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Levittown

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Aerial view of Levittown, Pennsylvania c. 1959

Levittown is the name of several large suburban housing developments created in the United States (including one in Puerto Rico) by William J. Levitt and his company Levitt & Sons. Built after World War II for returning white veterans and their new families, the communities offered attractive alternatives to cramped central city locations and apartments. The Veterans Administration and the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) guaranteed builders that qualified veterans could buy housing for a fraction of rental costs. Under Levitt & Sons, Levittown housing would maintain racial covenants that excluded non-Caucasian homeowners.

The first Levittown house sold for $7,900 and in a short period of time 17,000 units were sold, providing homes for 84,000 people. In addition to single-family dwellings, Levittowns provided private meeting areas, swimming pools, public parks, and recreational facilities.[1]

Production was modeled on assembly lines in 27 steps with construction workers trained to perform one step. A house could be built in one day, with 36 workers, when effectively scheduled.[2][3] This enabled quick and economical production of similar or identical houses with rapid recovery of costs. Standard Levittown houses included a white picket fence, green lawns, and modern appliances. Sales in the original Levittown began in March 1947. 1,400 houses were purchased during the first three hours.

The houses were, by later standards, bare bones: 750 sq ft (70 m2), with no basement or porch.[4]

Places

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Levittown houses in New York in 1958

Controversy

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William J. Levitt refused to sell Levittown houses to people of color. The FHA included racial covenants in each deed when authorizing Levitttown loans, making each Levittown a segregated community.[5] However this did not effect who the houses were resold to.

In 1957, William and Daisy Myers bought a second-hand house at 43 Deepgreen Lane in Pennsylvania's Levittown. William was a World War II army veteran and Daisy was a school teacher. The couple had three young children at the time. Attacks began immediately from the previously all white neighborhood.[6] For days, members of the community would gather hundreds at a time outside the Myers' home in violent demonstrations. Townspeople formed a group called the "Levittown Betterment Committee", dedicated to evicting the Myers and making Levittown all white once more. They would meet in a nearby home, which they dubbed "The Confederate House." The Confederate flag flew outside and "Dixie" was blasted on repeat from a record player.[7]

The Myers' struggle gained national attention. The Quakers, American Jewish Congress, and the William Penn Center helped organize a 24-7 citizen patrol. White couples volunteered to babysit the Myers’ children and cleaned up damage in wake of attacks. Martin Luther King Jr. and other black civil rights leader met with the family and wrote to them. [7]

The couple managed to stay four years more, until William Myers got a job in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.[6] Their plight helped lead to the passage of the Fair Housing Act in 1968.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Handbook to life in America. Volume VIII, Postwar America, 1950 to 1969. Rodney P. Carlisle. New York, NY: Facts on File. 2009. ISBN 978-1-4381-2699-9. OCLC 466379549.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  2. ^ "A City is Born - Levittown, PA". ProQuest Alexander Street. 1953. Retrieved 2022-02-19. The building of a house in one day is shown during the next 45 seconds by stop-motion photography. These are the 36 men who built this house. Another day, another 40 houses. This is one of four models, which are now being built throughout Levittown. The complete price is $10,500.
  3. ^ "The Fifties". Annenberg Learner. Retrieved 2022-02-19.
  4. ^ Rybczynski, Witold (February 1991). "Living Smaller". The Atlantic. Retrieved December 22, 2023.
  5. ^ Rothstein, Richard (May 2, 2017). The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America. Liveright. pp. 82-83. ISBN 978-1-63149-286-0.
  6. ^ a b "Trailblazers: The Story of the Myers Family in Levittown, Pennsylvania". The Daily Beast. 25 July 2019.
  7. ^ a b "Remembering the Battle to Integrate Levittown". Jewish Currents. Retrieved 2025-02-01.