05/01/2026
Welcome to the month of May! Sharing this absolutely beautiful story about the creation of Habitat for Humanity, a wonderful program that brings community together to house our neighbors. ❤️🏡🛠️🪚
He had the house. He had the horses. He had the lake cabin and the acres of land and the bank accounts that kept growing no matter how fast he spent.
By 29, Millard Fuller had built a direct-mail empire from scratch in Montgomery, Alabama — tractor cushions sold to farmers, then cookbooks, then real estate. Everything he touched converted into cash. He was the kind of man other men pointed to as proof that the American system worked.
He was also barely home.
His wife Linda lived in a large, beautiful, silent house. The money was there. The man was not — not really. His mind was always three deals ahead, his eyes always on the next ledger. The dinner table was a very lonely place.
One afternoon, Millard came home to an empty house and a handwritten note.
Linda had packed one suitcase. She had taken a train to New York City. She needed time, she wrote, to decide whether to file for divorce.
The empire suddenly didn't feel like very much.
He canceled everything. He bought a plane ticket. He tracked her down, and they found themselves together in the back of a cab, moving slowly through Manhattan traffic, surrounded by noise and strangers. He looked at the woman he had married and asked her one question.
What would it take to save us?
She told him the truth. The wealth wasn't a reward. It was a wall. The pursuit of it was hollowing him out. He was so consumed with securing their future that he had stopped living inside their present.
Right there, in the back of that cab, they made a decision that no one around them would understand.
They would sell everything.
The business. The house. The horses. The land. The cars. The cabin. All of it. And every dollar from the sale — the equivalent of nearly ten million in today's money — they would give away. To churches. To charities. To anyone but themselves.
They would make themselves poor on purpose.
In 1965 America, where success was measured strictly by what you owned and where you lived, this looked to the business world less like wisdom and more like a mental collapse. But Millard and Linda had already seen what the accumulation was costing them. The math wasn't hard.
They liquidated everything, kept only enough to live on for a short while, and moved to a small Christian farming community in Americus, Georgia — a place called Koinonia Farm, run by a farmer and biblical scholar named Clarence Jordan.
Clarence walked Millard around Sumter County and showed him something the banks had chosen not to see. Families living in wooden shacks with dirt floors and no running water. People who worked, who had jobs, who had dignity — but who had been entirely ignored by the financial system. No lender would touch them.
The two men sat down at a wooden kitchen table and started drawing up an idea.
No charity. Charity, they agreed, creates dependency. It takes something from a person even while it gives them something else.
Instead: partnership.
Volunteers would build the homes. The families would receive them at exact cost — no profit, no interest, ever. They would pay a small monthly mortgage, and that money would flow into a fund used to build the next house for the next family. A wheel that kept turning.
There was one requirement. Every family had to help build — not just their own home, but their neighbor's.
The work was brutal. The Georgia soil was hard red clay. They had almost no funding. Local suppliers sometimes refused to sell them materials because Koinonia was an integrated community, Black and white volunteers working and eating and living side by side in rural 1960s Georgia. Their roadside stand was shot at. They were boycotted.
They kept building.
One house. Then another. Families moved out of the shacks and into dry, warm homes with running water. Twenty or thirty dollars a month began arriving in a small metal lockbox. The model worked. It was just agonizingly slow.
In 1976, Millard and Linda sat down in a small office and officially gave the idea a name: Habitat for Humanity.
Millard was the same man who had sold tractor cushions door-to-door at twenty-two. He took that same relentless energy and drove it into church basements and rotary clubs and community halls across the country. He slept in spare bedrooms. He lived out of a used car. He was not selling a product anymore. He was selling the idea that nobody should have to sleep under a leaking roof.
In 1984, a former president named Jimmy Carter — who happened to live just down the road in Plains, Georgia — heard what they were doing. He and his wife Rosalynn put on work boots and showed up at a build site in New York City.
The cameras followed. The world found out.
Today, Habitat for Humanity operates in all fifty states and across more than seventy countries. Over a million homes have been built or repaired. Millions of families sleep under solid roofs tonight because a man in a taxicab decided that what he had wasn't worth what it was costing him.
The loans still carry zero interest.
Millard Fuller died in 2009. He never rebuilt his personal fortune. He never tried to.
He had already built something that would outlast him.