>I, too, am impressed by the skillful synthesis of Burrows' -Wallace's new book >Gotham. With all the scholarly advances of the last 20 years - I wonder what >those authors - and New York [State] historians in general - think are the >most important unanswered questions. > >For my particular area of closest interest - the real estate history of New >York City - I can think of several topics: > >1. How were the "wide streets" (34th, 42nd, 72nd, 86th, etc.) chosen >on the >1811 plan? > >2. Which developers & architects adapted to the shift from rowhouse >construction to apartment construction at the turn of the century - and which >did not? > >3. Most of the tenants in the big, new turn of the century apartment >houses >were not coming from private houses, but from other apartment buildings - and >the suburbs. What is the real story of the migration to luxury apartment >buildings? > >4. How did the lower heating loads of fluorescent lighting (1930's?) change >office building design? > >And, my personal quandary - where was Henry Clay Frick's garage (in NYC)? > >Christopher Gray >New York City Here's another possible approach: If someone knows the name of Henry Frick's coachman or chauffer (might be in his will), locating that person in the 1900 census or a 1914 city directory would probably give you the stable/garage location. Most coachman's families lifed above or adjacent to the stable. This probably true of chauffers as well Emily Leonard