The contributing buildings are the farmhouse (1832), a hewn timber frame Pennsylvania barn (c. 1900), and a small shed that date to the late-nineteenth or early twentieth-century. The property also includes the millrace and remains of a sicklemill and a line of cobblestones from the barn to the mill site. The house is a two-story, seven-bay, brick building with a central recessed double porch that was designed in a vernacular Greek Revival style.[2]