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The Residential Context Report also states: "[T]he houses located at 822, 1013, 1021, 1029, and <br />1040 La Farge and 548 Lincoln Avenue have a very distinctive form comprising a pyramidal- or <br />hipped -roof main portion and a small, front -gabled room on the side.... All of these houses <br />date between 1903 and 1912. PaleoWest recommends ... further investigating the origins of <br />these house plans. E.J. Di Francia reportedly purchased or constructed the houses at 1013, <br />1021, and 1029 La Farge Avenue for his daughters (Bacon 2016d). These houses appear similar <br />or identical (i.e., 1021 La Farge Avenue) to the Northern Coal and Coke Company's coal camp <br />house Type C (Figure 145). In the early 1900s, that company and the Rocky Mountain Fuel <br />Company constructed many different types of houses for mine workers. When the Rocky <br />Mountain Fuel Company consolidated ownership of several mines after the Long Strike of <br />1910-1914, and again after most mines closed in the 1930s, mining companies sold many <br />houses to private owners (Conarroe 2017:3; Lewis 2011:2). The three Di Francia houses were in <br />place before 1910, and possibly as early as 1906 (Bacon 2016d:4), making it unlikely that they <br />originated at a coal mine. However, it is possible that private builders copied or borrowed from <br />the coal companies' house plans (Doug Conarroe personal communication, October 10, 2017). <br />PaleoWest recommends that further research be conducted into why the aforementioned <br />houses on La Farge and Lincoln Avenues and the Type C coal company house are so similar" <br />(page 151). <br />The preceding research is based on a review of relevant and available online County property records, census <br />records, oral history interviews, Louisville directories, and Louisville Historical Museum maps, files, and obituary <br />records. <br />7 <br />