The main house is a large 2+1⁄2-story wood-frame building, with complex massing and roof line typical of the Queen Anne period.
Prominent features include a three-story tower with elaborate trim and balconies on the upper levels, and a full-width porch extending across the front.
The carriage barn, located near the southern end of the loop, is decorated in a manner similar to the house.
[2] Roughly opposite the house on the west side of Route 103 stands the mausoleum, set raised above the roadway, with a dressed ashlar granite retaining wall below.
[2] John Porter Bowman, for whom Laurel Hall was built, was a native of Clarendon who made a fortune in the tanning and leather industry, supplying the Union Army during the American Civil War.