Certain thoughts drift through our minds on the final day of the year – achievements realised or or not, as the case may be. But in the case of the St Albans' Own East End blog it is the realisation that new posts have been trickling through the system now for ten years, at the rate of over 30 posts a year. Which is over 300 items in total, and all about the East End of St Albans. Unfortunately the very early posts are no longer available online, but the original function was to generate interest in a couple of books about the district which had yet to be completed. Well, a decade on and work is progressing well on preparing for the second editions of those same books.
Let's talk about housing for a minute. In 1919 the city council was discussing a chronic under-supply of basic homes fit to live in; the rural council engaged with local communities to provide new homes for agricultural workers; and, slow off the ground, projects under Homes for Heroes eventually materialised, but for far fewer tenants than the target. Eventually, estates were provided at Townsend and Springfield.
In 1949 the city council was still grappling with the issue of lengthy housing waiting lists, with thousands juggling with allocated points to move themselves, hopefully, nearer a house. Local authority houses and homes for reserved occupations such as police, teachers and nurses, were created from whatever resources were available. Estates at Beaumonts, London Road and Slimmons Farm became available, augmenting the private developments from the thirties at Beaumonts, Spencer, Camp and Breakspear; and in the fifties at Marshalswick.
In 1979 further private developments had been launched at former farms and later in the grounds of former hospitals. Today, if there was an all-embracing list, with or without points, how many potential home owners and tenants would show themselves to be in need of accommodation in this city; east, west, south or north? Prices for even modest-sized homes are beyond many pockets and banks. Yet it is revealing that St Albans was one of the locations selected for a special edition of Monopoly! As a young couple, still living in a modest parental home, commented recently: "finding a house (or flat, or even a barn) is not a game." Which takes us back to 1919 – and in 1949 – because that is where many were forging out an existence, in barns, old caravans, huts and buildings awaiting demolition. Articles in the Herts Advertiser reported, with unfortunate photographs, many eviction cases. And, if we include overcrowded and multi-occupied dwellings, many are probably still there in 2019; the hidden population of St Albans.
SAOEE's New Year Greetings is for you more than anyone, though you are the residents who are most unlikely to be reading this message.
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