While the architect is unknown, St. Mary's English Gothic Design has been described as "a little box of place, an old dwelling fixed nicely inside.
It was during his ministry that St. Mary's became a host to talks on civil rights, capital punishment, and working with the Utah State Hospital.
A former member of St. Mary's, Reverend Jeannette Ridlon Piccard, was one of the first women to be ordained to the Episcopal Clergy.
[7] One of St. Mary's strongest proponents of Civil Rights was Reverend Alan C. Tull who served during the early and mid 1990s.
[8] The church's parish hall and library host more than twenty addiction and LGBT support groups that meet throughout the week at St. Mary's.