The exterior architecture features steeply pitched gables, half-timbering with stucco infill, prominent chimneys, and casement windows.
It is an 1880s Queen Anne style frame house, featuring an irregular plan, projecting bays, steeply pitched multiple gables, and wooden shingles.
Symmetrical in design, it had steeply pitched gables, ornate sandstone carvings of gargoyles and coats of arms.
In addition, the home still incorporates Gothic columns, pitched gables, and a cast iron roof cresting with a trefoil design.
The building is in three storeys, with tall chimneys and steeply pitched gables.
There are wraparound verandas on both floors, steeply pitched roofs and filigreed gables.
It features sharply pitched gables, a square parapeted 85-foot-high bell tower, lancet windows, and Gothic influenced interior decorative detailing.
It was constructed in 1880 and it consists of a main block with four steeply pitched gables, a corner bell tower, and a large single story rear wing.
It is irregular in plan and topped by several steeply pitched shingled gables, with a tall decorative chimney piercing the rear roof.
Its appearance, similar to that of Woodward Hall, was highlighted by prominent, steeply pitched gables and floral designs in terra cotta.