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Workers trained in new techniques set production records in Kaiser’s wartime shipyards on the San Francisco Bay and the Columbia River in the Pacific Northwest.īy the time the war was over, Henry Kaiser was more than ready to start building homes as fast as possible. Kaiser revolutionized ship construction by turning it into an assembly line and prefabrication industry. Under Kaiser’s sponsorship and with federal financial aid, noted San Francisco Bay Area builder David Bohannon had built the 700-home community of Rollingwood for shipyard workers in Richmond, Calif., in just 693 hours. Kaiser had been involved in many housing projects during the war that required fast construction. “Everyone who is willing to work and save has the right to be decently and comfortably housed,” Kaiser told the Conference of the National Committee on Housing in Chicago in 1944. To this list, Kaiser added “freedom of abundance.” President Roosevelt had enumerated for the American people the “Four Freedoms” at stake in the war: freedom of speech, freedom of worship, freedom from fear and freedom from want. Mass producing homes to meet an urgent demand fit right into Kaiser’s vision of the “fifth freedom” he referred to in wartime speeches. Secret to mass production: Build ‘chassis’ for houses just as Detroit does for automobilesĪ post-World War II opportunity to build thousands of small, affordable homes for returning servicemen and their families excited Henry J.