The station and water tank were built in 1910 by the Bangor & Aroostook Railroad (B&A) and were added to the National Register of Historic Places on June 20, 1995.
The station is a small rectangular wood frame building with a broadly-overhanging gable roof and weatherboard siding.
It is 51 feet 8.5 inches (15.761 m) in length, and was built by the Pullman Company as a troop transport car in December 1943.
The tank is supported by a heavy timber frame, and is structurally reinforced by fifteen steel rods.
It was built c. 1910, and served the railroad as a water source for its steam engines until 1958, when the line was converted to diesel power.