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Betty Boyd Caroli, "A Slumless America: Mary K. Simkhovitch and the Dream of Affordable Housing" (Oxford UP, 2026)

Jan 28, 2026
Betty Boyd Caroli, historian and author known for biographies and women's history, tells the story of Mary K. Simkhovitch, a pioneering settlement-house leader and public housing advocate. She traces Greenwich House, European influences on housing ideas, Simkhovitch’s role in New Deal public housing, and the lasting relevance of her reform work to today’s housing debates.
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ANECDOTE

How The Project Began

  • Betty Boyd Caroli recounts how her husband's job at Greenwich House introduced her to Mary Kingsbury Simkhovitch and sparked decades of research.
  • She discovered Simkhovitch's surprising fame despite being little-known to many New Yorkers.
INSIGHT

State Role In Housing As Infrastructure

  • Mary Simkhovitch's Berlin year transformed her view: she saw state-supported housing as necessary in dense cities.
  • She framed decent housing as a public infrastructure right, akin to clean air and water.
ANECDOTE

Marriage And Early Financial Strain

  • Caroli describes Simkhovitch meeting Vladimir Simkovich in Berlin, marrying him, and supporting the family early on.
  • Vladimir initially earned little while Mary carried most financial responsibility for years.
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