Picturesquely sited on Todt Hill, this impressive Greek-Revival-style mansion is a fine example of the early-nineteenth-century frame buildings that were constructed in New York, New England and throughout the country.
Originally built in Enfield, Massachusetts around 1846 for Daniel B. Gillett, this two-story house was reconstructed in Staten Island in 1931, when the buildings in the Swift River Valley were moved or razed to allow for the creation of the Quabbin Reservoir in western Massachusetts. Charles A. Wade, a builder from Dorset, Vermont, was commissioned to relocate this building to Todt Hill on Staten Island, to serve as the home of Walter A. Tyler, an executive of the L.A. Dreyfus chewing-gum-base manufacturer.