence of the majority of the lower class of people who sublet to the
+poor is almost wholly injurious. That tenants should be given up to the
+dominion of those whose word is given and broken almost as a matter of
+course, whose habits and standards are very low, whose passions are
+violent, who have neither large hope nor clear sight, nor even sympathy,
+is very sad. It seems to me that a greater power is in the hands of
+landlords and landladies than of schoolteachers—power either of life or
+death, physical or spiritual. It is not an unimportant question who
+shall wield it. There are dreadful instances in which sin is really
+tolerated and shared; where the lodger who will drink most with his
+landlord is most favoured, and many a debt overlooked, to compensate for
+which the price of rooms is raised; and thus the steady and sober pay
+more rent to make up for losses caused by the unprincipled.
+
+With the great want of rooms there is in this neighbourhood it did not
+seem right to expel families, however large, inhabiting one room.
+Whenever from any cause a room was vacant and a large family occupied an
+adjoining one, I have endeavoured to induce them to rent the two. To
+incoming tenants I do not let what seems decidedly insufficient
+accommodation. We have been able to let two rooms for four shillings and
+sixpence, whereas the tenants were in many cases paying four shillings
+for one. At first they considered it quite an unnecessary expenditure to
+pay more rent for a second room, however small the additional sum might
+be. They have gradually learnt to feel the comfort of having two rooms,
+and pay willingly for them. (It is not possible to form any comparison
+between the rent of rooms in London and New York, the circumstances of
+the two cities being so different; but the point to be observed is that,
+by a very small increase of rent, the amount of accommodation may be
+doubled.)
+
+The pecuniary success of the plan has been due to two causes. First, to
+the absence of middlemen; and, secondly, to great strictness about
+punctual payment of rent. At this moment not one tenant in any of the
+houses owes any rent, and during the whole time, as I have said, the bad
+debts have been exceedingly small. The law respecting such tenancies
+seems very simple, and when once the method of proceeding is understood,
+the whole business is easily managed; and I must say most seriously that
+I believe it to be better to pay legal expenses for getting rid of
+tenants than to lose by arrears of rent—better for the whole tone of the
+households, kinder to the tenants. The rule should be clearly understood
+and the people will respect themselves for having obeyed it. The
+commencement of proceedings which are known to be genuine and not a mere
+threat is usually sufficient to obtain payment of arrears; in one case
+only has an ejectment for rent been necessary. The great want of rooms
+gives the possessors of such property immense power over their lodgers.
+Let them see to it that they use it righteously. The fluctuations of
+work cause to respectable tenants the main difficulties in paying their
+rent. I have tried to help them in two ways. First, by inducing them to
+save; this they have done steadily, and each autumn has found them with
+a small fund accumulated, which has enabled them to meet the
+difficulties of the time when families are out of town. In the second
+place, I have done what I could to employ my tenants in slack seasons. I
+carefully set aside any work they can do for times of scarcity, and I
+try so to equalize in this small circle the irregularity of work, which
+must be more or less pernicious, and which the childishness of the poor
+makes doubly so. They have strangely little power of looking forward; a
+result is to them as nothing if it will not be perceptible till next
+quarter! This is very curious to me, especially as seen in connection
+with that large hope to which I have alluded, and which often makes me
+think that if I could I would carve over the houses the motto, “Spem,
+etiam illi habent, quibus nihil aliud restat.”
+
+Another beautiful trait in their character is their trust; it has been
+quite marvellous to find how great and how ready this is. In no single
+case have I met with suspicion or with anything but entire confidence.
+
+It is needless to say that there have been many minor difficulties and
+disappointments. Each separate person who has failed to rise and meet
+the help that would have been so gladly given has been a distinct loss
+to me; for somehow the sense of relation to them has been a very real
+one, and a feeling of interest and responsibility has been very strong,
+even where there was least that was lovely or lovable in the particular
+character. When they have not had sufficient energy or self-control to
+choose the sometimes hard path that has seemed the only right one, it
+would have been hard to part from them, except for a hope that others
+would be able to lead them where I have failed.
+
+Two distinct kinds of work depend entirely on one another if they are to
+bear their full fruit. There is, firstly, the simple fulfilment of a
+landlady’s bounden duties, and uniform demand of the fulfilment of those
+of the tenants. We have felt ourselves bound by laws which must be
+obeyed, however hard obedience might often be. Then, secondly, there is
+the individual friendship which has grown up from intimate knowledge and
+from a sense of dependence and protection. Knowledge gives power to see
+the real position of families; to suggest in time the inevitable result
+of certain habits; to urge such measures as shall secure the education
+of the children and their establishment in life; to keep alive the germs
+of energy; to waken the gentler thought; to refuse resolutely to give
+any help but such as rouses self-help; to cherish the smallest lingering
+gleam of self-respect; and, finally, to be near with strong help should
+the hour of trial fall suddenly and heavily, and to give it with the
+hand and heart of a real old friend, who has filled many relations
+besides that of almsgiver, who has long ago given far more than material
+help, and has thus earned the right to give this lesser to the most
+independent spirits.
+
+
+
+
+ III
+ BLANK COURT
+ (1871)
+
+
+How this relation between landlord and tenant might be established in
+some of the lowest districts of London, and with what results, I am
+about to describe by relating what has been done in the last two years
+in Blank Court.
+
+In many of the houses the dustbins were utterly unapproachable, and
+cabbage-leaves, stale fish and every sort of dirt were lying in the
+passages and on the stairs; in some the back kitchen had been used as a
+dustbin, but had not been emptied for years, and the dust filtered
+through into the front kitchens, which were the sole living and sleeping
+rooms of some families; in some, the kitchen stairs were many inches
+thick with dirt, which was so hardened that a shovel had to be used to
+get it off; in some there was hardly any water to be had; the wood was
+eaten away, and broken away; windows were smashed, and the rain was
+coming through the roofs. At night it was still worse; and during the
+first winter I had to collect the rents chiefly then, as the
+inhabitants, being principally costermongers, were out nearly all day,
+and they were afraid to entrust their rent to their neighbours. It was
+then that I saw the houses in their most dreadful aspect. I well
+remember wet, foggy Monday nights, when I turned down the dingy court,
+past the brilliantly lighted public-house at the corner, past the old
+furniture outside the shops, and dived into the dark, yawning
+passage-ways. The front doors stood open day and night, and as I felt my
+way down the kitchen stairs, broken, and rounded by the hardened mud
+upon them, the foul smells which the heavy, foggy air would not allow to
+rise met me as I descended, and the plaster rattled down as I groped
+along. It was truly appalling to think that there were human beings who
+lived habitually in such an atmosphere, with such surroundings.
+Sometimes I had to open the kitchen door myself, after knocking several
+times in vain, when a woman, quite drunk, would be lying on the floor on
+some black mass which served as a bed; sometimes, in answer to my
+knocks, a half-drunken man would swear, and thrust the rent-money out to
+me through a chink of the door, placing his foot against it so as to
+prevent it opening wide enough to admit me. Always it would be shut
+again without a light being offered to guide me up the pitch-dark
+stairs. Such was Blank Court in the winter of 1869. Truly, a wild,
+lawless, desolate little kingdom to come to rule over.
+
+On what principles was I to rule these people? On the same as I had
+already tried, and tried with success, in other places, and which I may
+sum up as the two following: firstly, to demand a strict fulfilment of
+their duties to me—one of the chief of which would be the punctual
+payment of rent; and secondly, to endeavour to be so unfailingly just
+and patient that they should learn to trust the rule that was over them.
+
+With regard to details, I would make a few improvements at once, such,
+for example, as the laying on of water and repairing of dustbins; but,
+for the most part, improvements should be made only by degrees, as the
+people became more capable of valuing them and not abusing them. I would
+have the rooms distempered and thoroughly cleansed as they became
+vacant, and then they should be offered to the more cleanly of the
+tenants. I would have such repairs as were not immediately needed used
+as a means of giving work to the men in times of distress. I would draft
+the occupants of the underground kitchens into the upstairs rooms, and
+would ultimately convert the kitchens into bathrooms and washhouses. I
+would have the landlady’s portion of the house—i.e. the stairs and
+passages—at once repaired and distempered, and they should be regularly
+scrubbed, and, as far as possible, made models of cleanliness, for I
+knew, from former experience, that the example of this would, in time,
+silently spread itself to the rooms themselves, and that payment for
+this work would give me some hold over the older girls. I would collect
+savings personally, not trust to their being taken to distant banks or
+savings clubs. And, finally, I knew that I should learn to feel these
+people as my friends, and so should instinctively feel the same respect
+for their privacy and their independence, and should treat them with the
+same courtesy that I should show towards any other personal friends.
+There would be no interference, no entering their rooms uninvited, no
+offer of money or the necessaries of life. But when occasion presented
+itself I should give them any help I could, such as I might offer
+without insult to other friends—sympathy in their distresses; advice,
+help and counsel in their difficulties; introductions that might be of
+use to them; means of education; visits to the country; a lent book when
+not able to work; a bunch of flowers brought on purpose; an invitation
+to any entertainment, in a room built at the back of my own house, which
+would be likely to give them pleasure. I am convinced that one of the
+evils of much that is done for the poor springs from the want of
+delicacy felt, and courtesy shown, towards them, and that we cannot
+beneficially help them in any spirit different to that in which we help
+those who are better off. The help may differ in amount, because their
+needs are greater. It should not differ in kind.
+
+I have learned to know that people are ashamed to abuse a place they
+find cared for. They will add dirt to dirt till a place is pestilential,
+but the more they find done for it, the more they will respect it, till
+at last order and cleanliness prevail. It is this feeling of theirs,
+coupled with the fact that they do not like those whom they have learned
+to love, and whose standard is higher than their own, to see things
+which would grieve them, which has enabled us to accomplish nearly every
+reform of outward things that we have achieved; so that the surest way
+to have any place kept clean is to go through it often yourself.
+
+Amongst the many benefits which the possession of the houses enables us
+to confer on the people, perhaps one of the most important is our power
+of saving them from neighbours who would render their lives miserable.
+It is a most merciful thing to protect the poor from the pain of living
+in the next room to drunken, disorderly people. “I am dying,” said an
+old woman to me the other day; “I wish you would put me where I can’t
+hear S—— beating his wife. Her screams are awful. And B—— too, he do
+come in so drunk. Let me go over the way to No. 30.” Our success depends
+on duly arranging the inmates; not too many children in any one house,
+so as to overcrowd it; not too few, so as to overcrowd another; not two
+bad people side by side, or they drink together; not a terribly bad
+person beside a very respectable one.
+
+It appears to me, then, to be proved by practical experience that when
+we can induce the rich to undertake the duties of landlords in poor
+neighbourhoods, and ensure a sufficient amount of the wise, personal
+supervision of educated and sympathetic people acting as their
+representatives, we achieve results which are not attainable in any
+other way. I would call upon those who may possess cottage property in
+large towns to consider the immense power they thus hold in their hands
+and the large influence for good they may exercise by the wise use of
+that power. When they have to delegate it to others, let them take care
+to whom they commit it; and let them beware lest, through the widely
+prevailing system of subletting, this power ultimately abide with those
+who have neither the will nor the knowledge which would enable them to
+use it beneficially.
+
+It is on these things and their faithful execution that the life of the
+whole matter depends, and by which steady progress is ensured. It is the
+smaller things of the world that colour the lives of those around us,
+and it is on persistent efforts to reform these that progress depends;
+and we may rest assured that they who see with greater eyes than ours
+have a due estimate of the service, and that if we did but perceive the
+mighty principles underlying these tiny things we should rather feel
+awed that we are entrusted with them at all, than scornful and impatient
+that they are no larger. What are we that we should ask for more than
+that God should let us work for Him among the tangible things which He
+created to be fair and the human which He redeemed to be pure? From time
+to time He lifts a veil and shows us, even while we struggle with
+imperfections here below, that towards which we are working—shows us
+how, by governing and ordering the tangible things one by one, we may
+make of this earth a fair dwelling-place. And, far better still, how, by
+cherishing human beings, He will let us help Him in His work of building
+up temples meet for Him to dwell in—faint images of that best Temple of
+all which He promised that He would raise up on the third day, though
+men might destroy it.
+
+
+
+
+ IV
+ THE INFLUENCE OF MODEL DWELLINGS UPON CHARACTER
+ (1892)
+
+
+As it now seems fairly clear that the working population of London is
+likely to be more and more housed in “blocks,” it is not very profitable
+to spend time in considering whether this is a fact to rejoice in or to
+deplore, except so far as the consideration may enable us to see how far
+the advantages of the change may be increased or the drawbacks
+diminished. The advantages of the change are very apparent and are apt
+to appear overwhelming, and the disadvantages are apt to be dismissed as
+somewhat sentimental or inevitable. I have, however, little to say upon
+advantages. They may, I think, be briefly summed up under two heads. It
+is supposed that better sanitary arrangements are secured in blocks. It
+is also certain that all inspection and regulation are easier in blocks;
+and on inspection and regulation much of our modern legislation, much of
+our popular hope is based.
+
+With regard to the sanitary arrangements, I think all who are at all
+conversant with the subject are beginning to be aware that these at
+least may be as faulty in blocks as in smaller buildings; but it is
+undoubtedly true that even where this is so, the publicity of the block
+enables inspection to be carried out much more easily, and so,
+theoretically at least, a certain standard can be enforced. And though
+this is not quite so true in actual practice as those who put their
+faith in enforcement of sanitary law are apt to imagine, still it is
+true, and it is a very distinct advantage to be noted.
+
+Your readers may be astonished that I do not put down the greater
+economy of the block system as a distinct gain, but I am not so wholly
+sure as may seem that it exists. For, first, room by room the block
+dwellings are not at all invariably cheaper than those in small houses.
+Moreover, I think we can hardly permit, and assuredly cannot permanently
+congratulate and pride ourselves upon, a form of construction which
+admits so very little sunlight into lower floors. So that to the present
+cost of block buildings must, I should think, be fairly added in the
+future such diminution of height or such increase of yard space as would
+allow of the freer entrance of air and light. This would increase the
+ground-rent payable on each room. I think also that the cheapness of
+erecting many-storied buildings is exaggerated. I have built very few
+blocks, but I have been consulted about some, and I have more than once
+proved in £ s. d. that cutting off a story from the block as shown in
+the plans was a very small net loss, when cost of building, saving on
+rates, repairs, etc., and possibly even diminution in wall thickness,
+justified by the lower elevation, were taken into account. We must also
+remember the increase of rent gladly paid by the sober and home-loving
+man for ground-floor rooms lighter and pleasanter than if overshadowed
+by high blocks. I do not wish to generalize—the matter is one of £ s.
+d.—but I say that the figures are well worth careful study on each
+building scheme, and that, as far as the model dwellings are concerned,
+I think their undue height in proportion to width of yard has sometimes
+been due to the mistaken zeal for accommodating numbers of families. I
+say mistaken, for with our increased means of cheap transit we should
+try to scatter rather than to concentrate our population, especially if
+the concentration has to be secured by dark lower rooms.
+
+With regard to the disadvantages of blocks, I think they may be divided
+into those which may be looked upon, by such of us as are hopeful, as
+probably transitory, and those which seem, so far as we can see, quite
+essential to the block system. The transitory ones are by far the most
+serious. They are those which depend on the enormously increasing evil
+which grows up in a huge community of those who are undisciplined and
+untrained. They disappear with civilization; they are, so far as I know,
+entirely absent in large groups of blocks where the tenants are the
+quiet, respectable working-class families who, to use a phrase common in
+London, “keep themselves to themselves,” and whose well-ordered, quiet
+little homes, behind their neat little doors with bright knockers,
+nicely supplied with well-chosen appliances, now begin to form groups
+where responsible, respectable citizens live in cleanliness and order.
+Under rules they grow to think natural and reasonable, inspected and
+disciplined, every inhabitant registered and known, School Board laws
+and laws of the landlord or company regularly enforced, every infectious
+case of illness instantly removed, all disinfecting done at public cost,
+is developed a life of law, regular, a little monotonous, and not
+encouraging any great individuality, but consistent with happy home
+life, and it promises to be the life of the respectable London working
+man.
+
+On the other hand, what life in blocks is to the less self-controlled
+hardly any words of mine are strong enough to describe, and it is
+abhorred accordingly by the tidy and striving, wherever any—even a small
+number—of the undisciplined are admitted to blocks, or where, being
+admitted, there is no real living rule exercised. Regulations are of
+small avail; no public inspection can possibly, for more than an hour or
+two, secure order; no resident superintendent has at once conscience,
+nerve and devotion single-handed to stem the violence, the dirt, the
+noise, the quarrels; no body of public opinion on the part of the
+tenants themselves asserts itself: one by one the tidier ones depart
+disheartened, the rampant remain and prevail, and often, though with a
+very fair show to the outsider, the block becomes a sort of pandemonium.
+No one who is not in and out day by day, or, better still, night after
+night; no one who does not watch the swift degradation of children
+belonging to tidy families; no one who does not know the terrorism
+exercised by the rough over the timid and industrious poor; no one who
+does not know the abuse of every appliance provided by the benevolent or
+speculative but non-resident landlord, can tell what life in blocks is
+where the population is low class. Sinks and drains are stopped; yards
+provided for exercise must be closed because of misbehaviour; boys bathe
+in the drinking-water cisterns; washhouses on staircases—or staircases
+themselves—become the nightly haunt of the vicious, the Sunday gambling
+places of boys; the yell of the drunkard echoes through the hollow
+passages; the stairs are blocked by dirty children, and the life of any
+decent hard-working family becomes intolerable.
+
+The very same evils are nothing like as injurious where the families are
+more separate, so that, while in smaller houses one can often try
+difficult tenants with real hope of their doing better, it is wholly
+impossible usually to try (or to train) them in blocks. The temptations
+are greater, the evils of relapse are far greater. It is like taking a
+bad girl into a school. Hence the enormous importance of keeping a large
+number of small houses wherever possible for the better training of the
+rowdy and the protection of the quiet and gentle; and I would implore
+well-meaning landlords to pause before they clear away small houses and
+erect blocks, with any idea of benefiting the poorer class of people.
+The change may be inevitable, it may have to come, but as they value the
+life of our poorer fellow-citizens, let them pause before they throw
+them into a corporate life for which they are not ready, and which will,
+so far as I can see, not train them to be ready for it. Let them either
+ask tidy working people they know, or learn for themselves, whether I am
+not right in saying that in the shabbiest little two-, four-, six- or
+eight-roomed house, with all the water to carry upstairs, with one
+little w.c. in a tiny backyard, with perhaps one dustbin at the end of
+the court, and even, perhaps, with a dark little twisted staircase,
+there are not far happier, better, yes, and healthier homes than in the
+blocks where lower-class people share and do not keep in order far
+better appliances.
+
+And let them look the deeper into this in so far as our reformers who
+trust to inspection for all education, our would-be philanthropists or
+newspaper correspondents who visit a court or block once and think they
+have seen it, even our painstaking statisticians who catalogue what can
+be catalogued, are unable to deal with these facts. Those who know the
+life of the poor know—those who watch the effect of letting to a given
+family a set of rooms in a block in a rough neighbourhood, or rooms in a
+small house in the same district, know—those who remember how numerous
+are the kinds of people to whom they must refuse rooms in a block for
+their own sake, or that of others, know. To the noisy drunkard one must
+say, “For the quiet people’s sake, No”; to the weak drunkard one must
+say, “You would get led away, No”; to the young widow with children one
+must say, “Would not you be better in a small house where the resident
+landlady would see a little to the children?” thinking in one’s heart
+also, “and to you.” For the orphaned factory girl who would “like to
+keep mother’s home together” one feels a less public life safer; for the
+quiet family who care to bring up their children well one fears the bad
+language and gambling on the stairs. For the strong and self-contained
+and self-reliant it may be all right, but the instinct of the others who
+cling on to the smaller houses is right for them.
+
+For, after all, the “home”—the “life”—does not depend on the number of
+appliances, or even in any deep sense on the sanitary arrangements. I
+heard a workman once say, with some coarseness but with much truth,
+“Gentlemen think if they put a water-closet to every room they have made
+a home of it,” and the remark often recurs to me for the element of
+truth there is in it, and there is more decency in many a tiny little
+cottage in Southwark, shabby as it may be—more family life in many a one
+room let to a family—than in many a populous block. And this is due
+partly to the comparative peace of the more separate home: for it seems
+as if a certain amount of quiet and even of isolation made family life
+and neighbourly kindness more possible. People become brutal in large
+numbers who are gentle when they are in smaller groups and know one
+another, and the life in a block only becomes possible when there is a
+deliberate isolation of the family and a sense of duty with respect to
+all that is in common. The low-class people herd on the staircases and
+corrupt one another, where those a little higher would withdraw into
+their little sanctum. But in their own little house, or as lodgers in a
+small house, the lower-class people get the individual feeling and
+notice which often trains them in humanity.
+
+Whatever may be the way out of the difficulty, let us hope that it may
+come before great evil is done by the massing together of herds of
+untrained people, and by the ghastly abuse of staircases, open all night
+but not under public inspection, not easily inspected even if nominally
+so placed. The problem is one we ought all, so far as in us lies, to lay
+to heart and do what we can to solve. I have not dwelt here on what may
+be called the “sentimental” objections to blocks. The first is the small
+scope they give for individual freedom. The second is their painful
+ugliness and uninterestingness in external look, which is nearly always
+connected with the first. For difference is at least interesting and
+amusing, monotony never. Let us hope that when we have secured our
+drainage, our cubic space of air, our water on every floor, we may have
+time to live in our homes, to think how to make them pretty, each in our
+own way, and to let the individual characteristics they take from our
+life in them be all good, as well as healthy and beautiful, because all
+human life and work were surely meant to be like all Divine creations,
+lovely as well as good.
+
+
+
+
+ V
+ SMALL HOUSES IN LONDON
+ (1886)
+
+
+“Land is too valuable in London for us to build cottages, we must have
+blocks.” Let that be granted for the moment; but that does not preclude
+those who own such cottages from keeping them where they are built. And
+I wish that any words of mine might avail with even one such owner, to
+induce him to pause and consider, very seriously, whether, at any rate
+for a time, he might not manage to drain and improve water supply and
+roofs, and thoroughly clean such old buildings, instead of sweeping them
+away. As to cost, the cottages are far more valuable than the cleared
+space; as to health, they may be made, at a small cost, far more healthy
+than any but the very best constructed and best managed blocks. As to
+the life possible in them—of which the charitable and reforming and
+legislating bodies know so little—it is incomparably happier and better.
+Let us keep them while we can.
+
+And suppose we grant that London is coming to block buildings, and must
+come to them; the preservation of the cottages gives time for the
+question of management to be studied and perfected. The improvement may
+come from the training and subsequent employment of ladies like my own
+fellow-workers, under the directors of large companies and in
+conjunction with good resident superintendents. Or it may come from the
+co-operation of a consultative body of good tenants, to assist the
+managers. Or it may come by the steady improvement of the main body of
+the roughest tenants, making them gradually fitted to use things in
+common. But, seeing in all classes how difficult it is to get anything
+cared for which is used in common, unless there be some machinery for
+its management, I think this latter remedy should rather be counted on
+as making the work easier than as sufficient in itself. While I am on
+this subject, may I remark that it would be well if those who build
+blocks would consider, in settling their plans, what machinery they are
+mainly trusting to for securing good order?
+
+
+
+
+ VI
+ LETTERS TO FELLOW-WORKERS
+
+
+In 1872 Miss Octavia Hill began the practice of writing at the end of
+each year a letter which was sent to all who were associated with her in
+her work. The following are some selections:
+
+
+ WORK UNDER THE ECCLESIASTICAL COMMISSIONERS.
+
+LETTER OF 1902.—During the past year the Ecclesiastical Commissioners
+asked us to take charge of some of their property, of which the leases
+fell in, in Southwark and Lambeth.
+
+In Southwark the area had been leased long ago on the old-fashioned
+tenure of “lives.” That is, it was held not for a specified term of
+years, but subject to the life of certain persons. The lease fell in,
+therefore, quite suddenly, and fifty of the houses, which were occupied
+by working people, were placed under my care. I had only four days’
+notice before I had to begin collecting. It was well for us that my
+fellow-workers rose to the occasion and at once undertook the added
+duties; well, too, that we were then pretty strong in workers. It was a
+curious Monday’s work. The houses having been let and sublet, I could be
+furnished with few particulars. I had a map and the numbers of the
+houses, which were scattered in various streets over the five acres
+which had reverted to the Commissioners, but I had no tenant’s name nor
+the rental of any tenement, nor did the tenants know or recognize the
+written authority, having long paid to other landlords. I subdivided the
+area geographically between my two principal South London workers, and I
+went to every house, accompanied by one or other of them. I learnt the
+name of the tenant, explained the circumstances, saw their books and
+learnt their rental, and finally succeeded in obtaining every rent. Many
+of the houses required much attention, and since then we have been
+busily employed in supervising necessary repairs. The late lessees were
+liable for dilapidations, and I felt once more how valuable to us it was
+to represent owners like the Commissioners, for all this legal and
+surveying work was done ably by responsible and qualified men of
+business, while we were free to go in and out among the tenants, watch
+details, report grievous defects, decide what repairs essential to
+health should be done instantly. We have not half done all this, but we
+are steadily progressing.
+
+The very same day the Commissioners sent to me about this sudden
+accession of work in Southwark, they asked me whether I could also take
+over one hundred and sixty houses in Lambeth. I had known that this
+lease was falling in to them, and I knew that they proposed rebuilding
+for working people on some seven acres there, and would consult me about
+this. But I had no idea that they meant to ask me to take charge of the
+old cottages pending the rebuilding. However, we were able to undertake
+this, and it will be a very great advantage to us to get to know the
+tenants, the locality, the workers in the neighbourhood, before the
+great decisions about rebuilding are made. In this case I had the
+advantage of going round with the late lessee, who gave me names,
+rentals and particulars, and whose relations with his late tenants
+struck me as very satisfactory and human. On this area our main duties
+have been to induce tenants to pay who knew that their houses were
+coming down (in this we have succeeded), to decide those difficult
+questions of what to repair in houses soon to be destroyed, to empty one
+portion of the area where cottages are first to be built, providing
+accommodation elsewhere so far as is possible, and to arrange the
+somewhat complicated minute details as to rates and taxes payable for
+cottages partly empty, temporarily empty, on assessments which had all
+to be ascertained, and where certain rates in certain houses for certain
+times only were payable by the owners whom we represent.
+
+LETTER OF 1903.—The past year has brought one very large expansion of
+our work, larger than that of any previous year; and it is started on
+independent lines, in a way which gives hope for future growth. The
+Ecclesiastical Commissioners wrote to tell me in the autumn that an area
+in South London containing twenty-two acres, and with between five
+hundred and six hundred houses on it, was falling in to them at the
+expiration of a long lease, and they asked me to undertake the
+management of the property. Bearing in mind what they themselves had
+said as to providing for the continuity of such work, and with a deep
+desire not to lose near touch with my own old tenants, workers and
+places, if I spread my time over still larger areas, I set myself to
+think whether this new work might not be started from a new centre, and
+have been fortunate enough to be able to recommend a lady of great power
+and experience, who consents to undertake this new property, with direct
+responsibility to the Commissioners.
+
+It was a huge undertaking, and needed much care and labour to start it
+well, and naturally we were all keen to help. It was a great day when we
+took over the place. Our seconds-in-command took command manfully for a
+fortnight of all our old courts, and fourteen of us met on Monday,
+October 5th, to take over the estate and collect from five hundred to
+six hundred tenants wholly unknown to us. We organized it all
+thoughtfully; we had fifteen collecting books and all the tenants’ books
+prepared, opened a bank account, found a room as an office, and divided
+the area among the workers. Our first duty was to get the tenants to
+recognize our authority and pay us. I think we were very successful; we
+got every tenant on the estate to pay us without any legal process,
+except one who was a regular scamp. We collected some £250, most of it
+in silver, and got it safely to the bank. Then came the question of
+repairs; there were written in the first few weeks one thousand orders
+for these, although, as the whole area is to be rebuilt, we were only
+doing actually urgent and no substantial ones. All these had to be
+overlooked and reported on and paid for. Next came pouring in the claims
+for borough and water rates. We had to ascertain the assessments of
+every house, the facts as to whether landlord or tenant was responsible,
+whether the rates were compounded for or not, what allowance was to be
+claimed for empty houses or rooms. There were two Water Companies
+supplying the area, and we had to learn which supplied each house.
+
+The whole place was to be rebuilt, and even the streets rearranged and
+widened, and I had promised the Commissioners I would advise them as to
+the future plans. These had to be prepared at the earliest date
+possible, the more so as the sanitary authorities were pressing, and
+sent in one hundred orders in the first few days we were there. It is
+needless to say with what speed, capacity and zeal the representatives
+of the Commissioners carried on their part of these preparations, and
+they rapidly decided on which streets should be first rebuilt. But this
+only implied more to be done, for we had to empty the streets swiftly,
+and that meant patching up all possible empty houses in other streets
+and moving the tenants into them. Fortunately, there were several houses
+empty, the falling in of the leases having scared some people away. The
+Commissioners had decided to close all the public-houses on the estate,
+and we let one to a girls’ club, and had to put repairs in hand to fit
+it for its changed destination.
+
+The matter now stands thus: we have got through the first quarter; have
+collected £2,672, mostly in silver; the quarter’s accounts are nearly
+ready to send in; we have completed the most pressing repairs; have
+emptied two streets, and plans for rebuilding them are decided on;
+tenders have been accepted for these, and they have been begun. Plans
+have been prepared for rebuilding and rearrangement of the whole estate,
+and these are now before the Commissioners for their consideration. They
+provide a site for rebuilding the parish school, an area of about an
+acre as a public recreation ground, the substitution of four wide for
+three narrow streets, and afford accommodation for 790 families in
+four-roomed and six-roomed cottages, cottage flats, and flats of three-
+and two-roomed tenements in houses in no case higher than three stories.
+
+But there remains one most important point still under the consideration
+of the Commissioners. It is whether this domain is to be leased to
+builders and managed by them and their successors for some eighty years
+or whether it is to remain under the direct control of the
+Commissioners. All of you who know anything of how much depends on
+management will realize how earnestly I trust that they may decide to
+retain the area, and may feel confident of finding representatives in
+the future to manage it for them on sound financial principles and in
+the best interests of tenants and landlords. Those who know what a
+country landlord can do in a village will realize the influence of wise
+government in such an area. This land is Church land, it adjoins the
+parish church, it is quite near the Talbot Settlement, established by,
+and named after, the Bishop of the diocese; surely it should not pass
+from the control of the owners. If clauses in leases were as wisely
+planned and as strongly enforced as possible, they could still not be
+like the living government of wise owners, and since needs and standards
+are for ever altering, many decisions involving change during the next
+eighty years may be desirable.
+
+
+ PAYMENT OF RATES BY TENANTS.
+
+LETTER OF 1894.—In all these new cottages I am introducing the plan of
+arranging that the tenants should pay their own rates, the rent being
+fixed much lower to enable them to do this.
+
+The plan of making weekly tenants responsible for rates is very
+difficult to work; not being general, the machinery and arrangements do
+not help us. But I have felt it to be very important, as well as to be
+worth a great effort. It may be that some of those in authority will
+realize its value and that we may get some help in time. What would
+conduce most to make the plan succeed would be that some allowance
+should be made for tenants paying their rates in advance, analogous to,
+though not naturally so great as, that made to landlords who compound:
+also that by some means the various payments might be spread over the
+year, falling due at different quarters. This would go far to mitigate
+the difficulty for working people of paying a lump sum down twice a
+year, as is demanded in some London parishes. Weekly or fortnightly
+collection, which I hear is arranged for in Edinburgh, would manifestly
+be more costly, but our tenants would manage a quarterly payment pretty
+easily. However, at present there is no hope of any modification of
+existing arrangements, and we must do our best to fit in with the
+present regulations in the several parishes. I hope that, if we lead the
+van, others will follow, and co-operation may come in time from
+officials. All newly elected vestrymen might, meantime, do well to try
+to secure that fuller facts should be inserted on claims and receipts.
+The words “made,” “due” and “payable” are used in a way not always clear
+to the ratepayer, while the option of paying in separate instalments is
+often not shown clearly on the claims.
+
+This subject, however, is somewhat technical, and I only refer to it
+here because it is interesting me deeply. I think it would tend towards
+municipal economy, likely to tell to the advantage of the time to come.
+
+
+ GARDENS IN LONDON.
+
+LETTER OF 1875.—When I look at the unused bits of ground around a farm
+or cottage, I sometimes think what they would be worth at the back of a
+London house.
+
+But even in the front of their houses in a London court, are the poor
+much better off? I go sometimes on a hot summer evening into a narrow
+court, with houses on each side. The sun has heated them all day, until
+it has driven nearly every inmate out of doors. Those who are not at the
+public-house are standing or sitting on their doorsteps, quarrelsome,
+hot, dirty; the children are crawling or sitting on the hard, hot
+stones, till every corner of the place looks alive. Everyone looks in
+everyone else’s way; the place echoes with words not of the gentlest.
+Sometimes on such a hot summer’s evening, in such a court, when I am
+trying to calm excited women shouting their execrable language at one
+another, I have looked up suddenly and seen one of those bright gleams
+of light the summer sun sends out just before he sets, catching the top
+of a red chimney-pot, and beautiful there, though too directly above
+their heads for the crowd below to notice it much. But to me it brings
+sad thought of the fair and quiet places far away, where it is falling
+softly on tree and hill and cloud, and I feel that that quiet, that
+beauty, that space would be more powerful to calm the wild excess about
+me than all my frantic striving with it.
+
+Leicester Square shows us another thing: such places must be made
+bright, pretty and neat—a small place which is not so becomes painfully
+dreary; it is quite curious to notice how little one feels shut in when
+the barriers are lovely, or contain beautiful things which the eye can
+rest on. The small enclosed leads which too often bound the view of a
+back dining-room in London oppress one like the walls of a prison; but a
+tiny cloistered court of the same size will give a sense of repose; and
+colour introduced into such spaces will give them such beauty as will
+prevent one from fretting against the boundaries. Strange and beautiful
+instance this of how—if we recognize the limitations appointed for us,
+accept them, and deal well with what is given—the passionate longing for
+more is taken away and a great peace hallows all.
+
+
+ THE WORKERS.
+
+LETTER OF 1900.—I have been thinking a great deal about how responsible
+bodies can, in the future, secure such management by trained ladies as
+has been found helpful in the past. This has turned my attention much
+more than heretofore to the thought of how to provide more responsible
+professional workers, for I feel that, however much volunteers may help,
+it is only to professional workers that responsible and continuous
+duties can, as a rule, be entrusted, especially by large owners or
+corporations.
+
+Up to now my professional workers have been among my most zealous and
+selfless colleagues, always ready to take onerous duties, to fill vacant
+places, to slip out of the way and go to new fields when it seemed best,
+always ready to help to train others for management in houses, whether
+in London, the provincial towns, Scotland, Ireland, America, Holland, or
+any other place from which work came, taking their holidays, when best
+they could be spared, and in every way proving themselves true helpers
+by their hearty recognition that what we had to do was to teach,
+initiate and supplement as many earnest workers as we could. What I owe
+to them in the past for the devoted help they have thus rendered for now
+many years, no one will ever know.
+
+But hitherto I or some tried and experienced volunteer have been the
+responsible person to whom private owners, or men of business or
+corporations have entrusted their houses; and it is we who have reported
+upon all business. As a matter of fact, as you all know, we have put all
+management on a business footing, and with few exceptions have charged
+the owners the ordinary 5 per cent. on rental usually paid to
+collectors.
+
+Thinking over all this with regard to the further future and to the
+larger areas that we can cover, it seemed to me that the present plan
+had its limitations. Even if many more such leaders were found, how
+would they be known? Could responsible bodies make plans dependent on
+them? Then I realized that my best plan for the future would be not only
+to train such volunteers as offered and the professional workers whom we
+required, but to train more professional workers than we ourselves can
+use, and, as occasion offers, to introduce them to owners wishing to
+retain small tenements in their own hands and to be represented in them
+by a kind of manager not hitherto existing. The ordinary collector is
+not a man of education, with time to spare, nor does he estimate that
+his duties comprise much beyond a call at the doors for rent brought
+down to him and a certain supervision of repairs that are asked for. If
+there existed a body of ladies trained to more thorough work, qualified
+to supervise more minutely, likely to enter into such details as bear on
+the comfort of home life, they might be entrusted by owners with house
+property. We all can remember how the training of nurses and of teachers
+has raised the standard of work required in both professions. The same
+change might be hoped for in the character of the management of
+dwellings let to the poor. Whether or no volunteers co-operated with
+them would settle itself. At any rate, owners could have, as I have told
+them they should have, besides their lawyer to advise them as to law,
+their architect as to large questions of buildings, their auditor to
+supervise their accounts, also a representative to see to their people
+and to those details of repair and management on which the conduct of
+courts or blocks inhabited by working people depends. Where people live
+close together, share yards, washhouses and staircases, too often there
+is no one whose business it is to supervise and govern the use of what
+is used in common or to see how one tenant’s conduct affects others.
+
+
+ THE WORK.
+
+LETTER OF 1879.—I should like, in my letter this year, to note down what
+it appears to me you are all feeling as to the difference between the
+charge of a court where the people are your tenants and much other
+visiting among the poor. The care of tenants calls out a sense of duty
+founded on relationship; the work is permanent, and the definite
+character of much of it makes its progress marked. Have you ever asked
+yourselves why you have chosen the charge of courts, with all its
+difficulties and ties? The burthen of the problems before you has been
+heavy, and the regularity of the occupation has often demanded of you
+great sacrifices. Why have you not chosen transitory connection with
+hundreds of receivers of soup, or pleasant intercourse with little
+Sunday scholars, or visiting among the aged and bedridden, who were sure
+to greet you with a smile when you went to them and had no right to say
+a word of reproach to you about your long absences in the country? Why
+did you not take up district-visiting, where, if any family did not
+welcome you, you could just stay away? Because you preferred a work
+where duty was continuous and distinct and where it was mutual. Because,
+also, the petty annoyances brought before you at such awkward moments,
+with so little discretion or good-temper—the smoky chimneys, broken
+water-pipes, tiresome neighbours, drunken husbands—as well as the great
+sorrows caused by death, disease, poverty, sin, have called not only for
+your sympathy but for your action. From the greatest to the least, the
+problems have implied some duty on your part. You have each had to ask
+yourself, “What ought I, in my relation to the tenants, to do for them
+in this difficulty?” From the merest trifle of a cupboard key broken in
+the lock to the future of some family desolated by death, or sunk in
+misery through drink, _all_ has asked your sympathy, much has demanded
+your action. I have said the charge of tenants has been valued by you
+also because the duty is mutual: it implies your determination, not
+simply to do kindnesses with liberal hand, popular as that would be, but
+to meet the poor on grounds where they too have duties to you.
+
+
+ SPIRIT OF THE WORK.
+
+LETTER OF 1890.—I will not in this, which is my one letter of the year
+to you, my friends and fellow-workers, enter on the great public
+questions which are attracting an ever-increasing degree of interest.
+
+Whatever be done about free meals, free education (why do we call them
+free, instead of paid for by charity, by rates, or by tax, do you
+think?)—whatever may happen about strikes or immigration from the
+country—for you and me there remain much the same great eternal duties,
+love, thought, justice, liberality, simplicity, hope, industry, for
+ever; still human heart depends on human heart for sympathy, and still
+the old duties of neighbourliness continue. Let us see that we fulfil
+them, each in our own circle, large or small; perhaps we may find the
+fulfilment of them answer more social problems than we quite expected.
+Perhaps we may find changes of system effect little reform unless
+courageous and honest men carry them out with single-mindedness and
+thought for others.
+
+If the free meal, free education, subsidized house accommodation attract
+you, will you pause and remember, first, that they are by no means free,
+but cost someone, somehow, just as much, probably a great deal more,
+than if provided otherhow? The question, if you get rid of the word
+“free,” which is deceptive, clears up a little, and becomes, “Is this
+the best way of, first, providing, and second, paying for these
+necessities?”
+
+And then, having answered this for yourself, see to it that you are
+wholly single-minded if you advocate this sort of subsidy for the poor.
+Be sure you do so neither from cowardice nor from ambition. If, indeed,
+it be pity, genuine kindness and a sense of justice that moves you, then
+the feeling is so good that in some way I believe it will lead you
+right; besides, you will keep your power to watch and see and alter as
+you come face to face with facts, and may modify all systems, and keep
+the desire to do justice and help in whatever way is seen finally to be
+really helpful.
+
+But if you let one touch of terror dim your sight and flinch before the
+most terrible upheaval of rampant force or threat; if, for popular
+favour, or seat at board, or success on platform, you hesitate to speak
+what you know to be true, then shall your cowardice and your ambition be
+indeed answerable for consequences which you little dream of. They may
+come now, or they may come later, but come they will; for only Truth
+abides and will stand the test of time. Let us see that we hold her very
+fast; only those who are loyal to her can.
+
+
+
+
+ VII
+ WOMEN MANAGERS—A CROWN ESTATE[2]
+
+
+Footnote 2:
+
+ Reprinted from _Housing_, the official journal of the Ministry of
+ Health, September 27, 1919, by kind permission of the Controller, H.M.
+ Stationery Office.
+
+
+A scheme of reconstruction which should be of interest to local
+authorities about to exercise the new powers conferred upon them by the
+Housing Act has been undertaken by the Office of Woods on a London
+estate near Regent’s Park, belonging to the Crown.
+
+The area in question lies to the east of Albany Street. It forms part of
+an estate, known as the “Marylebone Farm,” which about a hundred years
+ago was leased by the Office of Woods principally for residential
+purposes, ample provision being made in the type of building for all
+classes. The estate includes the Cumberland Basin, connected with the
+Regent’s Canal; Cumberland Market, an ancient market for the sale of hay
+and straw; and two other open spaces. The Market is now seldom used, but
+it is still paved with setts and furnished with a weighing-house. The
+other two spaces are squares, laid out with trees and shrubs, and are
+managed by the London County Council.
+
+During the last year or two many of the leases of property of the
+tenement class have fallen in, and others, which are not yet quite due,
+have been surrendered by the owners in preference to putting the houses
+into repair.
+
+With the gradual falling in of the leases the Office of Woods were faced
+with the question whether the site was again to be let on lease or
+whether it was to be held and managed on behalf of the Crown. The latter
+course was happily decided upon, and it was resolved to place the
+property immediately under the care of Miss Jeffery, an experienced
+house-property manager, trained under Miss Octavia Hill’s system, who
+has under her a staff of trained women.
+
+The plan of reconstruction, which includes rebuilding most of the houses
+and altering the course of some of the streets, is being prepared by the
+Office of Woods. It is intended to convert Cumberland Market into a
+public garden and to form one or more children’s playgrounds in
+addition.
+
+Rebuilding is hardly to be thought of for the moment. The immediate need
+is to make the existing houses reasonably fit for habitation. Most of
+them are dilapidated and some of them are filthy. Backyards have been
+built over, and in some instances another cottage has been put up, the
+only entrance to which is through the house which faces the street. The
+property has been for the most part badly neglected during the later
+years of the leases, while in the earlier years little care was
+exercised to see that the conditions of the lease were not departed
+from.
+
+Miss Jeffery has opened a small office on the estate, as a centre from
+which the rents of the houses are collected week by week. On their
+visits the women managers find out what repairs are needed to make the
+houses habitable and clean, and supervise the repairs already in hand.
+Miss Jeffery and her assistants are thus in constant touch with the
+tenants, helping them in many ways and inducing them to do their part in
+improving their surroundings. While insisting that necessary alterations
+and cleansing must be carried out forthwith, the managers do their best
+to study the comfort and convenience of the tenants as far as possible.
+If the tenants must be removed for a time, temporary accommodation is
+found for them.
+
+It is intended that the number of licensed houses on the estate shall be
+reduced as the leases fall in, and the managers are taking steps to
+ensure improved management, on Public House Trust lines, of those that
+will remain.
+
+About 170 families (representing a population of nearly 1,000) are
+already paying their rent to the women managers, and fresh houses come
+in every few weeks. The managers, with the Office of Woods behind them,
+believe that the work of reconstructing the estate can be successfully
+accomplished only if they can ensure the good will and co-operation of
+the present tenants. With this end in view, they called a meeting of the
+tenants already on their rent-roll in March last, and suggested the
+formation of a Tenants’ Association. The intentions of the Office of
+Woods with regard to the estate were explained to the meeting, as well
+as the reasons for desiring the tenants themselves to combine and
+co-operate in carrying out the scheme. The Association has been formed,
+a Chairman elected, and several other meetings have since been held. The
+scope of the scheme has been further explained, and points arising in
+the management—such as whether rates should be paid direct to the local
+authority or with the rent—have been discussed. That the powers and
+responsibilities of a Tenants’ Association are beginning to be realized
+is shown by the fact that within the last few days a petition has been
+put forward by the Association, asking that one of the first buildings
+to be put up on the estate may be a building containing rooms in which
+working men’s clubs may be held; at present these clubs, several of
+which have a large number of members, are held in the public-houses
+because there is no other place for them.
+
+The scheme bids fair to be a success. The necessary changes will be
+carried through with the least possible disturbance and friction among
+the tenants, because the women managers have already won the confidence
+of a large number of them. Many tenants do not want to part with their
+old cottages, dirty and dilapidated as they are, and others are afraid
+that, when the new houses are built, they will not be the persons to get
+them. The women managers, being on the spot, will get to know the
+individual needs of each household, and they will use every effort to
+meet the needs of these households when the houses are rebuilt. In the
+meantime, they are in a position to persuade the tenants gradually to
+adopt higher standards of cleanliness and comfort, and so enable them to
+take care of the new houses when they get them.
+
+Local authorities who are about to take over slum areas and reconstruct
+them may find it of advantage to follow the example of the Office of
+Woods and place an area, as soon as it comes into their hands, under the
+management of women educated and trained for this work.
+
+ E. A. C.
+
+
+
+
+ VIII
+ MANAGEMENT OF MUNICIPAL HOUSES IN AMSTERDAM[3]
+
+
+Footnote 3:
+
+ Reprinted from _Housing_, the official journal of the Ministry of
+ Health, July 19, 1920, by kind permission of the Controller, H.M.
+ Stationery Office.
+
+
+The Municipality of Amsterdam has provided, either directly or through
+Public Utility Societies, a large number of dwellings for its
+working-class inhabitants. Up to the present time 4,000 families have
+been housed in these municipal dwellings, 6,000 more dwellings are in
+course of erection, and plans are laid for bringing the total number up
+to 20,000 at no very distant date.
+
+The housing policy of Amsterdam is comprehensive. The town has assumed
+the duty not only of supplying houses to meet the general shortage, but
+of providing houses for those for whom no one else is able or willing to
+find accommodation, and especially for large families. It does not, like
+most English local authorities, select its tenants, but accepts all,
+even the worst class, if they are houseless citizens of Amsterdam.
+
+In these circumstances the question of managing the municipal houses
+becomes a very important one. Mr. Keppler, who has presided over the
+Housing Department of Amsterdam for five years, came over to England to
+see for himself the methods of managing working-class property
+introduced by Miss Octavia Hill, and it was decided, as a result of his
+experience, to appoint women managers to take charge of the municipal
+houses and their tenants on the same lines. The first two women
+appointed had been trained years earlier under Miss Hill in London.
+There is now a staff of thirteen managers working under the Chief Woman
+Manager.
+
+It is the duty of the Chief Manager to receive applications from and to
+interview would-be tenants, to inquire into their circumstances, and to
+allot new or empty houses to those families whose need she considers
+most acute. Great care is taken in assigning the new dwellings. Some
+groups of houses are designed expressly for families with five or more
+children and are reserved for them, while families with a member
+suffering from tuberculosis are placed in dwellings which have a sunny
+balcony or garden.
+
+The managers collect the rents from the tenants in their homes; they
+take a note of any repairs needed and inform the Repairs Department.
+They instruct the women in the use of fittings and apparatus (all the
+municipal houses are fitted with gas cookers and electric light) and
+insist upon the tenancy regulations being observed. They co-operate with
+a number of voluntary societies which help the tenants in various ways.
+
+The majority of tenants are of an average working-class type, and each
+manager looks after some two hundred to three hundred families. But
+since no tenants are rejected for reasons of character, it follows that
+there are among them families which are below the average and a few
+which can be described only as bad; they do not pay their rent promptly,
+they are destructive, or they are noisy, drunken and quarrelsome. When
+families are considered by the managers to belong to this group they are
+removed into one of the special areas set apart for them. They are
+placed in temporary wooden one-story buildings, built in pairs with a
+fair amount of space between. These special areas are in open situations
+on the outskirts of the town. Here the families are under strict
+supervision—a supervision, however, which has always in view the
+education and improvement of the tenant. The manager who has charge of
+one of these areas—on each of which are not more than twenty-five
+families—resides on the spot, in a dwelling similar to those occupied by
+the tenants; she reports weekly to the Chief Manager on the
+circumstances and conduct of each family and does all in her power to
+help and improve them.
+
+The salary of the Chief Woman Manager rises from £350 to £550 a year.
+Her assistants are placed in three groups, according to experience and
+to the responsible nature of their duties. The salary of an apprentice
+during her year’s training is £83; at the end of the year, if found
+satisfactory, she receives £125, rising to £183; after this she may rise
+gradually to £291. During the first twelve months an apprentice must
+attend an evening course of training at the University School of Social
+Work in Amsterdam, where she receives instruction in various branches of
+social work, such as the relief of distress, social hygiene, club
+management, housing and town planning.
+
+The Director of Housing regards the work of the women managers as
+extremely valuable from a social point of view, and he hopes to be able
+to find competent women to take charge of all the houses which the
+municipality are putting up. The salaries of the women managers are a
+fairly heavy charge upon the revenue, but the municipality considers the
+money well spent. They find that the tenants gradually improve, that
+rents are paid promptly and that the property is kept in good order,
+while good tenants appreciate the consideration shown to them and the
+interest taken in their welfare.
+
+ E. A. C.
+
+
+
+
+ IX
+ REPORT ON HOUSE PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
+
+
+In October 1920 the Women’s Section of the Garden Cities and Town
+Planning Association appointed a Sub-Committee to report on the methods
+and practice of House Property Management, especially with regard to
+what is generally called working-class property and management by women.
+
+Having collected evidence from the personal observations of their own
+members and the written statements of other investigators, and having
+taken evidence also from a leading Woman Sanitary Inspector and from the
+first Municipal Woman Housing Officer, the Sub-Committee adopted the
+following principle for general recommendation and as a basis of their
+Report:
+
+
+ That the management of working-class property should be in the hands
+ of persons who have had definite training in estate management and in
+ Social Science.
+
+
+The points considered and reported on are divided under four heads:
+
+ (1) The Classes of Property to be managed.
+
+ (2) The Qualifications of Manager and Assistants.
+
+ (3) The Training necessary.
+
+ (4) Payment.
+
+
+ I. INTRODUCTORY CLASSIFICATION OF MANAGEMENT.
+
+The Sub-Committee desire to point out that until the advent of the Woman
+House Property Manager there is no evidence that any special form of
+Management was considered necessary for the poorer classes of house
+property.
+
+A very general impression has been prevalent that the Management
+suitable for better class property (that is, roughly, property let under
+Agreement in Quarterly and Yearly tenancies) was also suited to tenement
+and small house property let out in weekly tenancies. In fact, no other
+system of management existed until Miss Octavia Hill took up the
+management of weekly tenancies and inaugurated a system of her own.
+
+When well-built properties are in occupation of selected tenants whose
+financial and social circumstances ensure that the property will be
+maintained, with few exceptions, in good condition, the work of
+management is reduced to a minimum and is chiefly occupied with rent
+collecting and simple and regular requirements in the way of upkeep and
+repairs. The assumption in the past that nothing more ought to be needed
+for property of lower grades has too often led to concentration on the
+more difficult collection of rents, with a minimum attention to repairs.
+No attention has been paid to economic and social conditions, and the
+net result has been the production of the slum.
+
+The Sub-Committee believe that the introduction of a suitable form of
+management, insisted on by some recognized authority, could have
+prevented the creation of slums in the past. They further believe that
+it may do so in the future, and that it can, with special effort,
+eradicate much that is evil in present bad areas. Miss Octavia Hill’s
+System put into practice the theory that slums could be eradicated and
+advanced the proposition that management could be made a means to this
+end. She, the first Woman House Property Manager, and workers she
+trained, all of them also women, introduced Social Economics into the
+business of House Property Management. The Sub-Committee feel strongly
+that many social evils might be avoided by the adoption of Social
+Economics into business generally. The distinctive mark of Miss Hill’s
+System is the consideration of the personal, human factor as an integral
+part of the business. The Sub-Committee can find no justification for
+condemning this principle as unbusinesslike.
+
+The Sub-Committee have considered the work done by Miss Hill and those
+who have succeeded her, by visits, and they have read reports of the
+work in various cities and towns in England and Scotland, in Holland
+(see _Women’s Local Government News_, February and March 1921) and in
+America (see _Good Housing that Pays_). They find there is evidence of
+many slum areas redeemed. Improvements by rebuilding have almost
+necessarily accompanied the work in nearly every case, but there are
+striking instances of the maintenance of the original old property in
+excellent sanitary condition. On the other hand, evidences of new
+properties falling into disrepair for lack of management are not
+wanting.
+
+
+ II. MANAGERS.
+
+On all working-class estates, whether of higher or lower grade, there is
+much evidence to show that managers should be in complete control,
+attending to all matters connected with the property, including the
+collection of rents and repairs. There is evidence that the separation
+of responsibility for rent collecting and for ordering and
+superintending repairs leads to delay in repairs, and, in some cases,
+has acted adversely on the rent collecting. Rent collectors who are not
+responsible for repairs are apt to forget to report the need of them.
+
+Whether the manager should be a man or a woman is not, in the opinion of
+the Sub-Committee, so important as that the principle of management
+inaugurated by Miss Hill should be adopted. At the same time, they are
+agreed that it should not be overlooked—
+
+ (1) That the housekeeper is always a woman;
+
+ (2) That the woman usually pays the rent;
+
+ (3) That housekeeping and repairs are closely connected; and
+
+ (4) That, therefore, a woman will usually be better equipped than a
+ man to deal with the problems arising out of the management of
+ working-class property.
+
+Whether a man or woman, the Committee are of opinion that the Manager
+should be properly trained under managers of accepted standing, should
+thoroughly understand the finance and law involved, should be of
+recognized efficiency for superintending repairs and upkeep, and should
+be well-versed in the social problems of the day and the methods of
+dealing with them.
+
+A word should be added on personality. The more social and industrial
+difficulties are represented on an estate the greater will the
+prominence of the personal element be. Whatever the class of property,
+the personal qualifications of the manager are of importance: tact and
+consideration are always necessary. But the successful redemption of a
+slum area will demand specially strong personal qualifications, with
+wide sympathies and broad outlook, and, just as some learned people
+never make good teachers, so some human temperaments will never produce
+good managers, however much “trained.”
+
+The Sub-Committee feel that, on the whole, the splitting of the
+management under separate Departments is inadvisable. Where such
+division has succeeded in the past, it has done so largely because a
+former (pre-war) selection of tenants has kept the most difficult
+problems of management away from it. In bad areas it is most important
+that there should be one Head in as direct contact with the Estate as
+possible, responsible for upkeep and repairs as well as rent collecting
+and selection of tenants.
+
+
+ III. TRAINING.
+
+Now that Housing has taken a foremost place among the questions of
+national importance, it is recognized that the standard of good housing
+cannot be attained unless accompanied by skilled management. From 1864,
+when Miss Hill began her work, house property may be said to have been
+managed on the two systems already indicated. The one—the more
+general—followed by men qualified by the Examinations held for Surveyors
+and Estate Agents. The other followed by women qualified by a high
+standard of education and by special training in Social Economics. The
+training of the men has been thorough on technical, financial and legal
+lines, if too stereotyped and narrow in outlook. The training of the
+women has not been thorough enough on the technical side, and has
+therefore, perhaps, over-emphasized the social side. In the opinion of
+the Sub-Committee an attempt should be made to combine the two courses.
+
+New houses, tenanted as they are mostly by the better class of tenants,
+may be easily managed; but where tenants dispossessed from old houses
+are provided for in modern dwellings, the need is evident for a highly
+trained manager who will add to his or her business and technical
+knowledge an educated interest in social conditions and problems. A
+point in favour of women’s management comes in here. Many of the
+incoming housekeepers have had no experience in using new fittings.
+There have been cases in which the tenants have been unable, through
+lack of knowledge, to clean their porcelain-surfaced or painted bath or
+their earthenware sink, and have been quite at a loss in the matter of
+their close-ranged flues. Where women managers have been at work
+instruction has been given and quick deterioration of appliances
+avoided. In many towns the congestion and overcrowding has been so great
+that it has been difficult even for families with regular incomes and a
+tradition of good housekeeping and homemaking to maintain their
+standard. Where unemployment has made the income uncertain there has
+certainly been a lowering of the standard. When such families go into
+the new houses they need the help of a skilled and tactful adviser if
+they are to become once more makers of happy and comfortable homes. It
+must be remembered that the past has left to the towns of to-day a
+heritage of slums which collect the products of all our social errors
+and are a breeding-ground for every known social evil. Even as the worst
+forms of disease require the skill of the cleverest physician, so such
+properties call for the most highly trained management. From the
+examples the Committee have had before them they find that such
+properties have only been successfully dealt with under the Octavia Hill
+System, and so far only by women.
+
+The London University now grants a Degree in Estate Management, and a
+College of Estate Management will shortly be opened in London which will
+prepare for this Degree. The Sub-Committee have examined the Course laid
+down for the Degree and recommend that steps be taken to obtain some
+recognition of the special need for the management of working-class
+property in its provisions. The College will be open to women as well as
+to men, and it would be well if some alternative or special section of
+the Course could be arranged to meet this need. The lines along which
+training should develop have already been indicated under Managers’
+qualifications. These might easily be arranged in the future at the
+College and on Estates approved by the College or other authority, if
+the good will of that authority can be obtained.
+
+The best course of training would probably be one which combined the
+kind of studies arranged at the Household Science Department at King’s
+College, the London School of Economics and the College of Estate
+Management. All these institutions are linked up to the University of
+London, and they would doubtless be willing to co-operate in this
+matter.
+
+
+ IV. PAYMENT.
+
+Estate Agents are usually paid on Commission, but Housing Managers,
+Superintendents, etc., under big Corporations are paid salaries.
+
+The Sub-Committee do not consider the percentage system a good one,
+especially for lower grade property, which needs the more time and
+skill. Also, where rent varies with the rates, as it does on nearly all
+the properties managed by women, the basis of variation is undesirable
+for such payment.
+
+Women Managers (mostly paid on percentage) have hitherto undertaken the
+work at a sacrifice. Introducing as they did a new system of management,
+their work was intensified, but their percentage remained the same as
+that of the former agents.
+
+The Sub-Committee believe that better pay might be secured by the
+following methods:
+
+ (1) By a wider and more general attempt at organization. One Manager,
+ responsible for the general principle of the Management, could control
+ a large property or groups of properties, with specially appointed
+ superintendents and staff who have been made to understand the spirit
+ and aims of the work.
+
+ (2) By a careful combination of higher grade quarterly tenancies with
+ the lower grade weekly, possibly aided by the promotion of some
+ regular weekly tenancies to monthly payments.
+
+There is very little doubt that management of lower grade properties has
+been made to pay by undesirable means. Key money, percentage fees on
+builders’ bills and other “payments” have crept in—in some cases are
+openly acknowledged and expected. Management should be placed beyond the
+reach of such practices.
+
+Inefficient management is very largely responsible for the slums of
+to-day and has led to the need for slum clearances and the consequent
+enormous expense to the Community. The necessary effort to redeem slum
+areas now can only be successful by management on modern lines—a strong,
+efficient business equipment, based on definite ideals with definite
+social aims. Work on such a foundation cannot fail to bring results, but
+it should be adequately paid. The attempt to overcome the evils of our
+heritage of bad management by the introduction of efficient management
+in bad areas may seem, at first, comparatively costly. It will never be
+quite so costly in the end as inefficient management.
+
+
+ GENERAL REMARKS.
+
+A consideration of the whole situation has led the Sub-Committee to the
+following conclusions:
+
+ (1) While not advocating that all properties should be handed over to
+ women to manage, they are convinced that there are special
+ requirements on certain properties which, at the moment, urgently call
+ for women’s special experience.
+
+ (2) It would be advisable for all Local Authorities to appoint women
+ in their Housing Departments. Birmingham City Council has taken the
+ first step by appointing a “Woman Rent Collector and Supervisor of
+ Houses.”
+
+ (3) That every effort should be made to draw the attention of the
+ Local Authorities to the importance of the need for an improved
+ standard of management.
+
+
+ _Members of Sub-Committee._
+
+ M. M. JEFFERY, _Chairman_.
+ E. A. CHARLESWORTH.
+ D. MEYNELL.
+ F. C. PRIDEAUX } _Members of the Association of_
+ M. GALTON } _Women House Property Managers._
+ E. A. BROWNING, _Secretary_.
+
+ (Signed) GERTRUDE EMMOTT,
+ _Chairman Women’s Section Garden Cities
+ and Town Planning Association_.
+
+
+ _Printed in Great Britain by_
+ UNWIN BROTHERS, LIMITED, THE GRESHAM PRESS, WOKING AND LONDON
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
+
+
+ ● Typos fixed; non-standard spelling and dialect retained.
+ ● Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75837 ***
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+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75837 ***</div>
+
+<div class='tnotes covernote'>
+
+<p class='c000'><strong>Transcriber’s Note:</strong></p>
+
+<p class='c000'>New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the public domain.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='titlepage'>
+
+<div>
+ <h1 class='c001'>HOUSE PROPERTY<br> <span class='xlarge'>&#38; ITS MANAGEMENT</span><br> <span class='large'>SOME PAPERS ON THE METHODS OF MANAGEMENT INTRODUCED BY MISS OCTAVIA HILL AND ADAPTED TO MODERN CONDITIONS</span></h1>
+</div>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<img src='images/i_title.jpg' alt='[Logo]' class='ig001'>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c002'>
+ <div>LONDON: GEORGE ALLEN &#38; UNWIN LTD.</div>
+ <div>RUSKIN HOUSE, 40 MUSEUM STREET, W.C. 1</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c003'>
+ <div><span class='small'><em>First published in 1921</em></span></div>
+ <div class='c004'><span class='small'>(<em>All rights reserved</em>)</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>INTRODUCTION</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div>By <span class='sc'>I. G. Gibbon</span>, D.Sc., C.B.E., Ministry of Health.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>Of standards we have heard much in
+connection with new housing, and,
+quite naturally, nearly always of material
+standards—of the number of houses to the
+acre, the size and the number of rooms, the
+provision of baths and the like; but of
+personal standards little, although persons of
+experience know full well that, where there
+are difficulties, half the trouble, at a moderate
+estimate, could be removed by personal
+action. The experiment of the ownership
+and management of large numbers of houses
+by Local Authorities is not free from the
+hazards of democratic control; some in full
+sympathy with the experiment view it not
+without some misgivings, and the misgivings
+will not be without place if adequate measures
+are not taken for proper management.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is timely, therefore, that we should be
+reminded of the most instructive experiment
+made during the last century in the management
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>of house property, the work of Octavia
+Hill. Her experiment in house management
+would probably have by now won her many
+more practical followers had she been less
+of a social worker; but had she been less
+of a social worker she would never have
+made the experiment. There may still be
+a few of the comparatively small number of
+persons who know of her work who look
+upon it as an attempt to insinuate a District
+Visitor under the disguise of a rent collector.
+District Visitors doubtless have their place
+and season; but the aim of those who would
+follow in the footsteps of Octavia Hill, the
+Women Property Managers, is to manage
+property on a firm business basis, to make
+it pay (and they have shown that they can
+make it pay, more so in difficult circumstances
+than business management of a dull
+routine kind), and to carry out the work
+with knowledge and experience, with sympathy
+and tact, and with as reasonable a
+regard to the genuine interests of the tenants
+as of the owner. This is their aim, and,
+where person and place fit, their achievement.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Octavia Hill’s influence was great in this
+country; but it passed beyond its borders.
+One of the most interesting reports issued in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>recent years on the management of house
+property has been that of the Octavia Hill
+Association, at Philadelphia, who report the
+uniform success of management on the lines
+laid down by Octavia Hill.<a id='r1'></a><a href='#f1' class='c008'><sup>[1]</sup></a> In Holland,
+also, her influence has been great; and at
+Amsterdam, for instance, all municipal house
+property, which is extensive, is managed by
+women who have been trained in her methods.</p>
+
+<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. See <em>Good Housing that Pays</em>, by Fullerton L. Waldo.
+Philadelphia: The Harper Press, 1012-20 Chancellor Street.
+1917.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>The ideal in these matters, I think, is
+self-management, where the tenants in a
+group of houses manage their own affairs
+with a social regard to their own real
+interests, an almost impossible result at the
+present time unless the tenants have a
+substantial financial stake in the property.
+We are very far indeed from this solution
+as yet, though every effort is needed towards
+achieving it; and one disappointing result
+of the State-assisted scheme of houses is the
+very poor showing made by Public Utility
+Societies. But a large measure of self-management
+is not precluded from the
+scheme of management on Octavia Hill’s lines,
+as, indeed, has been demonstrated in practice.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>There should be no spirit of patronage in
+management; if, as happens, the tenant
+comes to look upon the property manager
+as a counsellor and friend, this should grow
+out of the business management and as an
+incident to it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Octavia Hill and her successors did not
+work simply by the light of nature, or believe
+that women, as such, had a God-given
+aptitude for this business, though, house
+management being primarily a matter for
+the wife and mother, it naturally opens a
+field for which women should be well fitted.
+But the same need of instruction arises
+whether the management be by men or by
+women. The pupil has to be put through
+a severe course of training; she has to be
+versed in the most important facts of the
+law as to rents, landlord and tenant, and
+sanitation; she has to be acquainted with
+the defects which occur in houses, and
+how most economically to remedy them.
+Above all, she has to acquire that measure
+of firmness, tact and sympathy without
+which success is not likely to be attained.
+A pupil who is likely to be fully successful
+must have a goodly measure of that personal
+aptitude which, though difficult to test by
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>any system of examination, is as vitally
+necessary as are the essential technical
+qualifications.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If the manager of house property is
+to give of her best, she must be trusted
+with ample responsibility and authority. If
+hampered by restrictions, if limited in
+authority, if not granted powers for selecting
+and dealing with tenants and the control
+of repairs, if she has to refer to superior
+authority, whether an employer or an official
+or a Committee, before action can be taken,
+there is not much hope, even under favourable
+conditions, of more than a bare success.
+Here lies one principal danger, equally of
+autocracy or democracy. It is not good
+business or sound sense to pay a person for
+duties and to relieve her of the real responsibility
+attached to them, including the risk of
+dismissal for failure.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In dealing with slum property the lessons
+of Octavia Hill’s work are exceedingly encouraging.
+Weary years must pass before
+there can be extensive demolition and rebuilding
+of slum areas. Are we therefore
+to lie resigned and allow these grievous
+sores to fester in our cities and towns?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In properly qualified management we have
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>one at least of the keys to a temporary, if
+not a permanent, solution of the problem;
+and in this way we may effectively deal
+with the real evil. The ordinary method of
+clearance and rebuilding has often resulted
+too much in the shifting of the evil to
+another quarter, though it may be, happily,
+in a less concentrated form.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>One incidental gleam from the reading of
+the papers in this volume is of the great
+advances which have really been made in
+housing conditions. We are apt at times,
+not without reason, to gird at the slowness
+with which the manifest evils around us are
+being removed, but it is well occasionally, for
+a proper sense of proportion and for reform
+itself, to be reminded of the great improvements
+which have been achieved.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is important to bear in mind that the
+principles of trained management apply as
+much to privately owned as to public property.
+If the owners of properties in areas
+which are now classed as slums would but
+join together and employ for the common
+management of their property persons trained
+and with aptitude for the work, it is no
+exaggeration to say that within a few years
+a great transformation would be effected in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>the slum problem of London and of other
+towns, a transformation which would not
+only ease the manifold burdens of public
+authorities, but would be less irksome to
+the owners of the property and of untold
+benefit to its occupiers.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Equally important is it to remember that
+the methods of management associated with
+Octavia Hill are as pertinent for new property
+as for old—indeed, in some ways more so,
+for prevention is better than cure. She
+learnt her secrets in dealing with bad property,
+just as the scientist wrests his secrets
+from the pathological. Management of
+house property on the general lines laid
+down by her, adapted and developed, and,
+as I believe, with increasing emphasis on
+co-operative self-management, will help
+materially not only in the minor achievement
+of preventing property from degenerating
+into slums—and this, as experience
+shows, may well happen even with good
+and well-planned property—but in the greater
+achievement of attaining that higher standard
+of contentment and of pride of home and
+locality which should be the aim of all
+those who have the interests of the country
+at heart.</p>
+
+<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span></div>
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>
+The following are some papers written
+by Miss Octavia Hill in connection
+with her housing work.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>They are republished in the hope that
+her methods may be widely adopted in the
+efforts that are now being made to improve
+the very defective housing conditions in
+our cities.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>M. M. JEFFERY.</div>
+ <div class='line'>EDITH NEVILLE.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CONTENTS</h2>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table0'>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c009'></th>
+ <th class='c010'>&#160;</th>
+ <th class='c011'>PAGE</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Introduction.</span> By I. G. Gibbon, D.Sc., C.B.E., Ministry of Health</td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_5'>5</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr><td class='c012' colspan='3'>SELECTIONS FROM OCTAVIA HILL’S WRITINGS</td></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>I.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Management of Houses for the Poor</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_15'>15</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>II.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Cottage Property in London</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_20'>20</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>III.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Blank Court</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_31'>31</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>IV.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Influence of Model Dwellings upon Character</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_39'>39</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>V.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Small Houses in London</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_50'>50</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>VI.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Letters to Fellow-Workers</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_52'>52</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr><td class='c012' colspan='3'>OTHER PAPERS</td></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>VII.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Women Managers—A Crown Estate</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_72'>72</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>VIII.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Management of Municipal Houses in Amsterdam</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_78'>78</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>IX.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Report on House Property Management by a Sub-Committee of the Women’s Section of the Garden Cities and Town Planning Association</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_83'>83</a></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span></div>
+<div class='chapter ph1'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c003'>
+ <div>House Property and its Management</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <h2 class='c005'>I<br> MANAGEMENT OF HOUSES FOR THE POOR<br> <span class='c013'>(1899)</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>Thirty-four years ago, when I first
+began to manage houses inhabited
+by working people, London was in a very
+different state from what it is now,
+and it is useful and interesting to review
+the changes, their effects, and their bearing
+on the special work we are considering
+to-day.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(1) The standard of comfort was far lower
+then than now. In Marylebone, where I
+began work, nearly every family rented but
+one room; now there are hundreds of two-
+and three-roomed tenements. There were
+no cooking-ranges in the rooms; water was
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>hardly ever carried up higher than the
+parlours. There were hardly any amusements
+open to the people; there was no
+underground railway, no trams, few cheap
+omnibuses; there were no free libraries, no
+Education Act, no Board schools. Wages
+were very decidedly lower, hours of work
+were longer. The bright oil-lamps did not
+exist. Food was not so cheap or so various.
+Flowers were never sold in the streets to the
+poor. The people stood in those days far
+more in need of cheer and of help.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(2) The knowledge of sanitary matters had
+penetrated hardly at all; gross ignorance
+prevailed. There were, moreover, few, if
+any, Convalescent Homes, no country holiday
+arrangements. The Building Acts took cognizance
+of very few of the requirements for
+health, and hardly any sanitary measures
+were enforcible—fewer were enforced. Few
+hospitals for infectious diseases existed.
+Many excellent appliances for drainage
+were not invented.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(3) There was not one-tenth part of the
+sympathy and interest in the welfare of the
+people which permeates all classes now.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>From these and many other causes a
+London court in 1864 was a far more degraded
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>and desolate place than it can be now, even
+in the remotest and forlornest region, and
+in taking charge of it one had to do a variety
+of things oneself, where now one finds the
+intelligent and willing co-operation of many
+other agencies.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Again, there were next to no “model”
+dwellings and little power of cheap locomotion,
+so that a court in those days was
+subject to little change of population; the
+same families clung to it, lived, married and
+died in it. Cheap locomotion and facilities
+in reading have brought the different parts of
+London into much closer communication.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Many of these facts made the necessity
+for preserving and regulating the old courts
+and houses far more important than is the
+case now. The old courts are rapidly disappearing,
+and numerous blocks of buildings
+with modern appliances are now scattered
+over most neighbourhoods. But in 1864
+tenants were neither routed out of foul and
+close courts nor would they have been
+received into the rare and select model
+dwellings. Moreover, in the rough courts
+they were little meddled with, and could
+pursue in ignorance their insanitary habits
+further than would be possible now.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>It was very natural, therefore, that my
+first efforts should have been directed to
+rough courts and the inhabitants as I found
+them there. Steady and gradual improvement
+of the people of the houses, without
+selection of the former or sudden reconstruction
+of the latter, was our first duty,
+and my little book on <em>Homes of the London
+Poor</em> tells the history of that early work.
+But if there is one duty more incumbent on
+us than another in such efforts, it is to be
+quick to see where advance is possible, how
+higher standards can be realized, and how
+much old forms may be rightly superseded.
+With certain exceptions in regard to small
+old houses, our work of late years has been
+increasingly in new houses and with chosen
+tenants.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The principles, however, are the same,
+and there is one great fact which the changing
+form has only brought out more and more
+clearly, and that is that the conduct of
+houses or blocks, old or new, so as to secure
+health and comfort and homelike feeling,
+depends on management. One can see any
+day excellent buildings execrably managed,
+and one may see tumble-down old places of
+wretched construction both healthier and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>far more homelike because well managed.
+And I may confidently say that the distinctive
+feature of our work has been that
+of devoting our full strength to management.
+It will be realized at once how much more
+this implies than “rent collecting.” An
+ordinary clerk will go from door to door for
+rents; that is a very different matter from
+managing houses. We have tried, so far as
+possible, to enlist ladies, who would have an
+idea of how—by diligent attention to all
+business which devolves on a landlord, by
+wise rule with regard to all duties which a
+tenant should fulfil, by sympathetic and
+just decisions with a view to the common
+good—a high standard of management could
+be attained: repairs promptly and efficiently
+attended to, references carefully taken up,
+cleaning sedulously supervised, overcrowding
+put an end to, the blessing of ready-money
+payments enforced, accounts strictly kept,
+and, above all, tenants so sorted as to be
+helpful to one another.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>II<br> COTTAGE PROPERTY IN LONDON<br> <span class='c013'>(1866)</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>Two years ago I first had an opportunity
+of carrying out the plan I
+had long contemplated, that of obtaining
+possession of houses to be let in weekly
+tenements to the poor. That the spiritual
+elevation of a large class depended to a
+considerable extent on sanitary reform was,
+I considered, proved, but I was equally
+certain that sanitary improvement itself
+depended upon educational work among
+grown-up people; that they must be urged
+to rouse themselves from the lethargy and
+indolent habits into which they have fallen,
+and freed from all that hinders them from
+doing so. I further believed that any lady
+who would help them to obtain things, the
+need of which they felt themselves, and
+would sympathize with them in their desire
+for such, would soon find them eager to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>learn her view of what was best for them;
+that whether this was so or not, her duty
+was to keep alive their own best hopes and
+intentions, which come at rare intervals,
+but fade too often for want of encouragement.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I laid the plan before Mr. Ruskin, who
+entered into it most warmly. He at once
+came forward with all the money necessary,
+and took the whole risk of the undertaking
+upon himself. He showed me, however,
+that it would be far more useful if it could
+be made to pay; that a working man ought
+to be able to pay for his own house; that
+the outlay upon it ought, therefore, to
+yield a fair percentage upon the capital
+invested. Thus empowered and directed,
+I purchased three houses in my own immediate
+neighbourhood. They were leasehold,
+subject to a small ground-rent. The
+unexpired term of the lease was for fifty-six
+years; this we purchased for £750. We
+spent £78 additional in making a large
+room at the back of my own house, where
+I could meet the tenants from time to time.
+The plan has now been in operation about
+a year and a half; the financial result is
+that the scheme has paid 5 per cent. interest
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>on all the capital (it should be remembered
+that 5 per cent. interest in England on
+house property is equivalent to at least
+8 per cent. in the United States), has
+repaid £48 of the capital; sets of two
+rooms have been let for little more than
+the rent of one, the houses have been kept
+in repair, all expenses have been met for
+taxes, ground-rent and insurance. In this
+case there is no expense for collecting rents,
+as I do it myself, finding it most important
+work; but in all the estimates I put aside
+the usual percentage for it, in case hereafter
+I may require help, and also to prove
+practically that it can be afforded in other
+cases. It should be observed that well-built
+houses were chosen, but they were in
+a dreadful state of dirt and neglect. The
+repairs required were mainly of a superficial
+and slight character; slight in regard to
+expense—vital as to health and comfort.
+The place swarmed with vermin; the papers,
+black with dirt, hung in long strips from the
+walls; the drains were stopped, the water
+supply out of order. All these things were
+put in order, but no new appliances of any
+kind were added, as we had determined
+that our tenants should wait for these until
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>they had proved themselves capable of
+taking care of them. A regular sum is set
+aside for repairs, and this is equally divided
+between the three houses; if any of it
+remains, after breakage and damage have
+been repaired, at the end of the quarter,
+each tenant decides in turn in what way
+the surplus shall be spent, so as to add to
+the comfort of the house. This plan has
+worked admirably; the loss from carelessness
+has decreased to an amazing extent,
+and the lodgers prize the little comforts
+which they have waited for, and seem in a
+measure to have earned by their care, much
+more than those bought with more lavish
+expenditure. The bad debts during the
+whole time the plan has been in operation
+have only amounted to £2 11s. 3d. Extreme
+punctuality and diligence in collecting rents,
+and a strict determination that they shall be
+paid regularly, have accomplished this; as
+a proof of which it is curious to observe
+that £1 3s. 3d. of the bad debts accumulated
+during two months that I was away in the
+country. I have tried to remember, when
+it seemed hardest, that the fulfilment of
+their duties was the best education for the
+tenants in every way. It has given them
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>a dignity and glad feeling of honourable
+behaviour which has much more than
+compensated for the apparent harshness of
+the rule.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Nothing has impressed me more than the
+people’s perception of an underlying current
+of sympathy through all dealings that have
+seemed harsh. Somehow, love and care
+have made themselves felt. It is also wonderful
+that they should prize as they do the
+evenness of the law that is over them. They
+are accustomed to alternate violence of
+passion and toleration of vice. They expected
+a greater toleration, ignorant indulgence and
+frequent almsgiving; but in spite of this
+have recognized as a blessing a rule which
+is very strict, but the demands of which
+they know, and a government which is true
+in word and deed. The plan of substituting
+a lady for a resident landlady of the same
+class as her tenants is not wholly gain. The
+lady will probably have subtler sympathy
+and clearer comprehension of their needs,
+but she cannot give the same minute supervision
+that a resident landlady can. Unhappily,
+the advantage of such a change
+is, however, at present unquestionable. The
+influence of the majority of the lower class
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>of people who sublet to the poor is almost
+wholly injurious. That tenants should be
+given up to the dominion of those whose
+word is given and broken almost as a matter
+of course, whose habits and standards are
+very low, whose passions are violent, who
+have neither large hope nor clear sight,
+nor even sympathy, is very sad. It seems
+to me that a greater power is in the hands
+of landlords and landladies than of schoolteachers—power
+either of life or death,
+physical or spiritual. It is not an unimportant
+question who shall wield it. There
+are dreadful instances in which sin is really
+tolerated and shared; where the lodger who
+will drink most with his landlord is most
+favoured, and many a debt overlooked, to
+compensate for which the price of rooms is
+raised; and thus the steady and sober pay
+more rent to make up for losses caused by
+the unprincipled.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>With the great want of rooms there is in
+this neighbourhood it did not seem right to
+expel families, however large, inhabiting one
+room. Whenever from any cause a room
+was vacant and a large family occupied an
+adjoining one, I have endeavoured to induce
+them to rent the two. To incoming tenants
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>I do not let what seems decidedly insufficient
+accommodation. We have been able to let
+two rooms for four shillings and sixpence,
+whereas the tenants were in many cases
+paying four shillings for one. At first they
+considered it quite an unnecessary expenditure
+to pay more rent for a second room,
+however small the additional sum might be.
+They have gradually learnt to feel the
+comfort of having two rooms, and pay
+willingly for them. (It is not possible to
+form any comparison between the rent of
+rooms in London and New York, the circumstances
+of the two cities being so different;
+but the point to be observed is that,
+by a very small increase of rent, the amount
+of accommodation may be doubled.)</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The pecuniary success of the plan has been
+due to two causes. First, to the absence
+of middlemen; and, secondly, to great
+strictness about punctual payment of rent.
+At this moment not one tenant in any of
+the houses owes any rent, and during the
+whole time, as I have said, the bad debts
+have been exceedingly small. The law
+respecting such tenancies seems very simple,
+and when once the method of proceeding is
+understood, the whole business is easily
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>managed; and I must say most seriously
+that I believe it to be better to pay legal
+expenses for getting rid of tenants than to
+lose by arrears of rent—better for the whole
+tone of the households, kinder to the tenants.
+The rule should be clearly understood and
+the people will respect themselves for having
+obeyed it. The commencement of proceedings
+which are known to be genuine and not
+a mere threat is usually sufficient to obtain
+payment of arrears; in one case only has
+an ejectment for rent been necessary. The
+great want of rooms gives the possessors of
+such property immense power over their
+lodgers. Let them see to it that they use
+it righteously. The fluctuations of work
+cause to respectable tenants the main difficulties
+in paying their rent. I have tried to
+help them in two ways. First, by inducing
+them to save; this they have done steadily,
+and each autumn has found them with a
+small fund accumulated, which has enabled
+them to meet the difficulties of the time
+when families are out of town. In the
+second place, I have done what I could to
+employ my tenants in slack seasons. I
+carefully set aside any work they can do for
+times of scarcity, and I try so to equalize
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>in this small circle the irregularity of work,
+which must be more or less pernicious, and
+which the childishness of the poor makes
+doubly so. They have strangely little power
+of looking forward; a result is to them as
+nothing if it will not be perceptible till
+next quarter! This is very curious to me,
+especially as seen in connection with that
+large hope to which I have alluded, and
+which often makes me think that if I could
+I would carve over the houses the motto,
+“Spem, etiam illi habent, quibus nihil aliud
+restat.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Another beautiful trait in their character
+is their trust; it has been quite marvellous
+to find how great and how ready this is.
+In no single case have I met with suspicion
+or with anything but entire confidence.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is needless to say that there have been
+many minor difficulties and disappointments.
+Each separate person who has failed to rise
+and meet the help that would have been
+so gladly given has been a distinct loss to
+me; for somehow the sense of relation to
+them has been a very real one, and a feeling
+of interest and responsibility has been very
+strong, even where there was least that was
+lovely or lovable in the particular character.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>When they have not had sufficient energy
+or self-control to choose the sometimes hard
+path that has seemed the only right one,
+it would have been hard to part from them,
+except for a hope that others would be able
+to lead them where I have failed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Two distinct kinds of work depend entirely
+on one another if they are to bear their
+full fruit. There is, firstly, the simple fulfilment
+of a landlady’s bounden duties, and
+uniform demand of the fulfilment of those
+of the tenants. We have felt ourselves
+bound by laws which must be obeyed,
+however hard obedience might often be.
+Then, secondly, there is the individual friendship
+which has grown up from intimate
+knowledge and from a sense of dependence
+and protection. Knowledge gives power to
+see the real position of families; to suggest
+in time the inevitable result of certain
+habits; to urge such measures as shall
+secure the education of the children and
+their establishment in life; to keep alive
+the germs of energy; to waken the gentler
+thought; to refuse resolutely to give any
+help but such as rouses self-help; to cherish
+the smallest lingering gleam of self-respect;
+and, finally, to be near with strong help
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>should the hour of trial fall suddenly and
+heavily, and to give it with the hand and
+heart of a real old friend, who has filled
+many relations besides that of almsgiver,
+who has long ago given far more than
+material help, and has thus earned the right
+to give this lesser to the most independent
+spirits.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>III<br> BLANK COURT<br> <span class='c013'>(1871)</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>How this relation between landlord and
+tenant might be established in some
+of the lowest districts of London, and with
+what results, I am about to describe by
+relating what has been done in the last
+two years in Blank Court.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In many of the houses the dustbins were
+utterly unapproachable, and cabbage-leaves,
+stale fish and every sort of dirt were lying
+in the passages and on the stairs; in some
+the back kitchen had been used as a dustbin,
+but had not been emptied for years, and the
+dust filtered through into the front kitchens,
+which were the sole living and sleeping
+rooms of some families; in some, the kitchen
+stairs were many inches thick with dirt,
+which was so hardened that a shovel had to
+be used to get it off; in some there was
+hardly any water to be had; the wood was
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>eaten away, and broken away; windows
+were smashed, and the rain was coming
+through the roofs. At night it was still
+worse; and during the first winter I had
+to collect the rents chiefly then, as the
+inhabitants, being principally costermongers,
+were out nearly all day, and they were afraid
+to entrust their rent to their neighbours.
+It was then that I saw the houses in their
+most dreadful aspect. I well remember wet,
+foggy Monday nights, when I turned down
+the dingy court, past the brilliantly lighted
+public-house at the corner, past the old
+furniture outside the shops, and dived into
+the dark, yawning passage-ways. The front
+doors stood open day and night, and as I
+felt my way down the kitchen stairs, broken,
+and rounded by the hardened mud upon
+them, the foul smells which the heavy,
+foggy air would not allow to rise met me as
+I descended, and the plaster rattled down
+as I groped along. It was truly appalling to
+think that there were human beings who
+lived habitually in such an atmosphere,
+with such surroundings. Sometimes I had
+to open the kitchen door myself, after
+knocking several times in vain, when a
+woman, quite drunk, would be lying on the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>floor on some black mass which served as a
+bed; sometimes, in answer to my knocks,
+a half-drunken man would swear, and thrust
+the rent-money out to me through a chink
+of the door, placing his foot against it so
+as to prevent it opening wide enough to
+admit me. Always it would be shut again
+without a light being offered to guide me up
+the pitch-dark stairs. Such was Blank Court
+in the winter of 1869. Truly, a wild, lawless,
+desolate little kingdom to come to rule over.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>On what principles was I to rule these
+people? On the same as I had already
+tried, and tried with success, in other places,
+and which I may sum up as the two following:
+firstly, to demand a strict fulfilment of their
+duties to me—one of the chief of which
+would be the punctual payment of rent;
+and secondly, to endeavour to be so unfailingly
+just and patient that they should
+learn to trust the rule that was over them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>With regard to details, I would make a
+few improvements at once, such, for example,
+as the laying on of water and repairing of
+dustbins; but, for the most part, improvements
+should be made only by degrees, as
+the people became more capable of valuing
+them and not abusing them. I would have
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>the rooms distempered and thoroughly
+cleansed as they became vacant, and then
+they should be offered to the more cleanly
+of the tenants. I would have such repairs
+as were not immediately needed used as a
+means of giving work to the men in times
+of distress. I would draft the occupants of
+the underground kitchens into the upstairs
+rooms, and would ultimately convert the
+kitchens into bathrooms and washhouses.
+I would have the landlady’s portion of the
+house—i.e. the stairs and passages—at once
+repaired and distempered, and they should
+be regularly scrubbed, and, as far as possible,
+made models of cleanliness, for I knew, from
+former experience, that the example of this
+would, in time, silently spread itself to the
+rooms themselves, and that payment for this
+work would give me some hold over the
+older girls. I would collect savings personally,
+not trust to their being taken to distant
+banks or savings clubs. And, finally, I
+knew that I should learn to feel these people
+as my friends, and so should instinctively
+feel the same respect for their privacy and
+their independence, and should treat them
+with the same courtesy that I should show
+towards any other personal friends. There
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>would be no interference, no entering their
+rooms uninvited, no offer of money or the
+necessaries of life. But when occasion presented
+itself I should give them any help I
+could, such as I might offer without insult
+to other friends—sympathy in their distresses;
+advice, help and counsel in their
+difficulties; introductions that might be of
+use to them; means of education; visits to
+the country; a lent book when not able
+to work; a bunch of flowers brought on
+purpose; an invitation to any entertainment,
+in a room built at the back of my
+own house, which would be likely to give
+them pleasure. I am convinced that one of
+the evils of much that is done for the poor
+springs from the want of delicacy felt, and
+courtesy shown, towards them, and that we
+cannot beneficially help them in any spirit
+different to that in which we help those
+who are better off. The help may differ in
+amount, because their needs are greater.
+It should not differ in kind.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I have learned to know that people are
+ashamed to abuse a place they find cared for.
+They will add dirt to dirt till a place is
+pestilential, but the more they find done for
+it, the more they will respect it, till at last
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>order and cleanliness prevail. It is this
+feeling of theirs, coupled with the fact that
+they do not like those whom they have
+learned to love, and whose standard is higher
+than their own, to see things which would
+grieve them, which has enabled us to accomplish
+nearly every reform of outward things
+that we have achieved; so that the surest
+way to have any place kept clean is to go
+through it often yourself.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Amongst the many benefits which the
+possession of the houses enables us to confer
+on the people, perhaps one of the most
+important is our power of saving them from
+neighbours who would render their lives
+miserable. It is a most merciful thing to
+protect the poor from the pain of living in
+the next room to drunken, disorderly people.
+“I am dying,” said an old woman to me the
+other day; “I wish you would put me where
+I can’t hear S—— beating his wife. Her
+screams are awful. And B—— too, he do
+come in so drunk. Let me go over the way
+to No. 30.” Our success depends on duly
+arranging the inmates; not too many
+children in any one house, so as to overcrowd
+it; not too few, so as to overcrowd
+another; not two bad people side by side,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>or they drink together; not a terribly bad
+person beside a very respectable one.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It appears to me, then, to be proved by
+practical experience that when we can induce
+the rich to undertake the duties of landlords
+in poor neighbourhoods, and ensure a sufficient
+amount of the wise, personal supervision
+of educated and sympathetic people acting
+as their representatives, we achieve results
+which are not attainable in any other way.
+I would call upon those who may possess
+cottage property in large towns to consider
+the immense power they thus hold in their
+hands and the large influence for good they
+may exercise by the wise use of that power.
+When they have to delegate it to others,
+let them take care to whom they commit
+it; and let them beware lest, through the
+widely prevailing system of subletting, this
+power ultimately abide with those who have
+neither the will nor the knowledge which
+would enable them to use it beneficially.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is on these things and their faithful
+execution that the life of the whole matter
+depends, and by which steady progress is
+ensured. It is the smaller things of the
+world that colour the lives of those around
+us, and it is on persistent efforts to reform
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>these that progress depends; and we may
+rest assured that they who see with greater
+eyes than ours have a due estimate of the
+service, and that if we did but perceive
+the mighty principles underlying these tiny
+things we should rather feel awed that we
+are entrusted with them at all, than scornful
+and impatient that they are no larger.
+What are we that we should ask for more
+than that God should let us work for Him
+among the tangible things which He created
+to be fair and the human which He redeemed
+to be pure? From time to time He lifts
+a veil and shows us, even while we struggle
+with imperfections here below, that towards
+which we are working—shows us how, by
+governing and ordering the tangible things
+one by one, we may make of this earth a fair
+dwelling-place. And, far better still, how,
+by cherishing human beings, He will let us
+help Him in His work of building up temples
+meet for Him to dwell in—faint images of
+that best Temple of all which He promised
+that He would raise up on the third day,
+though men might destroy it.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>IV<br> THE INFLUENCE OF MODEL DWELLINGS UPON CHARACTER<br> <span class='c013'>(1892)</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>As it now seems fairly clear that the
+working population of London is
+likely to be more and more housed in
+“blocks,” it is not very profitable to spend
+time in considering whether this is a fact to
+rejoice in or to deplore, except so far as the
+consideration may enable us to see how far
+the advantages of the change may be increased
+or the drawbacks diminished. The
+advantages of the change are very apparent
+and are apt to appear overwhelming, and
+the disadvantages are apt to be dismissed as
+somewhat sentimental or inevitable. I have,
+however, little to say upon advantages.
+They may, I think, be briefly summed up
+under two heads. It is supposed that better
+sanitary arrangements are secured in blocks.
+It is also certain that all inspection and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>regulation are easier in blocks; and on inspection
+and regulation much of our modern
+legislation, much of our popular hope is
+based.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>With regard to the sanitary arrangements,
+I think all who are at all conversant with
+the subject are beginning to be aware that
+these at least may be as faulty in blocks as
+in smaller buildings; but it is undoubtedly
+true that even where this is so, the publicity
+of the block enables inspection to be carried
+out much more easily, and so, theoretically
+at least, a certain standard can be enforced.
+And though this is not quite so true in
+actual practice as those who put their faith
+in enforcement of sanitary law are apt to
+imagine, still it is true, and it is a very
+distinct advantage to be noted.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Your readers may be astonished that I do
+not put down the greater economy of the
+block system as a distinct gain, but I am
+not so wholly sure as may seem that it
+exists. For, first, room by room the block
+dwellings are not at all invariably cheaper
+than those in small houses. Moreover, I
+think we can hardly permit, and assuredly
+cannot permanently congratulate and pride
+ourselves upon, a form of construction which
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>admits so very little sunlight into lower
+floors. So that to the present cost of block
+buildings must, I should think, be fairly
+added in the future such diminution of
+height or such increase of yard space as
+would allow of the freer entrance of air
+and light. This would increase the ground-rent
+payable on each room. I think also
+that the cheapness of erecting many-storied
+buildings is exaggerated. I have built very
+few blocks, but I have been consulted about
+some, and I have more than once proved in
+£ s. d. that cutting off a story from the
+block as shown in the plans was a very
+small net loss, when cost of building, saving
+on rates, repairs, etc., and possibly even
+diminution in wall thickness, justified by the
+lower elevation, were taken into account.
+We must also remember the increase of rent
+gladly paid by the sober and home-loving
+man for ground-floor rooms lighter and
+pleasanter than if overshadowed by high
+blocks. I do not wish to generalize—the
+matter is one of £ s. d.—but I say that the
+figures are well worth careful study on each
+building scheme, and that, as far as the
+model dwellings are concerned, I think their
+undue height in proportion to width of yard
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>has sometimes been due to the mistaken
+zeal for accommodating numbers of families.
+I say mistaken, for with our increased means
+of cheap transit we should try to scatter
+rather than to concentrate our population,
+especially if the concentration has to be
+secured by dark lower rooms.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>With regard to the disadvantages of blocks,
+I think they may be divided into those which
+may be looked upon, by such of us as are
+hopeful, as probably transitory, and those
+which seem, so far as we can see, quite
+essential to the block system. The transitory
+ones are by far the most serious. They are
+those which depend on the enormously
+increasing evil which grows up in a huge
+community of those who are undisciplined
+and untrained. They disappear with civilization;
+they are, so far as I know, entirely
+absent in large groups of blocks where the
+tenants are the quiet, respectable working-class
+families who, to use a phrase common
+in London, “keep themselves to themselves,”
+and whose well-ordered, quiet little homes,
+behind their neat little doors with bright
+knockers, nicely supplied with well-chosen
+appliances, now begin to form groups
+where responsible, respectable citizens live
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>in cleanliness and order. Under rules they
+grow to think natural and reasonable, inspected
+and disciplined, every inhabitant
+registered and known, School Board laws and
+laws of the landlord or company regularly
+enforced, every infectious case of illness
+instantly removed, all disinfecting done at
+public cost, is developed a life of law, regular,
+a little monotonous, and not encouraging
+any great individuality, but consistent with
+happy home life, and it promises to be the
+life of the respectable London working man.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>On the other hand, what life in blocks is
+to the less self-controlled hardly any words
+of mine are strong enough to describe, and
+it is abhorred accordingly by the tidy and
+striving, wherever any—even a small number—of
+the undisciplined are admitted to
+blocks, or where, being admitted, there is
+no real living rule exercised. Regulations
+are of small avail; no public inspection can
+possibly, for more than an hour or two,
+secure order; no resident superintendent has
+at once conscience, nerve and devotion
+single-handed to stem the violence, the dirt,
+the noise, the quarrels; no body of public
+opinion on the part of the tenants themselves
+asserts itself: one by one the tidier
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>ones depart disheartened, the rampant remain
+and prevail, and often, though with a
+very fair show to the outsider, the block
+becomes a sort of pandemonium. No one
+who is not in and out day by day, or, better
+still, night after night; no one who does not
+watch the swift degradation of children
+belonging to tidy families; no one who does
+not know the terrorism exercised by the
+rough over the timid and industrious poor;
+no one who does not know the abuse of
+every appliance provided by the benevolent
+or speculative but non-resident landlord,
+can tell what life in blocks is where the
+population is low class. Sinks and drains
+are stopped; yards provided for exercise
+must be closed because of misbehaviour;
+boys bathe in the drinking-water cisterns;
+washhouses on staircases—or staircases
+themselves—become the nightly haunt of
+the vicious, the Sunday gambling places of
+boys; the yell of the drunkard echoes
+through the hollow passages; the stairs
+are blocked by dirty children, and the life
+of any decent hard-working family becomes
+intolerable.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The very same evils are nothing like
+as injurious where the families are more
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>separate, so that, while in smaller houses one
+can often try difficult tenants with real hope
+of their doing better, it is wholly impossible
+usually to try (or to train) them in blocks.
+The temptations are greater, the evils of
+relapse are far greater. It is like taking a
+bad girl into a school. Hence the enormous
+importance of keeping a large number of
+small houses wherever possible for the better
+training of the rowdy and the protection of
+the quiet and gentle; and I would implore
+well-meaning landlords to pause before they
+clear away small houses and erect blocks,
+with any idea of benefiting the poorer class
+of people. The change may be inevitable,
+it may have to come, but as they value the
+life of our poorer fellow-citizens, let them
+pause before they throw them into a corporate
+life for which they are not ready, and which
+will, so far as I can see, not train them to
+be ready for it. Let them either ask tidy
+working people they know, or learn for
+themselves, whether I am not right in
+saying that in the shabbiest little two-,
+four-, six- or eight-roomed house, with all
+the water to carry upstairs, with one little
+w.c. in a tiny backyard, with perhaps one
+dustbin at the end of the court, and even,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>perhaps, with a dark little twisted staircase,
+there are not far happier, better, yes, and
+healthier homes than in the blocks where
+lower-class people share and do not keep in
+order far better appliances.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And let them look the deeper into this
+in so far as our reformers who trust to
+inspection for all education, our would-be
+philanthropists or newspaper correspondents
+who visit a court or block once and think
+they have seen it, even our painstaking
+statisticians who catalogue what can be
+catalogued, are unable to deal with these
+facts. Those who know the life of the poor
+know—those who watch the effect of letting
+to a given family a set of rooms in a block
+in a rough neighbourhood, or rooms in a
+small house in the same district, know—those
+who remember how numerous are the
+kinds of people to whom they must refuse
+rooms in a block for their own sake, or that
+of others, know. To the noisy drunkard one
+must say, “For the quiet people’s sake,
+No”; to the weak drunkard one must say,
+“You would get led away, No”; to the
+young widow with children one must say,
+“Would not you be better in a small house
+where the resident landlady would see a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>little to the children?” thinking in one’s
+heart also, “and to you.” For the orphaned
+factory girl who would “like to keep mother’s
+home together” one feels a less public life
+safer; for the quiet family who care to
+bring up their children well one fears the
+bad language and gambling on the stairs.
+For the strong and self-contained and self-reliant
+it may be all right, but the instinct
+of the others who cling on to the smaller
+houses is right for them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>For, after all, the “home”—the “life”—does
+not depend on the number of appliances,
+or even in any deep sense on the sanitary
+arrangements. I heard a workman once
+say, with some coarseness but with much
+truth, “Gentlemen think if they put a
+water-closet to every room they have made
+a home of it,” and the remark often recurs
+to me for the element of truth there is in it,
+and there is more decency in many a tiny
+little cottage in Southwark, shabby as it
+may be—more family life in many a one
+room let to a family—than in many a
+populous block. And this is due partly
+to the comparative peace of the more
+separate home: for it seems as if a certain
+amount of quiet and even of isolation
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>made family life and neighbourly kindness
+more possible. People become brutal in
+large numbers who are gentle when they are
+in smaller groups and know one another,
+and the life in a block only becomes possible
+when there is a deliberate isolation of the
+family and a sense of duty with respect to
+all that is in common. The low-class people
+herd on the staircases and corrupt one
+another, where those a little higher would
+withdraw into their little sanctum. But in
+their own little house, or as lodgers in a
+small house, the lower-class people get the
+individual feeling and notice which often
+trains them in humanity.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Whatever may be the way out of the
+difficulty, let us hope that it may come
+before great evil is done by the massing
+together of herds of untrained people, and
+by the ghastly abuse of staircases, open all
+night but not under public inspection, not
+easily inspected even if nominally so placed.
+The problem is one we ought all, so far as
+in us lies, to lay to heart and do what we
+can to solve. I have not dwelt here on what
+may be called the “sentimental” objections
+to blocks. The first is the small scope they
+give for individual freedom. The second is
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>their painful ugliness and uninterestingness in
+external look, which is nearly always connected
+with the first. For difference is at
+least interesting and amusing, monotony
+never. Let us hope that when we have
+secured our drainage, our cubic space of air,
+our water on every floor, we may have time
+to live in our homes, to think how to make
+them pretty, each in our own way, and to
+let the individual characteristics they take
+from our life in them be all good, as well as
+healthy and beautiful, because all human
+life and work were surely meant to be like
+all Divine creations, lovely as well as good.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>V<br> SMALL HOUSES IN LONDON<br> <span class='c013'>(1886)</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>“Land is too valuable in London for
+us to build cottages, we must have
+blocks.” Let that be granted for the
+moment; but that does not preclude those
+who own such cottages from keeping them
+where they are built. And I wish that any
+words of mine might avail with even one
+such owner, to induce him to pause and
+consider, very seriously, whether, at any
+rate for a time, he might not manage to
+drain and improve water supply and roofs,
+and thoroughly clean such old buildings,
+instead of sweeping them away. As to cost,
+the cottages are far more valuable than the
+cleared space; as to health, they may be
+made, at a small cost, far more healthy than
+any but the very best constructed and best
+managed blocks. As to the life possible in
+them—of which the charitable and reforming
+and legislating bodies know so little—it is
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>incomparably happier and better. Let us
+keep them while we can.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And suppose we grant that London is
+coming to block buildings, and must come to
+them; the preservation of the cottages gives
+time for the question of management to be
+studied and perfected. The improvement
+may come from the training and subsequent
+employment of ladies like my own fellow-workers,
+under the directors of large companies
+and in conjunction with good resident
+superintendents. Or it may come from the
+co-operation of a consultative body of good
+tenants, to assist the managers. Or it may
+come by the steady improvement of the main
+body of the roughest tenants, making them
+gradually fitted to use things in common.
+But, seeing in all classes how difficult it is
+to get anything cared for which is used in
+common, unless there be some machinery for
+its management, I think this latter remedy
+should rather be counted on as making the
+work easier than as sufficient in itself.
+While I am on this subject, may I remark
+that it would be well if those who build
+blocks would consider, in settling their plans,
+what machinery they are mainly trusting to
+for securing good order?</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>VI<br> LETTERS TO FELLOW-WORKERS</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>In 1872 Miss Octavia Hill began the practice
+of writing at the end of each year a
+letter which was sent to all who were associated
+with her in her work. The following
+are some selections:</p>
+
+<h3 class='c014'><span class='sc'>Work under the Ecclesiastical Commissioners.</span></h3>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='sc'>Letter of 1902.</span>—During the past year
+the Ecclesiastical Commissioners asked us to
+take charge of some of their property, of
+which the leases fell in, in Southwark and
+Lambeth.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In Southwark the area had been leased
+long ago on the old-fashioned tenure of
+“lives.” That is, it was held not for a
+specified term of years, but subject to
+the life of certain persons. The lease fell
+in, therefore, quite suddenly, and fifty of
+the houses, which were occupied by working
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>people, were placed under my care. I had
+only four days’ notice before I had to begin
+collecting. It was well for us that my fellow-workers
+rose to the occasion and at once
+undertook the added duties; well, too, that
+we were then pretty strong in workers. It
+was a curious Monday’s work. The houses
+having been let and sublet, I could be
+furnished with few particulars. I had a
+map and the numbers of the houses, which
+were scattered in various streets over the
+five acres which had reverted to the Commissioners,
+but I had no tenant’s name nor
+the rental of any tenement, nor did the
+tenants know or recognize the written
+authority, having long paid to other landlords.
+I subdivided the area geographically
+between my two principal South London
+workers, and I went to every house, accompanied
+by one or other of them. I learnt
+the name of the tenant, explained the circumstances,
+saw their books and learnt
+their rental, and finally succeeded in obtaining
+every rent. Many of the houses required
+much attention, and since then we have been
+busily employed in supervising necessary
+repairs. The late lessees were liable for
+dilapidations, and I felt once more how
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>valuable to us it was to represent owners
+like the Commissioners, for all this legal and
+surveying work was done ably by responsible
+and qualified men of business, while we were
+free to go in and out among the tenants,
+watch details, report grievous defects, decide
+what repairs essential to health should be
+done instantly. We have not half done all
+this, but we are steadily progressing.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The very same day the Commissioners
+sent to me about this sudden accession of
+work in Southwark, they asked me whether
+I could also take over one hundred and
+sixty houses in Lambeth. I had known
+that this lease was falling in to them,
+and I knew that they proposed rebuilding
+for working people on some seven acres
+there, and would consult me about this.
+But I had no idea that they meant to ask
+me to take charge of the old cottages pending
+the rebuilding. However, we were able to
+undertake this, and it will be a very great
+advantage to us to get to know the tenants,
+the locality, the workers in the neighbourhood,
+before the great decisions about rebuilding
+are made. In this case I had the
+advantage of going round with the late
+lessee, who gave me names, rentals and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>particulars, and whose relations with his
+late tenants struck me as very satisfactory
+and human. On this area our main duties
+have been to induce tenants to pay who
+knew that their houses were coming down
+(in this we have succeeded), to decide those
+difficult questions of what to repair in
+houses soon to be destroyed, to empty one
+portion of the area where cottages are
+first to be built, providing accommodation
+elsewhere so far as is possible, and to arrange
+the somewhat complicated minute details as
+to rates and taxes payable for cottages
+partly empty, temporarily empty, on assessments
+which had all to be ascertained, and
+where certain rates in certain houses for
+certain times only were payable by the
+owners whom we represent.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Letter of 1903.</span>—The past year has
+brought one very large expansion of our work,
+larger than that of any previous year; and
+it is started on independent lines, in a way
+which gives hope for future growth. The
+Ecclesiastical Commissioners wrote to tell me
+in the autumn that an area in South London
+containing twenty-two acres, and with between
+five hundred and six hundred houses
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>on it, was falling in to them at the expiration
+of a long lease, and they asked me to
+undertake the management of the property.
+Bearing in mind what they themselves had
+said as to providing for the continuity of
+such work, and with a deep desire not to
+lose near touch with my own old tenants,
+workers and places, if I spread my time
+over still larger areas, I set myself to think
+whether this new work might not be started
+from a new centre, and have been fortunate
+enough to be able to recommend a lady of
+great power and experience, who consents to
+undertake this new property, with direct
+responsibility to the Commissioners.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It was a huge undertaking, and needed
+much care and labour to start it well, and
+naturally we were all keen to help. It was
+a great day when we took over the place.
+Our seconds-in-command took command
+manfully for a fortnight of all our old courts,
+and fourteen of us met on Monday, October
+5th, to take over the estate and collect from
+five hundred to six hundred tenants wholly
+unknown to us. We organized it all thoughtfully;
+we had fifteen collecting books and all
+the tenants’ books prepared, opened a bank
+account, found a room as an office, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>divided the area among the workers. Our
+first duty was to get the tenants to recognize
+our authority and pay us. I think we were
+very successful; we got every tenant on the
+estate to pay us without any legal process,
+except one who was a regular scamp. We
+collected some £250, most of it in silver,
+and got it safely to the bank. Then came
+the question of repairs; there were written
+in the first few weeks one thousand orders for
+these, although, as the whole area is to be
+rebuilt, we were only doing actually urgent
+and no substantial ones. All these had to
+be overlooked and reported on and paid for.
+Next came pouring in the claims for borough
+and water rates. We had to ascertain the
+assessments of every house, the facts as to
+whether landlord or tenant was responsible,
+whether the rates were compounded for or
+not, what allowance was to be claimed for
+empty houses or rooms. There were two
+Water Companies supplying the area, and we
+had to learn which supplied each house.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The whole place was to be rebuilt, and even
+the streets rearranged and widened, and I
+had promised the Commissioners I would
+advise them as to the future plans. These
+had to be prepared at the earliest date
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>possible, the more so as the sanitary authorities
+were pressing, and sent in one hundred
+orders in the first few days we were there.
+It is needless to say with what speed, capacity
+and zeal the representatives of the Commissioners
+carried on their part of these
+preparations, and they rapidly decided on
+which streets should be first rebuilt. But
+this only implied more to be done, for we
+had to empty the streets swiftly, and that
+meant patching up all possible empty houses
+in other streets and moving the tenants
+into them. Fortunately, there were several
+houses empty, the falling in of the leases
+having scared some people away. The Commissioners
+had decided to close all the
+public-houses on the estate, and we let one
+to a girls’ club, and had to put repairs in
+hand to fit it for its changed destination.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The matter now stands thus: we have got
+through the first quarter; have collected
+£2,672, mostly in silver; the quarter’s
+accounts are nearly ready to send in; we
+have completed the most pressing repairs;
+have emptied two streets, and plans for
+rebuilding them are decided on; tenders
+have been accepted for these, and they
+have been begun. Plans have been prepared
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>for rebuilding and rearrangement of
+the whole estate, and these are now before
+the Commissioners for their consideration.
+They provide a site for rebuilding the parish
+school, an area of about an acre as a public
+recreation ground, the substitution of four
+wide for three narrow streets, and afford
+accommodation for 790 families in four-roomed
+and six-roomed cottages, cottage
+flats, and flats of three- and two-roomed
+tenements in houses in no case higher than
+three stories.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But there remains one most important
+point still under the consideration of the
+Commissioners. It is whether this domain
+is to be leased to builders and managed by
+them and their successors for some eighty
+years or whether it is to remain under the
+direct control of the Commissioners. All of
+you who know anything of how much
+depends on management will realize how
+earnestly I trust that they may decide to
+retain the area, and may feel confident of
+finding representatives in the future to
+manage it for them on sound financial
+principles and in the best interests of tenants
+and landlords. Those who know what a
+country landlord can do in a village will
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>realize the influence of wise government in
+such an area. This land is Church land, it
+adjoins the parish church, it is quite near
+the Talbot Settlement, established by, and
+named after, the Bishop of the diocese;
+surely it should not pass from the control of
+the owners. If clauses in leases were as
+wisely planned and as strongly enforced as
+possible, they could still not be like the
+living government of wise owners, and since
+needs and standards are for ever altering,
+many decisions involving change during the
+next eighty years may be desirable.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c014'><span class='sc'>Payment of Rates by Tenants.</span></h3>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='sc'>Letter of 1894.</span>—In all these new cottages
+I am introducing the plan of arranging that
+the tenants should pay their own rates, the
+rent being fixed much lower to enable them
+to do this.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The plan of making weekly tenants responsible
+for rates is very difficult to work; not
+being general, the machinery and arrangements
+do not help us. But I have felt it
+to be very important, as well as to be worth
+a great effort. It may be that some of
+those in authority will realize its value and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>that we may get some help in time. What
+would conduce most to make the plan succeed
+would be that some allowance should
+be made for tenants paying their rates in
+advance, analogous to, though not naturally
+so great as, that made to landlords who
+compound: also that by some means the
+various payments might be spread over the
+year, falling due at different quarters. This
+would go far to mitigate the difficulty for
+working people of paying a lump sum down
+twice a year, as is demanded in some London
+parishes. Weekly or fortnightly collection,
+which I hear is arranged for in Edinburgh,
+would manifestly be more costly, but our
+tenants would manage a quarterly payment
+pretty easily. However, at present there is
+no hope of any modification of existing
+arrangements, and we must do our best to
+fit in with the present regulations in the
+several parishes. I hope that, if we lead
+the van, others will follow, and co-operation
+may come in time from officials. All newly
+elected vestrymen might, meantime, do well
+to try to secure that fuller facts should be
+inserted on claims and receipts. The words
+“made,” “due” and “payable” are used
+in a way not always clear to the ratepayer,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>while the option of paying in separate
+instalments is often not shown clearly on
+the claims.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This subject, however, is somewhat technical,
+and I only refer to it here because it
+is interesting me deeply. I think it would
+tend towards municipal economy, likely to
+tell to the advantage of the time to come.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c014'><span class='sc'>Gardens in London.</span></h3>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='sc'>Letter of 1875.</span>—When I look at the
+unused bits of ground around a farm or
+cottage, I sometimes think what they
+would be worth at the back of a London
+house.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But even in the front of their houses in a
+London court, are the poor much better off?
+I go sometimes on a hot summer evening
+into a narrow court, with houses on each
+side. The sun has heated them all day,
+until it has driven nearly every inmate out
+of doors. Those who are not at the public-house
+are standing or sitting on their doorsteps,
+quarrelsome, hot, dirty; the children
+are crawling or sitting on the hard, hot
+stones, till every corner of the place looks
+alive. Everyone looks in everyone else’s
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>way; the place echoes with words not of the
+gentlest. Sometimes on such a hot summer’s
+evening, in such a court, when I am trying
+to calm excited women shouting their execrable
+language at one another, I have
+looked up suddenly and seen one of those
+bright gleams of light the summer sun sends
+out just before he sets, catching the top
+of a red chimney-pot, and beautiful there,
+though too directly above their heads for
+the crowd below to notice it much. But to
+me it brings sad thought of the fair and
+quiet places far away, where it is falling
+softly on tree and hill and cloud, and I
+feel that that quiet, that beauty, that space
+would be more powerful to calm the wild
+excess about me than all my frantic striving
+with it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Leicester Square shows us another thing:
+such places must be made bright, pretty
+and neat—a small place which is not so
+becomes painfully dreary; it is quite curious
+to notice how little one feels shut in when
+the barriers are lovely, or contain beautiful
+things which the eye can rest on. The
+small enclosed leads which too often bound
+the view of a back dining-room in London
+oppress one like the walls of a prison; but
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>a tiny cloistered court of the same size
+will give a sense of repose; and colour
+introduced into such spaces will give them
+such beauty as will prevent one from
+fretting against the boundaries. Strange
+and beautiful instance this of how—if
+we recognize the limitations appointed for
+us, accept them, and deal well with what is
+given—the passionate longing for more is
+taken away and a great peace hallows all.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c014'><span class='sc'>The Workers.</span></h3>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='sc'>Letter of 1900.</span>—I have been thinking
+a great deal about how responsible bodies
+can, in the future, secure such management
+by trained ladies as has been found helpful
+in the past. This has turned my attention
+much more than heretofore to the thought
+of how to provide more responsible professional
+workers, for I feel that, however
+much volunteers may help, it is only to
+professional workers that responsible and
+continuous duties can, as a rule, be entrusted,
+especially by large owners or corporations.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Up to now my professional workers have
+been among my most zealous and selfless
+colleagues, always ready to take onerous
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>duties, to fill vacant places, to slip out of
+the way and go to new fields when it seemed
+best, always ready to help to train others
+for management in houses, whether in London,
+the provincial towns, Scotland, Ireland,
+America, Holland, or any other place from
+which work came, taking their holidays,
+when best they could be spared, and in
+every way proving themselves true helpers
+by their hearty recognition that what we
+had to do was to teach, initiate and supplement
+as many earnest workers as we could.
+What I owe to them in the past for the
+devoted help they have thus rendered for
+now many years, no one will ever know.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But hitherto I or some tried and experienced
+volunteer have been the responsible
+person to whom private owners, or men of
+business or corporations have entrusted
+their houses; and it is we who have reported
+upon all business. As a matter of fact, as
+you all know, we have put all management on
+a business footing, and with few exceptions
+have charged the owners the ordinary 5 per
+cent. on rental usually paid to collectors.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Thinking over all this with regard to the
+further future and to the larger areas that
+we can cover, it seemed to me that the present
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>plan had its limitations. Even if many more
+such leaders were found, how would they
+be known? Could responsible bodies make
+plans dependent on them? Then I realized
+that my best plan for the future would be
+not only to train such volunteers as offered
+and the professional workers whom we
+required, but to train more professional
+workers than we ourselves can use, and, as
+occasion offers, to introduce them to owners
+wishing to retain small tenements in their
+own hands and to be represented in them
+by a kind of manager not hitherto existing.
+The ordinary collector is not a man of
+education, with time to spare, nor does he
+estimate that his duties comprise much
+beyond a call at the doors for rent brought
+down to him and a certain supervision of
+repairs that are asked for. If there existed
+a body of ladies trained to more thorough
+work, qualified to supervise more minutely,
+likely to enter into such details as bear on
+the comfort of home life, they might be
+entrusted by owners with house property.
+We all can remember how the training of
+nurses and of teachers has raised the standard
+of work required in both professions. The
+same change might be hoped for in the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>character of the management of dwellings
+let to the poor. Whether or no volunteers
+co-operated with them would settle itself.
+At any rate, owners could have, as I have
+told them they should have, besides their
+lawyer to advise them as to law, their
+architect as to large questions of buildings,
+their auditor to supervise their accounts,
+also a representative to see to their people
+and to those details of repair and management
+on which the conduct of courts or
+blocks inhabited by working people depends.
+Where people live close together, share
+yards, washhouses and staircases, too often
+there is no one whose business it is to
+supervise and govern the use of what is
+used in common or to see how one tenant’s
+conduct affects others.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c014'><span class='sc'>The Work.</span></h3>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='sc'>Letter of 1879.</span>—I should like, in my
+letter this year, to note down what it appears
+to me you are all feeling as to the difference
+between the charge of a court where the
+people are your tenants and much other
+visiting among the poor. The care of tenants
+calls out a sense of duty founded on relationship;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>the work is permanent, and the
+definite character of much of it makes its
+progress marked. Have you ever asked
+yourselves why you have chosen the charge
+of courts, with all its difficulties and ties?
+The burthen of the problems before you has
+been heavy, and the regularity of the occupation
+has often demanded of you great
+sacrifices. Why have you not chosen transitory
+connection with hundreds of receivers
+of soup, or pleasant intercourse with little
+Sunday scholars, or visiting among the aged
+and bedridden, who were sure to greet you
+with a smile when you went to them and
+had no right to say a word of reproach to
+you about your long absences in the country?
+Why did you not take up district-visiting,
+where, if any family did not welcome you,
+you could just stay away? Because you
+preferred a work where duty was continuous
+and distinct and where it was mutual.
+Because, also, the petty annoyances brought
+before you at such awkward moments, with
+so little discretion or good-temper—the
+smoky chimneys, broken water-pipes, tiresome
+neighbours, drunken husbands—as
+well as the great sorrows caused by death,
+disease, poverty, sin, have called not only
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>for your sympathy but for your action.
+From the greatest to the least, the problems
+have implied some duty on your part.
+You have each had to ask yourself, “What
+ought I, in my relation to the tenants, to
+do for them in this difficulty?” From the
+merest trifle of a cupboard key broken in
+the lock to the future of some family
+desolated by death, or sunk in misery through
+drink, <em>all</em> has asked your sympathy, much
+has demanded your action. I have said the
+charge of tenants has been valued by you
+also because the duty is mutual: it implies
+your determination, not simply to do kindnesses
+with liberal hand, popular as that
+would be, but to meet the poor on grounds
+where they too have duties to you.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c014'><span class='sc'>Spirit of the Work.</span></h3>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='sc'>Letter of 1890.</span>—I will not in this, which
+is my one letter of the year to you, my
+friends and fellow-workers, enter on the
+great public questions which are attracting
+an ever-increasing degree of interest.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Whatever be done about free meals, free
+education (why do we call them free, instead
+of paid for by charity, by rates, or by
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>tax, do you think?)—whatever may happen
+about strikes or immigration from the
+country—for you and me there remain much
+the same great eternal duties, love, thought,
+justice, liberality, simplicity, hope, industry,
+for ever; still human heart depends on
+human heart for sympathy, and still the
+old duties of neighbourliness continue. Let
+us see that we fulfil them, each in our own
+circle, large or small; perhaps we may
+find the fulfilment of them answer more
+social problems than we quite expected.
+Perhaps we may find changes of system
+effect little reform unless courageous and
+honest men carry them out with single-mindedness
+and thought for others.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If the free meal, free education, subsidized
+house accommodation attract you, will you
+pause and remember, first, that they are
+by no means free, but cost someone, somehow,
+just as much, probably a great deal
+more, than if provided otherhow? The
+question, if you get rid of the word “free,”
+which is deceptive, clears up a little, and
+becomes, “Is this the best way of, first,
+providing, and second, paying for these
+necessities?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And then, having answered this for yourself,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>see to it that you are wholly single-minded
+if you advocate this sort of subsidy
+for the poor. Be sure you do so neither
+from cowardice nor from ambition. If, indeed,
+it be pity, genuine kindness and a
+sense of justice that moves you, then the
+feeling is so good that in some way I believe
+it will lead you right; besides, you will
+keep your power to watch and see and alter
+as you come face to face with facts, and may
+modify all systems, and keep the desire to
+do justice and help in whatever way is seen
+finally to be really helpful.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But if you let one touch of terror dim
+your sight and flinch before the most terrible
+upheaval of rampant force or threat;
+if, for popular favour, or seat at board, or
+success on platform, you hesitate to speak
+what you know to be true, then shall your
+cowardice and your ambition be indeed
+answerable for consequences which you little
+dream of. They may come now, or they
+may come later, but come they will; for
+only Truth abides and will stand the test
+of time. Let us see that we hold her very
+fast; only those who are loyal to her can.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>VII<br> WOMEN MANAGERS—A CROWN ESTATE<a id='r2'></a><a href='#f2' class='c008'><sup>[2]</sup></a></h2>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
+<p class='c016'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. Reprinted from <em>Housing</em>, the official journal of the
+Ministry of Health, September 27, 1919, by kind permission
+of the Controller, H.M. Stationery Office.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>A scheme of reconstruction which
+should be of interest to local authorities
+about to exercise the new powers
+conferred upon them by the Housing Act
+has been undertaken by the Office of Woods
+on a London estate near Regent’s Park,
+belonging to the Crown.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The area in question lies to the east of
+Albany Street. It forms part of an estate,
+known as the “Marylebone Farm,” which
+about a hundred years ago was leased by
+the Office of Woods principally for residential
+purposes, ample provision being made
+in the type of building for all classes. The
+estate includes the Cumberland Basin, connected
+with the Regent’s Canal; Cumberland
+Market, an ancient market for the sale of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>hay and straw; and two other open spaces.
+The Market is now seldom used, but it is
+still paved with setts and furnished with a
+weighing-house. The other two spaces are
+squares, laid out with trees and shrubs, and
+are managed by the London County Council.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>During the last year or two many of the
+leases of property of the tenement class
+have fallen in, and others, which are not yet
+quite due, have been surrendered by the
+owners in preference to putting the houses
+into repair.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>With the gradual falling in of the leases
+the Office of Woods were faced with the
+question whether the site was again to be
+let on lease or whether it was to be held and
+managed on behalf of the Crown. The latter
+course was happily decided upon, and it
+was resolved to place the property immediately
+under the care of Miss Jeffery, an
+experienced house-property manager, trained
+under Miss Octavia Hill’s system, who has
+under her a staff of trained women.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The plan of reconstruction, which includes
+rebuilding most of the houses and altering
+the course of some of the streets, is being
+prepared by the Office of Woods. It is
+intended to convert Cumberland Market
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>into a public garden and to form one or
+more children’s playgrounds in addition.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Rebuilding is hardly to be thought of for
+the moment. The immediate need is to
+make the existing houses reasonably fit for
+habitation. Most of them are dilapidated
+and some of them are filthy. Backyards
+have been built over, and in some instances
+another cottage has been put up, the only
+entrance to which is through the house which
+faces the street. The property has been for
+the most part badly neglected during the
+later years of the leases, while in the earlier
+years little care was exercised to see that the
+conditions of the lease were not departed
+from.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Miss Jeffery has opened a small office on
+the estate, as a centre from which the rents
+of the houses are collected week by week.
+On their visits the women managers find
+out what repairs are needed to make the
+houses habitable and clean, and supervise the
+repairs already in hand. Miss Jeffery and
+her assistants are thus in constant touch
+with the tenants, helping them in many
+ways and inducing them to do their part
+in improving their surroundings. While
+insisting that necessary alterations and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>cleansing must be carried out forthwith, the
+managers do their best to study the comfort
+and convenience of the tenants as far as
+possible. If the tenants must be removed for
+a time, temporary accommodation is found
+for them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is intended that the number of licensed
+houses on the estate shall be reduced as the
+leases fall in, and the managers are taking
+steps to ensure improved management, on
+Public House Trust lines, of those that will
+remain.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>About 170 families (representing a population
+of nearly 1,000) are already paying their
+rent to the women managers, and fresh
+houses come in every few weeks. The managers,
+with the Office of Woods behind them,
+believe that the work of reconstructing the
+estate can be successfully accomplished only
+if they can ensure the good will and co-operation
+of the present tenants. With this
+end in view, they called a meeting of the
+tenants already on their rent-roll in March
+last, and suggested the formation of a
+Tenants’ Association. The intentions of the
+Office of Woods with regard to the estate
+were explained to the meeting, as well as
+the reasons for desiring the tenants themselves
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>to combine and co-operate in carrying
+out the scheme. The Association has been
+formed, a Chairman elected, and several
+other meetings have since been held. The
+scope of the scheme has been further explained,
+and points arising in the management—such
+as whether rates should be paid
+direct to the local authority or with the
+rent—have been discussed. That the powers
+and responsibilities of a Tenants’ Association
+are beginning to be realized is shown by the
+fact that within the last few days a petition
+has been put forward by the Association,
+asking that one of the first buildings to be
+put up on the estate may be a building
+containing rooms in which working men’s
+clubs may be held; at present these clubs,
+several of which have a large number of
+members, are held in the public-houses
+because there is no other place for them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The scheme bids fair to be a success. The
+necessary changes will be carried through
+with the least possible disturbance and
+friction among the tenants, because the
+women managers have already won the
+confidence of a large number of them. Many
+tenants do not want to part with their old
+cottages, dirty and dilapidated as they are,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>and others are afraid that, when the new
+houses are built, they will not be the persons
+to get them. The women managers, being on
+the spot, will get to know the individual
+needs of each household, and they will use
+every effort to meet the needs of these
+households when the houses are rebuilt. In
+the meantime, they are in a position to
+persuade the tenants gradually to adopt
+higher standards of cleanliness and comfort,
+and so enable them to take care of the new
+houses when they get them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Local authorities who are about to take
+over slum areas and reconstruct them may
+find it of advantage to follow the example
+of the Office of Woods and place an area,
+as soon as it comes into their hands, under
+the management of women educated and
+trained for this work.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>E. A. C.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>VIII<br> MANAGEMENT OF MUNICIPAL HOUSES IN AMSTERDAM<a id='r3'></a><a href='#f3' class='c008'><sup>[3]</sup></a></h2>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
+<p class='c016'><a href='#r3'>3</a>. Reprinted from <em>Housing</em>, the official journal of the
+Ministry of Health, July 19, 1920, by kind permission of
+the Controller, H.M. Stationery Office.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>The Municipality of Amsterdam has
+provided, either directly or through
+Public Utility Societies, a large number of
+dwellings for its working-class inhabitants.
+Up to the present time 4,000 families have
+been housed in these municipal dwellings,
+6,000 more dwellings are in course of erection,
+and plans are laid for bringing the
+total number up to 20,000 at no very
+distant date.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The housing policy of Amsterdam is comprehensive.
+The town has assumed the duty
+not only of supplying houses to meet the
+general shortage, but of providing houses for
+those for whom no one else is able or willing
+to find accommodation, and especially for
+large families. It does not, like most English
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>local authorities, select its tenants, but
+accepts all, even the worst class, if they are
+houseless citizens of Amsterdam.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In these circumstances the question of
+managing the municipal houses becomes a
+very important one. Mr. Keppler, who has
+presided over the Housing Department of
+Amsterdam for five years, came over to
+England to see for himself the methods
+of managing working-class property introduced
+by Miss Octavia Hill, and it was
+decided, as a result of his experience, to
+appoint women managers to take charge of
+the municipal houses and their tenants on
+the same lines. The first two women
+appointed had been trained years earlier
+under Miss Hill in London. There is now a
+staff of thirteen managers working under
+the Chief Woman Manager.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is the duty of the Chief Manager to
+receive applications from and to interview
+would-be tenants, to inquire into their circumstances,
+and to allot new or empty
+houses to those families whose need she
+considers most acute. Great care is taken
+in assigning the new dwellings. Some groups
+of houses are designed expressly for families
+with five or more children and are reserved
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>for them, while families with a member
+suffering from tuberculosis are placed in
+dwellings which have a sunny balcony or
+garden.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The managers collect the rents from the
+tenants in their homes; they take a note of
+any repairs needed and inform the Repairs
+Department. They instruct the women in
+the use of fittings and apparatus (all the
+municipal houses are fitted with gas cookers
+and electric light) and insist upon the tenancy
+regulations being observed. They co-operate
+with a number of voluntary societies which
+help the tenants in various ways.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The majority of tenants are of an average
+working-class type, and each manager looks
+after some two hundred to three hundred
+families. But since no tenants are rejected
+for reasons of character, it follows that there
+are among them families which are below
+the average and a few which can be described
+only as bad; they do not pay their rent
+promptly, they are destructive, or they are
+noisy, drunken and quarrelsome. When
+families are considered by the managers to
+belong to this group they are removed into
+one of the special areas set apart for them.
+They are placed in temporary wooden one-story
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>buildings, built in pairs with a fair
+amount of space between. These special
+areas are in open situations on the outskirts
+of the town. Here the families are under
+strict supervision—a supervision, however,
+which has always in view the education and
+improvement of the tenant. The manager
+who has charge of one of these areas—on
+each of which are not more than twenty-five
+families—resides on the spot, in a dwelling
+similar to those occupied by the tenants;
+she reports weekly to the Chief Manager on
+the circumstances and conduct of each
+family and does all in her power to help
+and improve them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The salary of the Chief Woman Manager
+rises from £350 to £550 a year. Her assistants
+are placed in three groups, according to
+experience and to the responsible nature of
+their duties. The salary of an apprentice
+during her year’s training is £83; at the
+end of the year, if found satisfactory, she
+receives £125, rising to £183; after this she
+may rise gradually to £291. During the
+first twelve months an apprentice must
+attend an evening course of training at the
+University School of Social Work in Amsterdam,
+where she receives instruction in various
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>branches of social work, such as the relief
+of distress, social hygiene, club management,
+housing and town planning.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The Director of Housing regards the work
+of the women managers as extremely valuable
+from a social point of view, and he hopes to
+be able to find competent women to take
+charge of all the houses which the municipality
+are putting up. The salaries of the
+women managers are a fairly heavy charge
+upon the revenue, but the municipality
+considers the money well spent. They find
+that the tenants gradually improve, that
+rents are paid promptly and that the property
+is kept in good order, while good tenants
+appreciate the consideration shown to them
+and the interest taken in their welfare.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>E. A. C.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>IX<br> REPORT ON HOUSE PROPERTY MANAGEMENT</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>In October 1920 the Women’s Section of
+the Garden Cities and Town Planning
+Association appointed a Sub-Committee to
+report on the methods and practice of House
+Property Management, especially with regard
+to what is generally called working-class
+property and management by women.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Having collected evidence from the personal
+observations of their own members
+and the written statements of other investigators,
+and having taken evidence also from
+a leading Woman Sanitary Inspector and
+from the first Municipal Woman Housing
+Officer, the Sub-Committee adopted the
+following principle for general recommendation
+and as a basis of their Report:</p>
+
+<p class='c017'>That the management of working-class property
+should be in the hands of persons who have had definite
+training in estate management and in Social Science.</p>
+
+<p class='c016'><span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>The points considered and reported on are
+divided under four heads:</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>(1) The Classes of Property to be
+managed.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>(2) The Qualifications of Manager and
+Assistants.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>(3) The Training necessary.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>(4) Payment.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c014'><span class='sc'>I. Introductory Classification of Management.</span></h3>
+
+<p class='c015'>The Sub-Committee desire to point out
+that until the advent of the Woman House
+Property Manager there is no evidence that
+any special form of Management was considered
+necessary for the poorer classes of
+house property.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A very general impression has been prevalent
+that the Management suitable for
+better class property (that is, roughly, property
+let under Agreement in Quarterly and
+Yearly tenancies) was also suited to tenement
+and small house property let out in weekly
+tenancies. In fact, no other system of
+management existed until Miss Octavia Hill
+took up the management of weekly tenancies
+and inaugurated a system of her own.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>When well-built properties are in occupation
+of selected tenants whose financial and
+social circumstances ensure that the property
+will be maintained, with few exceptions, in
+good condition, the work of management is
+reduced to a minimum and is chiefly occupied
+with rent collecting and simple and regular
+requirements in the way of upkeep and
+repairs. The assumption in the past that
+nothing more ought to be needed for property
+of lower grades has too often led to concentration
+on the more difficult collection of
+rents, with a minimum attention to repairs.
+No attention has been paid to economic and
+social conditions, and the net result has been
+the production of the slum.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The Sub-Committee believe that the introduction
+of a suitable form of management,
+insisted on by some recognized authority,
+could have prevented the creation of slums
+in the past. They further believe that it
+may do so in the future, and that it can,
+with special effort, eradicate much that is
+evil in present bad areas. Miss Octavia
+Hill’s System put into practice the theory
+that slums could be eradicated and advanced
+the proposition that management could be
+made a means to this end. She, the first
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>Woman House Property Manager, and
+workers she trained, all of them also women,
+introduced Social Economics into the business
+of House Property Management. The Sub-Committee
+feel strongly that many social
+evils might be avoided by the adoption of
+Social Economics into business generally.
+The distinctive mark of Miss Hill’s System
+is the consideration of the personal, human
+factor as an integral part of the business.
+The Sub-Committee can find no justification
+for condemning this principle as unbusinesslike.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The Sub-Committee have considered the
+work done by Miss Hill and those who have
+succeeded her, by visits, and they have read
+reports of the work in various cities and
+towns in England and Scotland, in Holland
+(see <em>Women’s Local Government News</em>, February
+and March 1921) and in America (see
+<em>Good Housing that Pays</em>). They find there
+is evidence of many slum areas redeemed.
+Improvements by rebuilding have almost
+necessarily accompanied the work in nearly
+every case, but there are striking instances
+of the maintenance of the original old
+property in excellent sanitary condition.
+On the other hand, evidences of new properties
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>falling into disrepair for lack of
+management are not wanting.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c014'><span class='sc'>II. Managers.</span></h3>
+
+<p class='c015'>On all working-class estates, whether of
+higher or lower grade, there is much evidence
+to show that managers should be in complete
+control, attending to all matters connected
+with the property, including the collection of
+rents and repairs. There is evidence that
+the separation of responsibility for rent
+collecting and for ordering and superintending
+repairs leads to delay in repairs,
+and, in some cases, has acted adversely on
+the rent collecting. Rent collectors who are
+not responsible for repairs are apt to forget
+to report the need of them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Whether the manager should be a man or
+a woman is not, in the opinion of the Sub-Committee,
+so important as that the principle
+of management inaugurated by Miss Hill
+should be adopted. At the same time, they
+are agreed that it should not be overlooked—</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>(1) That the housekeeper is always a
+woman;</p>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>(2) That the woman usually pays the
+rent;</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>(3) That housekeeping and repairs are
+closely connected; and</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>(4) That, therefore, a woman will
+usually be better equipped than a man
+to deal with the problems arising out
+of the management of working-class
+property.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Whether a man or woman, the Committee
+are of opinion that the Manager should be
+properly trained under managers of accepted
+standing, should thoroughly understand the
+finance and law involved, should be of recognized
+efficiency for superintending repairs
+and upkeep, and should be well-versed in
+the social problems of the day and the
+methods of dealing with them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A word should be added on personality.
+The more social and industrial difficulties
+are represented on an estate the greater
+will the prominence of the personal element
+be. Whatever the class of property, the
+personal qualifications of the manager are
+of importance: tact and consideration are
+always necessary. But the successful redemption
+of a slum area will demand specially
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>strong personal qualifications, with wide sympathies
+and broad outlook, and, just as some
+learned people never make good teachers,
+so some human temperaments will never
+produce good managers, however much
+“trained.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The Sub-Committee feel that, on the
+whole, the splitting of the management
+under separate Departments is inadvisable.
+Where such division has succeeded in the
+past, it has done so largely because a former
+(pre-war) selection of tenants has kept the
+most difficult problems of management away
+from it. In bad areas it is most important
+that there should be one Head in as direct
+contact with the Estate as possible, responsible
+for upkeep and repairs as well as rent
+collecting and selection of tenants.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c014'><span class='sc'>III. Training.</span></h3>
+
+<p class='c015'>Now that Housing has taken a foremost
+place among the questions of national importance,
+it is recognized that the standard
+of good housing cannot be attained unless
+accompanied by skilled management. From
+1864, when Miss Hill began her work, house
+property may be said to have been managed
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>on the two systems already indicated. The
+one—the more general—followed by men
+qualified by the Examinations held for
+Surveyors and Estate Agents. The other
+followed by women qualified by a high
+standard of education and by special training
+in Social Economics. The training of the
+men has been thorough on technical, financial
+and legal lines, if too stereotyped and narrow
+in outlook. The training of the women has
+not been thorough enough on the technical
+side, and has therefore, perhaps, over-emphasized
+the social side. In the opinion of
+the Sub-Committee an attempt should be
+made to combine the two courses.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>New houses, tenanted as they are mostly
+by the better class of tenants, may be easily
+managed; but where tenants dispossessed
+from old houses are provided for in modern
+dwellings, the need is evident for a highly
+trained manager who will add to his or
+her business and technical knowledge an
+educated interest in social conditions and
+problems. A point in favour of women’s
+management comes in here. Many of the
+incoming housekeepers have had no experience
+in using new fittings. There have been
+cases in which the tenants have been unable,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>through lack of knowledge, to clean their
+porcelain-surfaced or painted bath or their
+earthenware sink, and have been quite at a
+loss in the matter of their close-ranged flues.
+Where women managers have been at work
+instruction has been given and quick deterioration
+of appliances avoided. In many
+towns the congestion and overcrowding has
+been so great that it has been difficult even
+for families with regular incomes and a
+tradition of good housekeeping and homemaking
+to maintain their standard. Where
+unemployment has made the income uncertain
+there has certainly been a lowering
+of the standard. When such families go
+into the new houses they need the help of
+a skilled and tactful adviser if they are to
+become once more makers of happy and
+comfortable homes. It must be remembered
+that the past has left to the towns of
+to-day a heritage of slums which collect the
+products of all our social errors and are a
+breeding-ground for every known social evil.
+Even as the worst forms of disease require
+the skill of the cleverest physician, so such
+properties call for the most highly trained
+management. From the examples the Committee
+have had before them they find that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>such properties have only been successfully
+dealt with under the Octavia Hill System,
+and so far only by women.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The London University now grants a
+Degree in Estate Management, and a College
+of Estate Management will shortly be opened
+in London which will prepare for this Degree.
+The Sub-Committee have examined the
+Course laid down for the Degree and recommend
+that steps be taken to obtain some
+recognition of the special need for the
+management of working-class property in its
+provisions. The College will be open to
+women as well as to men, and it would be
+well if some alternative or special section of
+the Course could be arranged to meet this
+need. The lines along which training should
+develop have already been indicated under
+Managers’ qualifications. These might easily
+be arranged in the future at the College and
+on Estates approved by the College or other
+authority, if the good will of that authority
+can be obtained.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The best course of training would probably
+be one which combined the kind of studies
+arranged at the Household Science Department
+at King’s College, the London School
+of Economics and the College of Estate
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>Management. All these institutions are
+linked up to the University of London, and
+they would doubtless be willing to co-operate
+in this matter.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c014'><span class='sc'>IV. Payment.</span></h3>
+
+<p class='c015'>Estate Agents are usually paid on Commission,
+but Housing Managers, Superintendents,
+etc., under big Corporations are
+paid salaries.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The Sub-Committee do not consider the
+percentage system a good one, especially for
+lower grade property, which needs the more
+time and skill. Also, where rent varies with
+the rates, as it does on nearly all the
+properties managed by women, the basis of
+variation is undesirable for such payment.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Women Managers (mostly paid on percentage)
+have hitherto undertaken the work
+at a sacrifice. Introducing as they did a
+new system of management, their work was
+intensified, but their percentage remained
+the same as that of the former agents.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The Sub-Committee believe that better pay
+might be secured by the following methods:</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>(1) By a wider and more general
+attempt at organization. One Manager,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>responsible for the general principle of
+the Management, could control a large
+property or groups of properties, with
+specially appointed superintendents and
+staff who have been made to understand
+the spirit and aims of the work.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>(2) By a careful combination of higher
+grade quarterly tenancies with the lower
+grade weekly, possibly aided by the
+promotion of some regular weekly tenancies
+to monthly payments.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is very little doubt that management
+of lower grade properties has been made
+to pay by undesirable means. Key money,
+percentage fees on builders’ bills and other
+“payments” have crept in—in some cases
+are openly acknowledged and expected.
+Management should be placed beyond the
+reach of such practices.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Inefficient management is very largely
+responsible for the slums of to-day and has
+led to the need for slum clearances and the
+consequent enormous expense to the Community.
+The necessary effort to redeem
+slum areas now can only be successful by
+management on modern lines—a strong,
+efficient business equipment, based on definite
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>ideals with definite social aims. Work on
+such a foundation cannot fail to bring
+results, but it should be adequately paid.
+The attempt to overcome the evils of our
+heritage of bad management by the introduction
+of efficient management in bad areas
+may seem, at first, comparatively costly.
+It will never be quite so costly in the end
+as inefficient management.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c014'><span class='sc'>General Remarks.</span></h3>
+
+<p class='c015'>A consideration of the whole situation has
+led the Sub-Committee to the following
+conclusions:</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>(1) While not advocating that all
+properties should be handed over to
+women to manage, they are convinced
+that there are special requirements on
+certain properties which, at the moment,
+urgently call for women’s special experience.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>(2) It would be advisable for all
+Local Authorities to appoint women in
+their Housing Departments. Birmingham
+City Council has taken the first
+step by appointing a “Woman Rent
+Collector and Supervisor of Houses.”</p>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>(3) That every effort should be made
+to draw the attention of the Local
+Authorities to the importance of the
+need for an improved standard of management.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c004'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in12'><em>Members of Sub-Committee.</em></div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='sc'>M. M. Jeffery</span>, <em>Chairman</em>.</div>
+ <div class='line'><span class='sc'>E. A. Charlesworth.</span></div>
+ <div class='line'><span class='sc'>D. Meynell.</span></div>
+ <div class='line'><span class='sc'>F. C. Prideaux</span> } <em>Members of the Association of</em></div>
+ <div class='line'><span class='sc'>M. Galton</span> } <em>Women House Property Managers.</em></div>
+ <div class='line'><span class='sc'>E. A. Browning</span>, <em>Secretary</em>.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>(Signed) <span class='sc'>Gertrude Emmott</span>,</div>
+ <div class='line in4'><em>Chairman Women’s Section Garden Cities</em></div>
+ <div class='line in8'><em>and Town Planning Association</em>.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div><span class='small'><em>Printed in Great Britain by</em></span></div>
+ <div><span class='small'>UNWIN BROTHERS, LIMITED, THE GRESHAM PRESS, WOKING AND LONDON</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c002'>
+</div>
+<div class='tnotes x-ebookmaker'>
+
+<div class='chapter ph2'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c003'>
+ <div>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+ <ul class='ul_1 c004'>
+ <li>Typos fixed; non-standard spelling and dialect retained.
+ </li>
+ </ul>
+
+</div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75837 ***</div>
+ </body>
+ <!-- created with ppgen.py 3.57e (with regex) on 2025-03-21 19:46:45 GMT -->
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+
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