It is a small single-story wood-frame structure with a gable roof and clapboarded exterior.
Its main facade has two matching entrances, framed by simple molding and topped by a cornice.
The interior has two vestibules with closets between them, leading into a single large schoolroom with a raised section at the back.
The building's utilitarian appearance, which is largely devoid of period stylistic embellishments, was probably more typical of Connecticut's 19th-century district schools.
[2] The school was built around 1855, on land given for the purpose by Henry Wylie, a local farmer.