[an error occurred while processing this directive]



Suburban Legend
William Levitt

His answer to a postwar housing crisis created a new kind of home life and culture: suburbia


BY RICHARD LACAYO

Fo long as you don't count sex and violence, there's no human impulse older than the urge to find a nice, affordable house, something outside of town but not too far. In Crabgrass Frontier, the essential history of suburbanization, Kenneth T. Jackson quotes a letter to the King of Persia, inscribed on a clay tablet and dated 539 B.C., that describes the pleasures of the Ur-suburb. (Literally. It was in Ur.) "Our property ... is ,enjoy all the advantages of the city, and yet when we come home we are away from all the noise and dust." Ur shriveled. But the inclination to get out of town survived. Ancient Rome had its surrounding settlements. Chaucer mentions the 'burbs in The Canterbury Tales. All the same, it wasn't until the later 20th century that suburbia was imagined as the ideal human habitation, an arrangement of houses and lives so fundamental, it was taken for granted that the Flintstones lived there.

Suburbia required cars, highways and government-guaranteed mortgages. It also required William Levitt, who first applied a full panoply of assembly-line techniques to housing construction. That insight enabled him, and the many builders who copied him, to put up houses fast and cheap. Levitt's houses were so cheap (but still reasonably sturdy) that bus drivers, music teachers and boilermakers could afford them. And the first place he offered them was Levittown, N.Y., a town that is as much an achievement of its cultural moment as Venice or Jerusalem.

That moment came right after World War II. When the servicemen and -women headed home, there wasn't much home for them to come to. Wartime shortages of everything had crippled the housing industry. Returning veterans, their libidos fully charged with the ambitions that would create the baby boom, found themselves doubled up with parents and in-laws. To publicize their search for an apartment, one New York City couple camped out for two days in a department-store window.

In those years, the American housing industry was not so much an industry as a loose affiliation of local builders, any one of whom completed an average of four houses a year. What Levitt had in mind was 30 to 40 a day. Before the war, Levitt and his brother Alfred had built a few houses on land their father owned in Manhasset, N.Y.

Page 1 | Page 2 | Page 3

SIDEBAR: ON THE HOME-BUILDING FRONT



POLL:
Do you believe Bill Levitt was one of the 20 most influential builders and titans of the 20th century?

QUIZ:
Where was the first Levittown built in 1947?

BORN Feb. 11, 1907, in Brooklyn, N.Y.

1924 Enters NYU, staying until his junior year

1927 Takes a job in his father's law firm

1929 Levitt & Sons starts work on its first house

1941 With brother Alfred, builds housing for defense workers in Norfolk, Va.

1947 Starts transforming farmland on New York's Long Island into Levittown

1968 Sells his company to ITT for $92 million

1994 Dies Jan. 28 in Manhasset, N.Y.BR>


TIME ARCHIVES:
July 3, 1950

WEB RESOURCES:
Levittown, N.Y.
The site includes photos and some biographical information, and traces the evolution of Levitt-built homes from 1950-1997.
Privacy Policy