Carver Court
Carver Court is a historic housing development located at Foundry Street and Brooks Lane near Coatesville in Chester County, Pennsylvania|Caln Township], Chester County, Pennsylvania. Built in 1944 in the International Style, Carver Court is important to understanding the African American experience in Coatesville. The development was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2016.
Description and history
Federal authorities built Carver Court during World War II as public housing for African American steelworkers and families, who were critical to the wartime defense industry. Most residents worked at Lukens Steel Company and others worked at the Coatesville [Veterans Administration Hospital Historic District|Coatesville Veterans Administration Hospital] or Embreeville State Hospital. A former race track forming a rough ellipse became a landscaped cul-de-sac around a communal open space, lined with 89 units of one- and two-story homes. These homes were modest but modern, featuring carports, designated storage, and yards to a degree uncommon in public housing. Carver Court is adjacent to the Coatesville Area High School and is separated from the town by the Lincoln Highway and Amtrak tracks.Influential Modernist architects Louis Kahn, Oscar Stonorov, and George Howe designed Carver Court alongside numerous other buildings in the Philadelphia area. Carver Court was originally named the Foundry Street Defense Housing Project but was quickly renamed in honor of George Washington Carver following a naming contest at a local school. Carver Court was dedicated on September 4, 1944. A mix of single-family and multi-family homes, Carver Court's wooden buildings mostly have vinyl exterior sliding and gable or hip roofs, replacing the original beveled wooden sliding and flat roofs. Originally rentals, the homes were sold to private owners by the Federal Housing Administration in 1955.