Although still base in Saffron Walden, Gibson and his wife spent two months every summer in County Durham and bought a house there, Balder Grange, in 1843.[1] The Victorian house is close to Cotherstone and overlooks the River Balder.
Personal life
On 7 May 1829, he married Elizabeth Pease, the youngest daughter of Edward Pease, "the father of the railways".[1] He enjoyed painting and, late in life, he built the Fry Art Gallery (1856), in Saffron Walden.[2]
They had two children:
Elizabeth Pease Gibson (1830-1870). She married the Quaker lawyer, politician and philanthropist Lewis Fry (1832-1921)
Francis Edward Gibson (1831-1862). He died of apoplexy in Florence, Italy.
^Cook, O. (2012). The Fry Art Gallery. In Artists at the Fry: Art and design in the North West Essex Collection (pp. 7-14). Saffron Walden, Essex: The Fry Art Gallery.