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Eldercare at the Margins: Keeping up to Code at the Stephen Smith Home.

Authors :
GRANGER, WILLA
Source :
Pennsylvania Magazine of History & Biography; Oct2021, Vol. 145 Issue 3, p305-338, 34p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Between 1949 and 1966, the Stephen Smith Home, one of the oldest African American "homes for the aged" in the United States, went from partially condemned to new construction. Through his leadership at this historic Philadelphia institution, administrator Hobart C. Jackson learned firsthand the "double jeopardy" of Black aging, culminating in the 1970s with his national advocacy efforts on behalf of minority elders. The intersectionality of age and race was intimately tied to the built environment of homes for the aged, the precursor of today's nursing home. This paper considers how structural racism and ageism were materially manifested in the strug gle of African American eldercare institutions to respond to protean building and safety regulations for se nior care. I introduce a necessary architectural analy sis into histories of aging in the United States by examining how building maintenance, upkeep, and volunteerism offer a way of understanding social history. This research reveals Philadelphia's Stephen Smith Home to be both representative and singular: like other African American facilities, the home strug gled with building obsolescence and funding shortfalls, but unlike many of its counter parts, it nonetheless survived and developed into a hybrid campus of historic and newly built structures within a growing Black neighborhood. Ultimately this article does foundational work in exploring the shifting building and social cultures of the charitable old age home in the mid-twentieth century by examining a mode of community- based care that, when rendered within the built environment, contrasts greatly with con temporary perceptions of institutionalization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00314587
Volume :
145
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Pennsylvania Magazine of History & Biography
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
156136658
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1353/pmh.2021.0013