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Funded by the Works Progress Administration and constructed under the supervision of local builder David Felts, the community house has a rustic appearance, popular for rural Great Depression-era buildings. Its round, peeled logs connect at the ends with saddle notches in contrast to nineteenth-century Mississippi log buildings, which typically featured hewn, squared logs that formed roughly planar wall surfaces. Exterior ironstone chimneys (a material rarely used in this sandy region) anchor both end walls. On the interior, the log walls, stone chimneys, and the roof structure are exposed.