Built by H. J. Hensley and L. A. Wilson, the former hotel is a three-story structure, constructed in the town’s prevailing rock-faced limestone. Pilasters bracketing second- and third-floor windows rise above the cornice line, framing shallow bow windows recessed within the thick walls. Tile-roofed hoods extend between the pilasters. The rounded front corner is capped with a scrolled stone pediment.
Other more utilitarian late-nineteenth-century stone structures are at 106 E. Belknap Street, which has Mesker Brothers cast-iron columns on the first story and, at 111 E. Archer Street, the Jacksboro Fire Department.