It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.
[1] It is notable as a "unique early house of brick nogging-filled half timber construction with a beaded clapboard-covered main facade and a steeply pitched roof.
"[2] The exterior of the brick nogging (infill between the timbers) is plastered with stucco while the timbers are not; this is unusual as the only house in Kentucky known to have this feature.
The construction is thus dated to pioneer era and perhaps the 18th century.
This article about a property in Scott County, Kentucky on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.