[3] The building is a Tudor Revival structure constructed in 1874; it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989.
The front-facing gable houses a large arched stained glass window, and the side walls have modest buttressing.
Entry vestibules project to either side, in emulation of the English country churches its design recalls.
A significant deviation from that style is the lack of a rounded apse; instead, that section of the church has a flat wall.
It is also built out of local granite, with heavy stone window sills and lintels and steep ridged roof gables.