The Village of Arden was founded in 1900 by sculptor Frank Stephens and
architect Will Price, both social reformers who sought to create an
ideal society based on principles set forth by the American economist
Henry George. With funding from Joseph Fels, a wealthy Philadelphia soap
manufacturer who also financed C. R. Ashbee's Guild of Handicraft in
England, Stephens and Price purchased 162 acres in northern Delaware and
named their colony after the Arden forest of William Shakespeare's As
You Like It. The community's motto was You Are Welcome Hither, but
Arden's founders did not anticipate the diverse and colorful mix of
radicals and progressives their experiment would attract, including
Upton Sinclair, muckraking author of The Jungle, and Scott Nearing,
author of Living the Good Life. Through photographs, Images of America:
Arden explores the early history of one of this country's most vibrant,
yet little known, utopian experiments.