IT IS the council housing that can leave the strongest impression in the villages, small towns and hamlets of our countryside. Still today, it is the well-built council family houses, mostly semis or small terraces, with their generous garden and community spaces, often paying homage in their design to local building traditions, that seem most practical and homely. With their old privet hedges, mini-greens and trees often older than the houses, they are as much part of our countryside as old churches, pubs and timber-framed cottages.
They weren’t perfect. Some were cramped, while others were generously sized. Some were old-fashioned, poorly built and insulated, while others used the very latest building techniques.
The old council management regimes could be nit-picking and oppressive as well as caring, and in the early days, the rents were often beyond many of the poorest folk. You don’t often find them in the old village centres. The landowners and councillors didn’t want them too near the quaint old streets and lanes of cottages and prosperous tradesmen’s homes, farmhouses and small manor houses.
They made sure the council housing was stuck out on local feeder roads, or groups of ex-farm fields, often some distance from the old centres. Rural council housing represented one of the greatest gains for rural working-class people made in modern times. It was mostly built in the 60 years between the 1919 Addison Housing Act and the Tories’ 1980 “right to buy” Hous.
