The mansion was built by William Gibbons beginning in 1833 in the heart of his 96-acre property; it was first occupied in 1836. Gibbons was the son of
Thomas Gibbons, a prominent politician, lawyer and steamboat operator originally from the
South. In 1867, Gibbons’ only son, William Heyward Gibbons, sold the vacant mansion and estate to
Daniel Drew for $140,000. Drew, in turn, the
Drew Theological Seminary, named in his honor. The Gibbons mansion was renamed Mead Hall, in honor of Drew's wife, Roxanna Mead. The sister of William Heyward Gibbons, Sarah Taintor Gibbons, was Mrs.
Ward McAllister.
1989 fire Mead Hall was devastated by a fire in 1989, reopened in 1993, and despite the damage, is still “considered the finest example of
Greek Revival architecture north of the
Mason–Dixon line." ==See also==