Francestown, New Hampshire, is one of the most perfectly realized small hill towns in the entire Monadnock Region — a Hillsborough County community of fewer than 1,600 residents whose village center on Main Street at the junction of New Boston Road and Greenfield Road constitutes one of the most authentically preserved and genuinely beautiful New England commons in the state. Incorporated in 1772 and named for Frances Deering Wentworth, wife of Royal Governor John Wentworth, Francestown was the home of important early 19th-century figures including Daniel Abbot, and its landscape of stone walls, farmsteads, and mountain views gave the town a character that generations of residents have worked carefully to maintain against the pressures of development that have altered so many of its neighbors. The Old Meeting House at 1 New Boston Road is the town’s most beloved landmark — a beautifully restored 18th-century meetinghouse with great acoustics, a setting that inspires visitors to describe it as a perfect New England wedding venue, and a summer Sunday concert series on the lawn at 4 PM every week that has made it a genuine community gathering place for music, comedy performances including a comical short Christmas Carol, and the kind of unhurried communal life that most towns have lost entirely. The Francestown Improvement and Historical Society on Greenfield Road preserves the town’s documentary record, and the town center itself — with its magnificent live Christmas tree, its scenic focal point that makes visitors describe it as a community that simply makes you feel good — functions as a living museum of New England civic life that requires no admission and no explanation.
Francestown’s most spectacular outdoor asset sits directly on its western border in the form of Crotched Mountain, whose two distinct trail systems serve entirely different audiences and together make this modest 2,066-foot summit one of the most accessible and rewarding mountain experiences in southern New Hampshire. Crotched Mountain Ski and Ride on Francestown Road in Bennington operates as a Vail Resort property with a mix of beginner and challenging terrain, evening skiing until 9 PM on weekdays, excellent ski school instructors whose patient and enthusiastic teaching has earned the mountain a devoted following of families introducing children to the sport, a repair team that has been described as extraordinary, and a bar and cafeteria that serve skiers coming off the slopes with the reliable efficiency of a well-run mountain operation. The Crotched Mountain Accessible Trails on Verney Drive in Greenfield provide a completely different experience on the same mountain in the non-ski season — a 1.5-mile Gregg Trail to a summit observation platform with beautiful views, a 2-mile Dutton Brook loop through woods and wetlands with an observation deck, fully handicap-accessible trail surfaces, picnic areas, and an atmosphere calm enough that a 2.5-year-old child has walked the entire trail without difficulty. Miller State Park on Pack Monadnock Mountain in Peterborough — New Hampshire’s oldest state park, just twenty minutes from Francestown — adds the option of driving to the summit or hiking the yellow or blue trails to panoramic views reaching Mount Washington and the Boston skyline on clear days, with a fire tower, hot chocolate, gift shop, and staff who greet arriving dogs with treats.
Francestown’s dining scene is anchored by two establishments of exceptional quality that have together made this tiny hilltop town a genuine dinner destination for people driving from Manchester, Nashua, and beyond. The Tavern at Blue Bear Inn at 534 Mountain Road on the slopes of Crotched Mountain is the most enthusiastically reviewed restaurant in all of Hillsborough County — a beautifully restored and modernized old farmhouse open Thursday through Sunday with smoked prime rib on special nights with horseradish crema cooked to perfect medium rare, fried cheese curds that are crisp and gooey simultaneously, a roaring fireplace that makes winter evenings here feel genuinely restorative, expert cocktails, and a level of attentive, warm, old-fashioned service that visitors describe as the kind they thought had disappeared entirely — making reservations essential and drawing anniversary and birthday dinners from an hour in every direction. The Toll Booth Tavern on the 2nd New Hampshire Turnpike is the town’s beloved neighborhood bar and grill — open Thursday through Sunday with massive fish and chips portions, excellent fried pickles, pretzels described as always a hit, outdoor deck seating in season, a loyal local following of skiers rolling in from Crotched Mountain and lake visitors in summer, and a friendly staff whose sweetness and warmth reviewers note with consistency — a tavern whose relaxed conviviality and reliable food make it the kind of place people return to not because it is extraordinary but because it is exactly right. Tooky Mills Pub in neighboring Hillsborough, fifteen minutes north, rounds out the regional dining picture with outstanding chicken parmesan, baked haddock, prime rib with butternut squash, and a beer and cider selection that makes it one of the most reliably satisfying bars and grills in the broader Monadnock Region.