It is a 19th-century brick home that was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982 as "the finest mid-century Italianate structure in the area.
The centrally-located doorway, behind a shed-roofed porch with two decorative piers, has an arched transom and four-paneled sidelights.
The gabled roofline is distinguished by a modillioned cornice, and is pierced by two brick chimneys on the south and one large one at a cross-gable on the north.
[1] Local property tax records suggest the house was built in 1868.
Local builder E. Ferris, with whom Secor co-owned another property in town, is noted as being active in that area of the village on the earlier map.