The front section is three stories high with a corner tower.
The second floor housed a library and the third a meeting hall, which was originally used as the town's Masonic Temple.
[2] During the 1919 renovation, the auditorium was modified to make it suitable for movies and traveling vaudeville shows.
This building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1975.
[1] In 1983, the auditorium underwent an extensive restoration, preserving the details of the 1919 renovation.