Built in 1899, the stone Gothic Revival structure is the rural community's finest example of late 19th-century architecture.
It is a single-story masonry structure, built out of randomly coursed local fieldstone and covered by a slate roof.
It is basically cruciform in shape, with a square tower project to the side of the street-facing gable end.
The sides of the nave are reinforced by buttresses, and the tower is capped by a low hip roof with posts at the corners.
Harding was then in the early stages of his career, which would include a wide variety of public buildings across New England.