They include the farmhouse, a stone bank barn (c. 1780), spring house (c. 1800), two frame tobacco barns, a small frame shed (c. 1940), and family burial ground.
The farmhouse is an evolutionary dwelling originally built as a two-story, stone building about 1750, and extensively remodeled in 1787.
Stone and frame additions were made about 1815, about 1870, and about 1890.
Attached to the house is a small frame summer kitchen with beehive oven, that was once a separate structure.
[2] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994.