[2] The church is a combination of the Carpenter Gothic and the Queen Anne architectural styles.
[3] The church was sold in 1975, and in 1984, it became the White Steeple Gallery and Tea Room, a name by which it was still known in 1992.
[3] The church, a balloon frame 26 by 52 feet (7.9 m × 15.8 m) building built during 1891-92, is Gothic Revival in style, with Eastlake ornamentation.
The property includes a non-contributing parson's study, a one-story detached building built between 1953 and 1956, behind the church.
[4] The church and parsonage buildings were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.