It is a three-story wood-frame structure, five bays wide with a gambrel roof and clapboard siding.
The main entrance is flanked by short sidelight windows and topped by a narrow semi-oval fanlight.
A rounded bay projects to the left of the entrance, and gabled dormers pierce the roof.
The house was built in 1894 to design by Longfellow, Alden & Harlow and is a well-kept example of Colonial Revival architecture; the yard was originally landscaped by Charles Eliot.
This article about a National Register of Historic Places listing in Cambridge, Massachusetts is a stub.