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  2. Clayton Homes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clayton_Homes

    Clayton Home Building Group committed to donating $300,000 to support the program. [71] Clayton Homes also partners with Family Promise to donate several homes per year to families who have experienced homelessness. [72] In 2021, Clayton Homes donated $450,000 and 3 off-site built homes to be used to prevent family homelessness. [73]

  3. Raytown, Missouri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raytown,_Missouri

    The Rice-Tremonti Home, which still stands in Raytown today, was built on the Santa Fe Trail in 1844 by Archibald Rice and his family. [4] William Ray established a blacksmith shop on the Santa Fe Trail in Jackson County in about 1848. The settlement around the blacksmith shop was known first as "Ray's Town" and later as "Raytown" in 1854.

  4. Manufactured housing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manufactured_housing

    The MHINCC distinguishes among several types of factory-built housing: manufactured homes, modular homes, panelized homes, pre-cut homes, and mobile homes. From the same source, mobile home "is the term used for manufactured homes produced prior to June 15, 1976, when the HUD Code went into effect."

  5. Mobile home - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mobile_home

    Mobile homes are designed and constructed to be transportable by road in one or two sections. Mobile homes are no larger than 20 m × 6.8 m (65 ft 7 in × 22 ft 4 in) with an internal maximum height of 3.05 m (10 ft 0 in). Legally, mobile homes can still be defined as "caravans".

  6. Champion Homes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Champion_Homes

    Champion Homes was founded in 1953 as a single manufacturing facility in the small town of Dryden in rural Michigan by Walter W. Clark and Henry E. George. [4]In 2005, Champion was the first manufacturer to build privatized modular housing for the military.

  7. Rice-Tremonti House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rice-Tremonti_House

    The Rice-Tremonti House in Raytown, Missouri, was built in 1844 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979. [1]The house was built by Archibald and Sally Rice, who had moved to Missouri from North Carolina and started a forced-labor farm worked by enslaved people.