New York in fiction . e that is behind his men andwomen. In finding a home for the Lau- 131 NUW YORK IN FICTION derdales, Mr. Crawford obviously madeuse of the vine-covered residence of Watson Gilder, to which he hasbeen a frequent visitor, on the north sideof Clinton Place, a few doors east ofFifth Avenue. He speaks of ClintonPlace never having been a fashionablethoroughfare, although it once lay in afashionable neighbourhood. Farther easton Clinton Place, in an odd, old struc-ture tenanted by Bohemians, lived PaulHathaway {The Midge). Again takingup Mr. Crawfords New York, the sec


New York in fiction . e that is behind his men andwomen. In finding a home for the Lau- 131 NUW YORK IN FICTION derdales, Mr. Crawford obviously madeuse of the vine-covered residence of Watson Gilder, to which he hasbeen a frequent visitor, on the north sideof Clinton Place, a few doors east ofFifth Avenue. He speaks of ClintonPlace never having been a fashionablethoroughfare, although it once lay in afashionable neighbourhood. Farther easton Clinton Place, in an odd, old struc-ture tenanted by Bohemians, lived PaulHathaway {The Midge). Again takingup Mr. Crawfords New York, the secondhouse of Colonnade Row, opposite theAstor Library, was the home of WalterCrowdie and his wife Hester. A littlegarden, surrounded by an iron railing,separates the house from the white houses, with their tall pillarsand deep balconies, are among the mostinteresting and picturesque relics of theolder New York. One of them was usedby Mrs. Burton Harrison in The Anglo-maniacs. John Ralston and Katharine 132. ^usmr^a^issf- |ijil|lil|


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