It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1996,[1] and continues in use by the original congregation.
The Congregationalists met in private homes until 1789, when the town's meeting house was complete enough for use.
This building was used by the town for civic purposes, and was shared with a local Baptist congregation until 1793.
This church its second, was dedicated in February 1882, and was built by local contractor B. H. Hatch of Great Barrington.
It was built in the then-fashionable Stick style, to a design by Pittsfield architect Charles T.