Hancock, New Hampshire, is one of the most completely realized and carefully preserved Federal-era villages in all of New England — a Hillsborough County town of approximately 1,700 residents whose Main Street constitutes a nearly unbroken architectural record of early 19th-century civic and domestic life, with the white-steepled Congregational church, the general store, the inn, and the surrounding farmsteads arranged around a village green in the precise configuration that New England towns achieved at their finest between 1790 and 1830 and have been protecting ever since. Incorporated in 1779 and named for John Hancock, the town grew as an agricultural and small-manufacturing community along Norway Pond and the headwaters of the Contoocook River, and its character of careful, principled conservation has been its dominant feature for two centuries. The Inn at Hancock at 33 Main Street — proudly described as the oldest inn in New Hampshire — has been completely renovated with a phenomenal atmosphere and outstanding food that reviewers call exceptional by any standard, with a beet cocktail described as the best ever tasted, a coconut cake described as out of this world, warm fresh bread worth the visit alone, corn chowder, raspberry crisp, burger nights, and a dining room that provides the kind of experience one expects in a major city delivered in a small rural town with such charm and care that it has become a destination for special occasions from across the region. The Hancock Historical Society at 7 Main Street opens Saturday afternoons with historical pieces that visitors consistently call great and worth every minute — a modest but genuine repository of the town’s long, quiet story. The Harris Center for Conservation Education at 83 Kings Highway is Hancock’s most important institutional landmark — a nationally recognized conservation nonprofit open Monday through Friday whose passionate staff including Jeremy have been described as very kind, safety-conscious, and deeply knowledgeable about the area’s natural history, with a pollinator garden excellent in three seasons, trail maps available in the foyer even on weekends when the office is closed, and educational programming designed to teach love of the natural world through immersive experience.
Hancock’s outdoor landscape is defined by two remarkable trail systems that together offer some of the finest hiking in the entire Monadnock Region. The Skatutakee Mountain Trail system — accessed from the Harris Center parking lot on Kings Highway — follows the Harriskat Trail through forest past two large hand-carved wooden animal sculptures to the summit of Skatutakee Mountain, then connects via the Thumbs Up Trail to Thumb Mountain with what reviewers describe as a perfect 360-degree view of the surrounding hills, foliage, and distant horizon, with the 4.9-mile loop including two summits, a neon green pond, abundant wildlife, and a quality of solitude — typically only one or two other parties on the entire trail — that makes it one of the most rewarding moderate hikes in southern New Hampshire for those who prefer their trail unmarred by crowds. The Harrisville Rail Trail running south from Hancock offers 2.75 miles of diverse landscape along a segment of the original 1878 Manchester and Keene Railroad bed, with elevated embankments, beaver ponds in all stages, old stone walls, stream crossings, road cuts, and a rugged character more evocative of true trail running than a traditional rail corridor — excellent for hikers, passable for cyclists on hybrid bikes except for the rootiest eastern sections. Powdermill Pond on Forest Road rounds out Hancock’s water-based outdoor options with a boat ramp and kayak access to both the pond and the Contoocook River, beautiful covered bridge views from the water, excellent fishing, and an annual kayak event organized by the Bennington Conservation Committee each June that draws paddlers from across the region.
Hancock’s dining scene is anchored by three establishments that together make the village one of the most satisfying small-town dining destinations in the Monadnock Region. The Inn at Hancock on Main Street is the crown jewel — a seasonally rotating dinner menu of exceptional quality with a kitchen that reviewers who describe themselves as food professionals call truly talented, and cocktails whose creativity and execution make the experience feel genuinely urban in the best possible sense. Fiddleheads Café at 28 Main Street is Hancock’s beloved breakfast and lunch institution — open Tuesday through Sunday with Rwanda Kinini drip coffee described as among the best ever tasted (smooth as butter, no cream needed), a breakfast burrito desayuno described as incredibly flavorful and huge, chicken tikka described as far better than most Indian restaurants in Boston, everything avocado toast a cut above, locally made gluten-free bread, waffles with fresh fruit for children, outdoor seating on a quiet street, and a menu that has developed genuine destination appeal that draws campers, hikers, and day-trippers who discover it and immediately put it on their list for every future visit. And Hornburg Brewing Company at 165 Peterborough Road is Hancock’s finest craft beer experience — a veteran-owned, Viking-themed taproom open Thursday through Sunday with the brewer behind the bar pouring the beers they made, on-site BBQ from a local smoker, a cozy atmosphere with views of ducks and sheep through the taproom windows, a corn hole tournament culture, and a community intimacy that regulars describe as a place they would keep secret if they didn’t want so much to see it thrive.