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After building several frame churches, the First Methodist congregation erected this monumental buff brick Classical Revival church. A tall, two-story, gable-roofed block is fronted by a pedimented portico with four Corinthian columns in cast stone with brick pilasters behind. A (currently unpainted) tall metal entablature wraps the entire body of the church. The massing is complex, with lower inset entrance blocks and advancing and receding planes of the main block. Windows and doors have projecting, bracketed architraves that, along with pilasters and rich Corinthian capitals, add depth to the wall surface. The gable roofs were installed over the original flat roof in 1950, raising the profile out of proportion to the original composition and diminishing the importance of the front pediment.