It features two asymmetrical, crenelated towers and a steeply pitched gabled roof.
The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984 for architectural significance and for its importance in local African-American history.
[2] Muskogee had a "thriving" black community with a business district of "several retail stores, physicians and attorneys offices, a black-owned bank, and a black newspaper, the Muskogee Cimeter.
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