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Sweat Equity

Cooperative House-Building in Newfoundland, 1920-1974

by (author) C.A. Sharpe & A.J. Shawyer

Publisher
Memorial University Press
Initial publish date
Aug 2016
Subjects
Human Geography, General, Social History
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781990445231
    Publish Date
    Dec 2023
    List Price
    $28.99

Library Ordering Options

Description

The lack of decent urban housing — a problem neither new nor unique to Newfoundland — was widely recognized during the twentieth century. After numerous piecemeal attempts to find a solution, a remarkable and successful government-supported “sweat equity” program was established in 1952, where homes were built cooperatively and, upon completion, became owner-occupied. This labor (about 2,000 hours per man) was accepted in lieu of a down payment.

Tracing public policy during the Commission of Government and the early days of the Smallwood administration, and sourced from archival material and interviews with surviving members of the cooperatives, Sweat Equity outlines how people in Newfoundland tried to solve the housing shortage themselves by building more than 500 houses in the 1950s and 1960s.

This critical monograph-length study — the first of its kind on the subject — is the story of how the Commission of Government and the then new provincial government recognized the desperate need for decent accommodation and what they did to provide it.

About the authors

Chris Sharpe is Professor Emeritus of Geography, Memorial University of Newfoundland and Labrador. During his 40-year career at MUNL, he pursued an interest in urban landscapes and housing. He is co-author of Sweat Equity: Cooperative House-Building in Newfoundland, 1920–1974.

C.A. Sharpe's profile page

Jo Shawyer is a retired Associate Professor, Department of Geography, Memorial University of Newfoundland and Labrador. Throughout her career she has explored the dynamic character of cultural landscapes — their creation, maintenance, and change. Employing both field work and archival research, Jo has studied landscapes personal and public, urban and rural, historical and contemporary. She is co-author of Sweat Equity: Cooperative House-Building in Newfoundland, 1920–1974.

A.J. Shawyer's profile page

Editorial Reviews

"Two decades and more have been invested in this project... The result is a clearly written, tightly presented, and extensively referenced account"

The Canadian Geographer

"An impeccably detailed chronicle of the rise of Newfoundland’s housing cooperatives... Sweat Equity should be required reading for the many individuals and groups interested in taking a different approach to house building.”

Iqbal Hamiduddin, Planning Perspectives