It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2001.
[1] It is a large wood-frame square-plan structure constructed by J. M. Guthrie to be "used for revivals, church association meetings and conferences, singing conventions and 'meetings for all good purposes.
'"[2] It was originally open on one side until it was enclosed in 1938 as part of a National Youth Administration project during the Depression.
In Methodism, a "tabernacle" serves as the center of a camp meeting.
This article about a property in Allen County, Kentucky on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.