His 1998 book, “Gotham,” which told the city’s story to 1898, focused on social 
and economic conflict. It won a Pulitzer Prize and inspired two sequels.

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/05/books/mike-wallace-dead.html

Mike Wallace, a self-proclaimed radical historian whose magisterial, 
unvarnished biography of New York, “Gotham,” written with Edwin G. Burrows, won 
the Pulitzer Prize and inspired two more door-stopper volumes about the city, 
died on Sunday in Mexico City. He was 83.

His death, in a hospital, was confirmed in a statement by his wife, Carmen 
Boullosa, a poet and playwright. She said he had been suffering from Lewy body 
dementia.

In the early 1960s, the Brooklyn-born Mr. Wallace was dutifully fulfilling his 
mother’s dream for him as a pre-med student at Columbia. But after nearly 
failing organic chemistry, he became radicalized in the years leading up to the 
1968 student takeover of campus buildings to protest the Vietnam War. (He would 
be among the hundreds of students arrested during those demonstrations.)

Mr. Wallace turned his studies to history, and came to define ( 
https://muse.jhu.edu/article/30214/summary ) “radical” as bottom-up social 
history that recognizes the profound influence of capitalism and of economic 
and social class distinctions and conflicts. He argued that in most 
conventional accounts “the dominant classes in the United States — wittingly or 
unwittingly — appropriated the past,” and he incorporated the voices of women, 
Black people, the working class and others who had often been excluded.

What became a half-century scholarly undertaking began in 1976, when Mr. 
Wallace and Mr. Burrows were awarded a $7,000 grant to write an expansive book 
that would encompass the global transition from feudalism to capitalism. 
Eventually, they decided that telling the story through the prism of New York 
over 500 years was formidable enough.

In “Gotham: A History of New York City to 1898,” published to coincide with the 
centennial of Greater New York, Mr. Wallace made a case that the consolidation 
of what became the five boroughs was a natural sequel by local government to 
what corporations had in the late 19th century recently accomplished to stifle 
competition through trusts and monopolies.

“For all the big bankers and corporate executives’ putative love of free 
markets,” he told The New York Times ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/29/nyregion/mike-wallace-the-man-of-gotham.html 
) in 2017, “real capitalists of that era thought competition is lunatic. They 
have to cut wages, which leads to unionism, which has to be repressed, which 
leads to socialism.”

In describing the book, the Pulitzer committee said, “The authors weave 
together diverse histories — of sex and sewer systems, finance and 
architecture, immigration and politics, poetry and crime — into a single 
narrative tapestry that reads like a fast-paced novel.”

The book’s heroes, the committee added, were the hundreds of individuals, 
famous and unknown, whose “fusions and collisions generated tremendous kinetic 
energy, cultural inventiveness and a vision of unity-in-diversity that would 
become a distinctive contribution to world civilization.”

Mr. Wallace, now the sole author, wove similar themes into “Greater Gotham: A 
History of New York City From 1898 to 1919” (2017), in which he traced the 
city’s displacement of Europe as a world financial capital as the United States 
emerged from World War I as a creditor nation, and “Gotham at War: A History of 
New York City From 1933 to 1945” (2025), as the city claimed the mantle of 
world capital when it won its underdog campaign to become the United Nations 
headquarters.

Collectively, the three volumes numbered some 3,500 pages. But reviewers wrote 
that Mr. Wallace’s verve and wit, and his unsparing profiles of the characters 
who built the city, made for light reading.

He wrote, for example, that in 1908, before automobiles proliferated, more than 
120,000 horses deposited 60,000 gallons of urine and 2.5 million pounds of 
manure in the streets every day; that reformers’ efforts to curb Sunday 
drinking, by limiting it to hotels with 10 or more bedrooms, unintentionally 
benefited the sex trade by inspiring saloonkeepers to partition their barrooms 
into brothels; and that when the New York labor leader Bayard Rustin was 
imprisoned as a war resister, the convicted murderer Louis “Lepke” Buchalter 
nearly died laughing over the anomaly that people could be jailed for not 
killing.

Michael L. Wallach was born on July 22, 1942, in Brooklyn. His father, Aaron, 
was the son of Russian immigrants. His mother, Margaret Lederer, a dressmaker, 
was born in Hungary.

In 1943, the family moved to San Francisco, where his father ran a record 
store. In 1949 (after the family apparently changed its surname sometime in the 
1940s), they returned to New York, where he was raised in Fresh Meadows, 
Queens, and in Valley Stream and Great Neck on Long Island, where his father 
became a real estate broker.

“Politically I had come out of the heart of Reader’s Digest land,” he recalled.

After graduating from Great Neck North High School, he earned three degrees in 
history from Columbia: a bachelor’s in 1964, a master’s in 1966, and a 
doctorate in 1973. While he was researching his dissertation on the birth of 
the two-party system, he and his adviser, Richard Hofstadter, published 
“American Violence: A Documentary History” (1970).

Thanks to a recommendation from Professor Hofstadter, he was recruited by Leon 
Botstein, then the 23-year-old president of Franconia College in New Hampshire 
(and more recently the president of Bard College until he stepped down this 
year), to join Franconia’s one-man history department.

A year later, Mr. Wallace was denounced by The Wall Street Journal for an 
article he had published in The American Scholar. Mr. Wallace assumed the 
editorial had doomed his future employment prospects in academia.

He was commiserating with John M. Cammett, a scholar of Italian communism at 
the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, part of the City University of New 
York. Mr. Wallace later recalled: “Cammett says, ‘You’ve been attacked by The 
Wall Street Journal! You want a job?!’ John took this as a great job 
credential.”

At John Jay, where most of the students at the time worked in law enforcement, 
Mr. Wallace said: “My first class had lots of students who had been on the 
other side of the police barricades from me, up at Columbia in 1968. I also 
taught Western Civilization, which I reformulated as a course on the history of 
imperialism.”

Promoting public history in all its incarnations, he directed the Radical 
History Forum for about 10 years in the 1970s and ’80s; helped save the 
New-York Historical Society (now the New York Historical) from financial 
collapse in the 1990s; advised Ric Burns on his PBS series “New York: A 
Documentary Film”; and in 2000 founded the Gotham Center for New York City 
History at the City University Graduate Center.

He anthologized some of his pieces in “Mickey Mouse History and Other Essays on 
American Memory” (1996) and after the Sept. 11 attacks wrote the prescriptive 
“A New Deal for New York” (2002).

His marriages to Nancy Greenough, Elizabeth Fee and Hope Cooke ended in divorce 
*.*

In 2005, he married Ms. Boullosa. They lived in Brooklyn and Mexico City and 
together wrote “A Narco History: How the United States and Mexico Jointly 
Created the ‘Mexican Drug War’” (2015). Information about his other survivors 
was not immediately available.

Mr. Wallace said that historiography — the study of history — is, like history 
itself, a constant struggle, in part because most people are focused less on 
what came before than on what’s next.

“It’s an American characteristic, to some degree,” he told Columbia College 
Today ( 
https://www.college.columbia.edu/cct/issue/winter-2020%E2%80%9321/article/guru-gotham
 ) in 2020, echoing George Orwell. “The past is the dustbin of history. It 
might be a source of amusing movies or interesting museum exhibits. But the 
action is in the future. Followed closely by the present.”


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