The Fuller House is a large and picturesque Mediterranean style house, of wood-framed construction, with tan stucco walls and red-tiled hipped roofs. A partially balustraded terrace extends along the house’s front, merging with an arcaded roof-terraced loggia on the side. The arched entry has an elaborate cast stone surround which incorporates an arched second story window with wrought-iron balcony. A wide chimney with corbelled base projects from the front wall below the second-story level, pierces the eave, and terminates in a stepped profile. It is the theatrical tour-de-force of a house designed very much as a stage set. The work of architect Wiley G. Clarkson, the house was built in 1923 for M. A. Fuller, who had business interests in banking and cottonseed oil. The Fullers owned the house through the 1920s. The Fuller House is a contributing resource in the Elizabeth Boulevard Historic District (local and national).