an industrial and a health and housing point of view.
And the same is true of Bournville. Bournville
is one of the most beautiful villages in the world,
largely again because of the potentialities of a new
site acquired for the definite purpose of building
thereon a village in which overcrowding shall be deliberately
and permanently prevented, [Page: 121] and in
which work inside the factory may be varied by work
in the garden. Now that these successful experiments
have been carried out in this country, is it not time
that the idea of establishing new industries on new
sites, and of surrounding those industries with healthy
homes, should be carried forward on a larger scale,
with wider and more concerted aims—carried
forward, too, in such a manner as to make it possible
for the small manufacturer to take part in a movement
which has proved to be so beneficial alike to employer
and employed? It is out of this thought that
the Garden City idea has grown, an idea now in course
of being fulfilled. Three thousand eight hundred
acres of land, or nearly ten times the area of Bournville
or Port Sunlight, have been acquired in Hertfordshire,
two miles west of the town of Hitchin, and on the branch
line of railway between that town and Cambridge.
State aid has not been sought; that would indeed be
weary work. But a company has been formed, through
the untiring efforts of the Garden City Association;
plans for the town have been carefully prepared, plans
which, of course, have regard to the contours of the
land (which were first taken, showing every change
of level of five feet), to the preservation of its
natural beauties—its trees and the picturesque
villages of Norton and Willian; to the necessity for
railway sidings and railway station, now, thanks to
the Great Northern Railway, already provided; to the
making of roads of easy gradient and of suitable width,
affording access to different parts of the estate,
actual work on which is progressing; the careful guarding
from contamination of our water supply, already proved
to be abundant; the provision of a reservoir of suitable
elevation, now in course of construction; a system
of drainage, about to be started with; the provision
of parks and playgrounds within the town, as well as
a wide belt of agricultural land around it; sites
for homes for 30,000 persons, with good sized gardens.
About six cottages have already been built, not by
the Company but by private enterprise, while many others
are just about to be started upon; the setting apart
of sites for schools, churches, and other public buildings,
while plans are in preparation for lighting the town,
as well as for providing it with motive power.