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Explore England's Past

Council housing

Despite the appalling slums and overcrowding, public housing made a slow start in Sunderland. The first council housing was conceived in 1892. The infamous slums of Fitters Row and the adjoining Hat Case were declared unfit, and after a series of delays, tenants moved into Harrison’s Buildings on the site in 1904. It was now council policy to replace every home demolished, so the new blocks took a novel style for Sunderland, barrack-like tenements. After the First War, Sunderland council became one of the most active house-builders in the country. Most of the estates developed on the outskirts of town. The Garths, in the east end, were a notable exception.

Content generated during research for two paperback books 'Sunderland and its Origins: Monks to Mariners' (ISBN 13 : 9781860774799) and 'Sunderland: Building a City' (ISBN 13 : 978-1-86077-547-5 ) for the England's Past for Everyone series

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