It is notable for its architecture and as the only extant house on the Downtown section of Central Avenue, which is otherwise occupied entirely by commercial buildings.
[4] The contractor, Wallace Hesselden, also built the Henry Mann House the same year.
The house is a two-and-a-half-story building generally adhering to the American Foursquare design, with a rectangular plan, a pyramidal hipped roof with dormers on three sides, and a full-width porch.
The clinker brick was also used to build a wall and walkway in front of the house.
This article about a property in New Mexico on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.