Little Fork Church stands on a low knoll to the east of State Route 229 nine miles north of Culpeper, Virginia in a small grove of trees that enhances its naturally pastoral setting.
A full-scale renovation took place in the 1970s, including relocation of the memorial to the local Little Fork Rangers cavalry unit, to the side yard of the church.
It lacks elements of deep churches in Northern Virginia such as two tiered windows and cruciform structure.
The general doorway plan and placement of the pulpit is remarkably similar to that of Lamb's Creek Church, designed by the same architect, and resembles several extant middle colony meeting houses.
[7] Instead of another wooden church, apparently planned by Edmund Bass who was paid five pounds for his work, this brick edifice was erected.
[9] However, the parish's own history states that William Phillips built the church for a fee of 35,000 pounds of tobacco and John Voss designed it.
[citation needed] In 1963, Rawlings reported a plaster line indicating that the original wainscoting was taller than that installed in the nineteenth century restoration.
The elaborate reredos contains a central tablet bearing the Lord's Prayer, the Decalogue, and the Apostles' Creed in modern gold lettering on a black background.
[7] The flat wooden ceiling is a restoration as are most of the floorboards; Rawlings believes the floor was originally lower than the present level.
[13] The 8' 8" tall windows are of typical compass style with round arches of voussiors, rubbed brick, and queen closers.
[7] There were no colonial graves near the present church, although there seems to be the start of a memorial garden cemetery to the east of the building among a copse of small trees.