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PEOPLE IN AMERICA - James Rouse was a land developer who built shopping malls and a planned city near Washington, D.C.
By Jerilyn Watson
Broadcast: Sunday, November 13, 2005
(THEME)
VOICE ONE:
I'm Steve Ember.
VOICE TWO:
And I'm Faith Lapidus with People in America in VOA Special English. Today we tell about James Rouse. He was a developer who found new ways to improve American cities.
(THEME)
VOICE ONE:
It was a gray day in nineteen seventy-three. James Wilson Rouse got off a train in Boston, Massachusetts. He had come to see a very old building that was almost empty.
James Rouse
Mister Rouse owned a company that developed property. Another official of the company was on that trip. The official remembered that the building looked terrible. Part of it was burned out. It was filled with holes where rats lived.
Yet, the official said: "Jim was very happy. He said it was going to be great. The man could see things no one else could see."
VOICE TWO:
The damaged building James Rouse was inspecting became the beginning of Boston's famous Faneuil Hall. Repaired and rebuilt, it is an important part of a historic1 cultural center for stores, ethnic2 foods and street performers.
The center is designed to show life as it was in the seventeen hundreds. Millions of people from all over the world have visited Faneuil Hall.
VOICE TWO (CONT):
Faneuil Hall is just one of many "festival marketplaces" that James Rouse created in the centers of older cities. Festival marketplaces are large centers for shopping, eating and other pleasant activities. He built other major centers in New York City; Baltimore, Maryland and Miami, Florida.
VOICE ONE:
Harborplace in Baltimore is a good example of James Rouse's festival marketplaces. In the seventeen hundreds, the land on which the Harborplace development was built served as a trade center for Baltimore. Many ships sailed to and from this area of the eastern American port city.
Over the years, however, this busy, successful waterfront area changed. By the middle of the twentieth century, businesses were failing. Many buildings were empty and in need of major repair.
The Baltimore city government decided3 to establish a plan to re-build the area. The plan called for a waterfront development that would combine business and pleasure.
VOICE TWO:
James Rouse's company won the right to develop part of the area. The project was to be called Harborplace. The first part of Harborplace opened in nineteen eighty. Later in the nineteen eighties, the Rouse Company developed another area called The Gallery at Harborplace.
Today, millions of people each year visit Harborplace and The Gallery in Baltimore, Maryland. They shop and eat in many stores and restaurants. They watch music, dancing and plays performed near the water. And they enjoy the mix of people and activities that brings new life to the center of that old city.
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VOICE ONE:
James Rouse was born in nineteen fourteen. His family lived in a farming area on the eastern shore of Maryland. His father and mother died within a few months of each other in nineteen thirty. They left their five children without much money.
The parents owed a bank a lot of money for their house. So the bank was forced to take away the family home. James was able to find a job to pay for his college education. He later graduated from the University of Maryland Law School in nineteen thirty-six. He began working for a bank in Baltimore.
VOICE TWO:
In nineteen thirty-nine, James Rouse and a banker, Hunter Moss4, borrowed twenty-five thousand dollars. They formed a company that lent money to people who wanted to buy homes. During World War Two, Mister Rouse served as an officer in the Navy in the Pacific area.
After the war, he returned to Baltimore. His business grew. It represented banks and provided loans to people returning from the war who wanted to buy homes.
James Rouse became a rich man. During the early nineteen-fifties, he also became known for social action as well as property development. He tried to improve a poor, undeveloped area in east Baltimore. The mayor of the city said he would not offer complete support for a plan to rebuild the poor area. So Mister Rouse resigned from a citizens' committee that was supporting the plan.
VOICE ONE:
Also in the nineteen fifties, Mister Rouse began a project that brought him national fame. He began building some of the first enclosed shopping centers in America. He built a lot of these shopping malls in Maryland and other states. Each mall had stores and businesses inside a large building. They were built outside cities, in the growing housing areas called suburbs.
James Rouse wanted to develop land for the good of society and the environment, not just for profit. In the nineteen sixties, he dreamed of building a complete new city between Washington, D.C. and Baltimore, Maryland.
His company bought ten percent of the property in Howard County, Maryland. The company bought more than fifty-seven square kilometers of land from one hundred forty separate owners.
VOICE TWO:
In nineteen sixty-three, James Rouse announced that his company would help build a new planned community. By creating separate villages within the community, it was to seem like a small town. Each village would have a shopping center, open spaces and homes. The new community of Columbia, Maryland began in nineteen sixty-seven.
Today, more than ninety-four thousand people live in the city.
(MUSIC)
VOICE ONE:
In nineteen seventy-two, three members of a Washington, D.C. church came to visit James Rouse. The three belonged to the Church of the Saviour5, where James and Patricia Rouse had been married.
The women asked Mister Rouse for advice about creating housing for poor people in the Adams Morgan area of Washington. But Mister Rouse thought people who knew nothing about development, money or building could not possibly create low-income housing.
VOICE TWO:
The women did not give up their goal. Instead, they invested money to buy two apartment house buildings in Adams Morgan. The buildings were in terrible condition. Mister Rouse helped them get six hundred twenty-five thousand dollars to complete the deal. He also helped them get one hundred twenty-five thousand dollars to repair the buildings.
Their project was huge. People worked for no pay for fifty thousand hours to repair the buildings. Workers cleaned out garbage and rats. People also gave additional financial help for the restoration. More than nine hundred housing violations6 were corrected. The completed project provided ninety apartment homes for poor people. They were called Jubilee7 Housing.
VOICE ONE:
James and Patricia Rouse served as advisors8 for Jubilee Housing. Mister Rouse retired9 as head of his development company. Then, in nineteen eighty-two, they took a further step toward helping10 poor and middle-income people. They established a new organization, the Enterprise11 Foundation. They used profits from Mister Rouse's company to start the foundation. Its goal is to give poor people in America a chance to live in clean, pleasant places.
Since then, the Enterprise Foundation has worked with thousands of community groups and other organizations. Each year it provides thousands of new or re-built homes for poor and middle-income families.
(MUSIC)
VOICE TWO:
Many experts say that James Rouse helped shape the look of the United States for years to come. In nineteen ninety-five, President Clinton gave him the Presidential Medal of Freedom. It is the highest award a civilian12 can receive. He was honored for his work restoring the central areas of cities. President Clinton said that James Rouse's life was based on a strong belief in the American spirit.
James Rouse died in nineteen ninety-six. But the work of the Enterprise Foundation continues with help from family members. One of these is the Rouses' grandson, Edward Norton, a movie actor. He developed a project to help poor people heat their homes. It is a joint13 project with the organization his grandparents established.
The influence of James Rouse continues today in other ways. Developers continue to re-build and improve poor areas of cities. And millions of people visit historic centers like Faneuil Hall and Harborplace every year.
(THEME)
VOICE ONE:
This program was written by Jerilyn Watson. Lawan Davis was our producer. I'm Steve Ember.
VOICE TWO:
And I'm Faith Lapidus. Join us again next week for PEOPLE IN AMERICA in VOA Special English.
(THEME)
1 historic | |
adj.历史上著名的,具有历史意义的 | |
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2 ethnic | |
adj.人种的,种族的,异教徒的 | |
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3 decided | |
adj.决定了的,坚决的;明显的,明确的 | |
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4 moss | |
n.苔,藓,地衣 | |
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5 saviour | |
n.拯救者,救星 | |
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6 violations | |
违反( violation的名词复数 ); 冒犯; 违反(行为、事例); 强奸 | |
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7 jubilee | |
n.周年纪念;欢乐 | |
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8 advisors | |
n.顾问,劝告者( advisor的名词复数 );(指导大学新生学科问题等的)指导教授 | |
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9 retired | |
adj.隐退的,退休的,退役的 | |
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10 helping | |
n.食物的一份&adj.帮助人的,辅助的 | |
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11 enterprise | |
n.企业单位,商业公司,事业,计划 | |
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12 civilian | |
adj.平民的,民用的,民众的 | |
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13 joint | |
adj.联合的,共同的;n.关节,接合处;v.连接,贴合 | |
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