It was built in 1891, and is a three-story, Victorian Italianate style brick townhouse.
The house was altered by the architectural firm of Noland and Baskervill in 1904.
It features a flat roof decorated with a Doric entablature and copper cresting, a full height three-sided bay window, and an entry porch supported by paired Doric order columns.
At two meetings in November 1909, a group of women met at the home to form what would become the Equal Suffrage League of Virginia (ESL).
This article about a property in Richmond, Virginia on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.