The Booth House was designed and constructed by Samuel H. Booth, one of City Island’s most prolific contractors in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. It is a two and half story wood frame house that features asymmetrical massing, wood clapboarding, gabled roofs with deep eaves, a corner entrance porch, and angled bays, all typical of the Stick style. The Booth family owned the house until 1959, during which they added a rear porch, a gabled oriel on the east and an angled bay on the west. While the new owner renovated the house in the mid-1980s, building out the attic and replacing windows, the Booth house retains its historic Stick style