Built in 1876, it is a distinctive local example of Stick Style architecture, and has served the town as a schoolhouse and community meeting place for most of its existence.
It has a three-bay facade, with the center bay projecting slightly and rising to an open belfry and pyramidal cap.
The roof eaves are adorned with decorative brackets, and the front of the upper portion of the tower has applied wood work in the Stick Style.
The main entrance is sheltered by a hip roof portico that is fronted by a Stick style gable.
[2] The hall was built in 1875–76, with funds donated by John W. F. Hobbs, a native son who made his fortune in Boston.