It is a square three story brick building with a low hip roof that has a deep bracketed cornice.
Each facade has four bays, separated by piers that rise to corbelling just below the roof line.
At the time of its construction, the area where it stands was a densely populated neighborhood; it has since been largely redeveloped for industrial uses.
The school was featured in architectural publications of the period (although one somewhat quixotically described it as a multiunit residence).
This article about a National Register of Historic Places listing in Worcester, Massachusetts is a stub.