The property includes a small brick wash house, a row of board-and-batten outbuildings, a large stone end bank barn, a frame corn crib and wagon shed, and lime kiln.
Samuel Doub built the current eight-room brick farmhouse in 1851, as evidenced by painted dates in the attic.
Frisby Doub died unmarried without children in 1915 and the property passed to the Kline family who had been his caretaker while elderly.
The Doubs currently manage the property for conservation and agriculture, leasing the fields and pastures to Brian Baker, a local farmer.
Other outbuilding structures include a brick smokehouse situated just north of the house and a chimney that was likely part of a summer kitchen located just southeast.
Peyton Doub remembers that the collapsed remains of the summer kitchen stood until 1976, when his family had the building (except for its chimney) and a pile of litter inside it removed as part of the overall restoration of the property.
Peyton Doub built a brick patio in front of the chimney in 1978, his senior year in high school.
A few osage orange trees remain near the roadway and drop their large green tennis ball sized fruits on the ground.
The eastern part of the property is a roughly 30-acre tract of pasture land that contains multiple scattered small woodlots, most of which surround abrupt rock outcrops of 20 feet or more.
One key feature of the Doub Farm is an unnamed intermittent stream that flows through the property roughly from north to south, passing close in front of the house and barn.
The stream and adjoining wetlands are typically dry in mid summer and fall with streamflow returning with heavier rain and snowmelt events in winter.
While flowing, the stream and its wetlands attract enormous numbers of Canada geese and occasional great blue herons and American egrets.
Great blue herons frequent the stream as it dries down in late spring and large numbers of carp become entrapped in isolated pools of remnant water.
A drought in late 2017 and early 2018 left the stream and wetlands dry throughout winter, spring, and early summer of 2018; but unusual mid-summer rain events have kept the stream and wetlands full of running and standing water throughout the normally dry summer months.
Peyton Doub has noted over the years numerous groundhogs, skunks, possums, cottontail rabbits, red and yellow foxes, and coyotes.
Brian Baker, who rents and farms much of the land, has anecdotally spoken of black bears and mountain lions in the area.