Hollis, New Hampshire, is one of the most graceful and deliberately preserved Hillsborough County towns in the entire state — a farming community of just under 8,000 residents that has maintained its agricultural character, colonial-era road patterns, and village green integrity with a consistency and conviction that makes it a model for what southern New Hampshire towns can choose to remain when they decide that what they have is worth protecting. Incorporated in 1746 and named for Thomas Holles, Duke of Newcastle, the town grew as a prosperous agricultural community on the fertile terrain between the Nashua and Squannacook Rivers, and its Main Street village center with its 18th-century meetinghouse, monument square, and surrounding farms has been recognized as one of the finest intact colonial landscapes in the region. The town’s most extraordinary historical landmark is Monson Center on Federal Hill Road — a New Hampshire Forest Society property that preserves the cellar holes, stone walls, and one restored Gould house of New Hampshire’s first inland settlement, founded in 1737 and mysteriously abandoned in 1770 under circumstances that historians still debate, with trails through the abandoned village that visitors describe as having a haunted vibe at dusk in October, American sweet chestnuts growing near the foundations, and a small museum in the restored house open by appointment — one of the most genuinely atmospheric and historically resonant sites in all of southern New Hampshire. The Hollis Historical Society at 20 Main Street is described by its own members as dedicated to the remembrance of this rich New England farming town’s history with nothing but positive things to say about the organization’s commitment and character, and the Hollis Farmers’ Market running seasonally near the village center draws the community together around the local agricultural heritage that has defined the town since its founding.
Beaver Brook Association at 117 Ridge Road is Hollis’s most beloved and comprehensive natural resource — a nonprofit land trust and conservation organization managing more than 2,000 acres of protected land with a trail network that visitors describe as an absolute gem spanning miles of well-maintained paths through diverse terrain, with informative trail markers identifying plants along the educational trails, a nature playground, pollinator gardens, a compost education area, fairy castles appearing in the fall, spring wildflowers, a large lake with beaver activity, Maple Hill Farm with activities and information at the southern entrance, rental cabins with fire rings for overnight stays, and a quality of ecological diversity and trail variety that makes it a destination in every season — trails to suit everyone from families with small children to serious hikers doing five-mile loops encountering school field trips and horses. The Beaver Brook Wildlife Pond Trailhead off Brown Lane provides a more focused experience with easy well-marked trails leading to beaver ponds where the animals can be observed swimming in the evening alongside great blue herons, with log benches throughout and a peaceful around-the-pond loop of about an hour perfect for families with young children. Silver Lake State Park at 138 Silver Lake Road provides Hollis’s primary swimming destination — a clean, beautiful lake beach open daily from 8 AM with picnic tables, grilling areas, and a peaceful family atmosphere that looks essentially the same as it did in the 1980s, a fact that regulars discover with something between nostalgia and relief.
Hollis’s dining and provisions scene is concentrated around Monument Square and the Market Place cluster, where a remarkable collection of independent food businesses has made the town’s small commercial center one of the finest in Hillsborough County. Buckley’s Market and Café at 9 Market Place is Hollis’s most complete food destination — open seven days a week from 7 AM with fresh proteins for dinner, fantastic baked goods including custom celebration cakes and Mexican chocolate cupcakes described as a hit, excellent deli meats and cheese selection, quick lunches, fresh Italian sandwiches with flavorful meats and spreads, fun appetizers, and a wine and beer selection that makes it as useful for a dinner party at home as for a quick lunch on the road. The Market Place Diner at 4 Market Place is the town’s essential morning institution — open seven days from 6 AM with homemade corned beef hash described simply as delicious, banana Nutella crepes described as out of this world, pumpkin muffins, hearty breakfast sandwiches, generous portions, chef Kevin’s kitchen described as caring and creative, and a small cozy interior with outdoor seating in warm months and the kind of personal service from staff like Erin that makes first-time visitors from Texas feel immediately like regulars. Hollis Country Kitchen on Proctor Hill Road rounds out the local dining picture with a home-style kitchen open Tuesday through Sunday with homemade corned beef hash, the Chicken BLT recommended by owner Christo himself described as so good, excellent pancakes described as the best outside home cooking, Greek and Italian menu options across dinner hours Wednesday through Friday, and the warm, unpretentious atmosphere of a true neighborhood restaurant where food quality and community loyalty have built a following that spans decades.