Beginnings and Foundations |
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The Greater London Plan, 1944 - the "Abercrombie plan"The Labour PartyWorld War Two was closing upon the publication of Abercrombie’s second work, but the beginning of peacetime in 1945 would allow the gates to open for widespread social re-oganisation. The pivotal catalyst being the election of the Labour government in 1945. Before the war’s end the Labour Party, along with many other political and pressure groups, issued pamphlets detailing their future housing policy. Although [Your Home Planned by Labour - PDF] is aimed at all working-class people, reflecting the times, the introduction is targeted at housewives seeking a better kitchen:
Near the back page under the title “More Worthy Of Our People”, opposite a picture of a slum, the text reads:
Frederick J. Osborn, Lewis Silkin and Lord ReithAlthough much of the successful post-war social planning rested on the shoulders of the Labour government, efforts were being made almost from the outbreak of war to ensure that peace would also bring prosperity to the masses. People such as Frederick J. Osborn [see picture], who, in 1940 – when the winner was far from decided – found themselves at the heart of Whitehall arguing the case for radical efforts to tackle Britain’s housing problems. Osborn was then the Honorary Secretary of the [Town and Country Planning Association]– Howard’s direct descendents – and submitted evidence on their behalf to the [Barlow Royal Commission on the Distribution of the Industrial Population]. Through diligent work, Osborn was instrumental in persuading the participants in the Barlow Commission to come down forcefully on the side of a redistribution of the urban population, but even this wasn’t radical enough for some and led to a Minority Report, signed by Patrick Abercrombie himself, which called for far more centralised and authoritarian powers by the national government to deal with the problem. This concentrated and prolonged lobbying was a product of the widely viewed failure to capitalise on the possibilities presented after the First World War. The cry ‘Never Again!’ was taken up by both the people and professionals, and within Whitehall both Lewis Silkin – the new Labour Minister of Town and Country Planning – and Lord Reith – Chairman of the Ministry’s Advisory Committee – played fundamental roles which lead to the New Towns Act (1946) and the [Town and Country Planning Act (1947)]. |
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