[2] At this time, Hannaford was near to the peak of his prestige: he had ended a partnership with another architect seven years before, and his reputation was growing with his designs of significant Cincinnati-area buildings such as the Cincinnati Music Hall.
[3]: 11 Hannaford's design was a stone building, one-and-one-half stories tall;[2] its foundation is constructed of limestone,[4] laid in ashlar blocks,[2] while its roof is composed of slates.
Soon after he died on January 7, 1911, his funeral was held in the church,[3]: 11 and thirteen years later, the building was expanded.
[1] Seven other Cincinnati-area church buildings designed by Hannaford, as well as dozens of other structures in the city, were listed on the National Register at the same time as part of a multiple property submission.
[5] Media related to Winton Place Methodist Episcopal Church at Wikimedia Commons