The Most Beautiful Places in New Hampshire
Yankee’s longtime editor, Mel Allen, shares his picks for some of the most beautiful places in New Hampshire.
Coffee By Design | Portland, Maine
Photo Credit : Katherine KeenanThe farther away from home we travel, it seems, the more we see with fresh eyes. A mountain or a meadow or a sun-dappled beach — or even a bright nighttime cityscape — becomes more dramatic, more lovely, when we view it as strangers for the first time. But what if we live here in New Hampshire, one of the most beautiful places in the country? Will our eyes ever grow weary of looking at beauty?
I have lived in New Hampshire nearly 40 years, and I am still discovering places and moments of beauty that surprise me. Sometimes it may be seeing the same setting — a country road, a hillside, a meadow — in different light or in a different season. New Hampshire is compact enough for visitors to visit everything on my list of most beautiful places in a day or two, but the secret to appreciating beauty is to take time. Step out of the car. Let the scenery soak in. Look around with fresh eyes.
The Most Beautiful Places in New Hampshire
Photo Credit : Cathryn McCann
Mount Monadnock
Mount Monadnock rises 3,165 feet — barely a foothill in some parts of the west. But geology has given Monadnock the status of mountains many hundreds of feet taller, because Monadnock, located in the southwest corner of New Hampshire, stands alone. No other ridge distracts the eye. It is a mountain that gives an entire region of some 40 villages and towns a singular identity: We say we live in the Monadnock Region. Yankee is located in the heart of this area, in the small town of Dublin, and just up the road, around the curve of Route 101 heading west, Monadnock rises to the south, a blue lake at its feet. Small wonder that the setting is often compared to Switzerland. Each year some 125,000 hikers climb Monadnock’s many trails, and guidebooks typically claim it’s either the most-climbed mountain in the world or, after Japan’s Mount Fuji, the second-most-climbed. Fuji sees more people; however, there is a road cut through part of it now, so those of us who live in the shadow of Monadnock stay firm in claiming our title.
You climb above the tree line in less than an hour, and from there the landscape below will reward you even if you don’t take another step toward the summit. New England has more-famous mountains — Mansfield, Katahdin, and Mount Washington, for instance — but none that speaks as eloquently to the rugged yet gentle beauty of forest, meadow, water, home. It is why for two centuries poets and artists have climbed this mountain.
People claim that on the clearest of days they can see all six New England states from the summit. I cannot say that I have, but no matter: The promise of one day doing so is always there.
Photo Credit : Courtesy of Monadnock Berries
Monadnock Berries, Troy
I could easily compile a list of the most beautiful places in New Hampshire with nearly all the nominees coming from the 40 towns nestled along the rivers and lakes of my home Monadnock Region. I promise I’ll get to the other New Hampshire regions in a moment here, but first let me say there are few better ways to spend a late summer morning or afternoon than picking blueberries at Monadnock Berries, with Monadnock rising to the northeast and the green hills seeming to float above the fields. The blueberries, raspberries, and other, more exotic fruits are the reason that many go (it’s also a favorite place for weddings), but chances are good that after you have enjoyed the berries’ sweetness, you’ll recall the feeling of a day passing slowly on this hillside, feasting on what you pick and what you see.
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker
Canterbury Shaker Village, Canterbury
The beauty to be found at Canterbury Shaker Village is the enduring sense of living history all around. Even if visitors arrive with only a vague knowledge of the Shaker sect and what they believed (simple living, equality of sexes, communal living, pacifism, celibacy, respect for nature), the 300 people who lived and worked here two centuries ago would still feel at home all these decades later. Today, more than 25 years since the last Shaker sister at Canterbury died, the village is a tribute to a way of life that has influenced generations to appreciate the beauty in simplicity. Strolling the village, you feel relaxed, unhurried. There are nearly 700 acres of meadow, ponds, and nature trails to explore, and more than two dozen buildings to poke about — all the while perhaps singing softly the timeless melody “’Tis the Gift to be Simple.”
SEE MORE: Exploring Canterbury Shaker Village
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker
The Porches at the Mountain View Grand & The Omni Mount Washington
Here is the picture to hold: It is nearing twilight in the Whites. It doesn’t really matter if you’re sitting in one of those made-to-pass-the-day chairs on the 900-foot-long Omni Mount Washington veranda, in Bretton Woods, or on the porch of the Mountain View Grand, in Whitefield. Both of these historic grand hotels understand the beauty of repose. Having the time to simply watch (preferably with a late afternoon adult beverage in hand). The mountains seemingly close enough to converse with. The quiet.
SEE MORE: The Mount Washington Hotel at Bretton Woods
Photo Credit : Bethany Bourgault
Franconia Notch State Park
To my mind, there’s no more beautiful interstate highway stretch in America than the eight miles of I-93 that cuts through Franconia Notch. You’re flying along north of Concord at 70 mph when the road narrows, your speed slows dramatically, and you can’t take your eyes off the rising mountains (even though you must). There are moments when you feel as if your car is a watercraft slicing through a gorge. These eight miles can easily take a day, with stops along the way including the storied Flume Gorge, with its boardwalk that lets you traverse the deep gorge cut by the Pemigewasset River; the Cannon Mountain Aerial Tramway and, at its base, Echo Lake; and hiking trails that take you as deep into the wilds as you want.
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker
Conway Scenic Railroad, North Conway
When you put the word scenic in the title of your enterprise, you need to deliver, and the train excursion from North Conway to Crawford Depot over tracks that were laid in the 1870s does so in breathtaking fashion. There is an hour layover at the depot, and that is enough time to easily reach a knoll on Mount Willard for the view of Mount Washington and the southern Presidentials. If this train ride and short hike doesn’t make your own New England bucket list of most beautiful experiences, then I need to know where you’ve been.
SEE MORE: Conway Scenic Railroad | White Mountains Fun
Photo Credit : Craig Nevers
Kancamagus Highway
When you think “beautiful New Hampshire,” you must think “fall foliage.” The season is New England’s own Mardi Gras, a celebration of fleeting color that’s among the most vibrant in the world. Of all the scenic fall drives in the region, none is more celebrated than the nearly 35 miles along Route 112 that carries the local nickname “the Kanc.” The two-lane road that carries you straight through the heart of the White Mountain National Forest holds no stores, no gas stations, and no signs except for those pointing to hiking trails and campgrounds. The pull-offs look out over the national forest, waterfalls, and mountains. Moose-watching is a bonus, especially in early morning and at twilight.
SEE MORE: History of the Kancamagus Highway
Photo Credit : Ellen Edersheim (User submitted)
Newfound Lake
In the startlingly clear, deep waters of Newfound Lake, located in central New Hampshire’s Lakes Region, you can see fish swimming 10 feet below as if in an aquarium. The stream-fed lake is one of those treasures hidden in plain sight, easily overlooked in the shadow of the region’s more famous freshwater destinations, Winnipesaukee and Squam. Walk along its 20-plus miles of shoreline. Jump in. This is what a beautiful lake feels like.
SEE MORE: Prettiest Lakes in New England
Photo Credit : Deb Despres
Saint Gaudens National Historic Site, Cornish
A summer afternoon at the home and gardens of Augustus Saint-Gaudens, one of America’s greatest sculptors, gives you these possibilities to soak in beauty: sit on the expansive lawn and listen to the Sunday concerts; walk the expansive landscape of one of only two National Park Service properties devoted to visual artists; look in awe at his famous Robert Gould Shaw Memorial, a version of the same monument that faces the Massachusetts State House in Boston and depicts the bravery and sacrifice of the Massachusetts 54th Regiment during the Civil War. When my sons were growing up, the Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site was an annual visit, and as they ran around the lush green lawn they never knew they were playing amid the setting that helped create enduring beauty — but they were.
SEE MORE: Cornish, New Hampshire | Home of the Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site
Photo Credit : Courtesy of Wildcat Mountain
Polecat Trail on Wildcat Mountain, Pinkham Notch
From the Wildcat Mountain summit, Polecat cuts down the flank, and for more than two miles of twisting yet easy trail you stare west into Mount Washington’s Tuckerman Ravine. There are so many longer and steeper and more famous ski trails in America, but I venture there is none more dramatically beautiful than Polecat.
SEE MORE: Ski New England | Unique Ski Mountain Experiences
What are your picks for the most beautiful places in New Hampshire?
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Mel Allen is the fifth editor of Yankee since the magazine began in 1935. His career at Yankee spans more than three decades, during which he has edited and written for every section of the magazine, including home, food, and travel. In his pursuit of stories, he has raced a sled dog team, crawled into the dens of black bears, fished with the legendary Ted Williams, picked potatoes in Aroostook County, and stood beneath a battleship before it was launched. We think he’s as New England as they come.
I would like to add Lake Winnipesaukee, Portsmouth and Cannon Mountain Aerial Tramway. The Kancamagus Highway imo is the best of all. It is a must drive and in general is a breathtaking experience. It is so hard to narrow down the most beautiful and I am sure that everyone has their picks. Thanks for sharing yours Mel, love the insight that you have.
Lake Frances
There are so many that it’s hard to narrow it down. As a Franklin Pierce (College) University alum, I must agree with Monadnock. The views of the mountain from the campus are some of my favorite memories from college. My favorite parts of NH were always the remote rivers and streams of Pittsburg and the White Mountains that I grew up fly fishing which is no coincidence; as my father always used to say, “Trout don’t live in ugly places!”
While I live in Colorado now, New England and especially New Hampshire keeps calling to me. Yankee Magazine invokes fond memories of my youth. Your articles on Monadnock, Bretton Woods, Shaker Village and the Mount Washington hotel had me thinking I was there. Thank you for the memories.
When I first saw the title to this article, the first thing I thought of was my Mother & Father’s grave site. Sounds morbid I know, but they are buried in Dublin Cemetery, where 101 makes the turn around Dublin Lake. The exact place described in the section about Mount Monadnock.
I want everyone who has posted here to know I agree with all your comments! Can you imagine choosing from such a bounty. I once read a comment from famed filmmaker Ken Burns that choosing what to put in a film from thousands of hours of raw material was like going to an orchard and realizing you can only put so many apples in a basket and must leave the others behind.
I think you should have included the coastal drive through Rye, which is absolutely beautiful and it shows another completely different dimension to the state of NH.
I love to collect beautiful places in my travels…but one evening at Monadnock Berries, picking luscious peaches and being enchanted by Mount Monadnock, outshines them all. So cool to see that exact spot get recognized. Saint-Gaudens is also a transcendent experience, and Newfound Lake, I can barely type those words without being brought to tears at how perfectly NH it is.
I was surprised to come across my photo used in this article. I think I may have submitted it for a photo contest a while back, giving Yankee permission to use it. Still, a heads up that it was used would have been nice. Good article.
Hi Karen! Photos generously uploaded by our talented community into our former YankeeMagazine.com photo gallery are regularly used to illustrate content throughout the site — always with a photo credit. We often do not have accurate email information for photographers so we cannot notify them when a photo is used. We are delighted to have your lovely photo of Mount Monadnock representing the mountain here, but if you would prefer it not be used, let me know and I will swap it out with a different image from another photographer. Thanks!
Only one word. Beautiful
I grew up near Wildcat and they offered season tickets to locals for very reasonable prices while I was in High School and College. I have to say Polecat is my favorite trail, which I used to ski at the end of the day, when my legs were tired. I just loved those last runs of the day. My mother taught me how to ski in our back which had a small hill.
“Will our eyes ever grow weary of looking at beauty?” This sentence from Mel Allen’s introduction has me thinking back to this vignette from one of Judson Hale’s books. He wrote of the New England (Vermont?) farmer’s response to a visitor who raved endlessly about the surrounding mountain views. When the visitor stopped to take a breath the farmer injected with, “After a while it doesn’t bother me no more.”
Alexandria Village was my home. We used to walk the 4 miles to Newfound Lake as often as possible. I’ve traveled throughout the US and 20 Countries but few places are as beautiful as this one.
The tiny town of Mason, N.H. – beautiful in its simplicity. Also famous for the little house where the real Uncle Sam grew up (Sam Wilson). Read the amazing story of America’s Uncle Sam.
My husband and I built a second home in Compton about 30 years ago.
Sold it 5 years ago.
He passed away two years ago.
Miss him and beautiful N H.
So many memories of the beautiful state.
More there than where our permanent residence has been the past 56 years.
Funny.
That is so sad. Deeply sorry for your loss. Perhaps you can still go up to NH, maybe during the fall? I know it won’t be the same without your husband, but you can still enjoy the beauty, and the wonderful memories. In time, you may be able to see it without sadness. God bless.
I’ve been camping on the Kanc for 25 some years and we still go back we love it kids all grow up and they still come up as well. what does that tell you.. love the kanc.
I miss my Home State of NH mostly in the Fall time of year and have made many trips to view the Leaf Season. Enjoyed this Article about NH and also Peterborough.
How about the view of Mount Monadnock from Cathedral of the Pines.
When I lived in Peterborough I can say I have been to all your places on the list and many more.
I have been to New England a few times in the past and would like to come back again even so my old age keeps me in Pennsylvania most of the time. Hats off to Mel Allen! Hoping to come north next fall.
An overlooked gem: Foss Mountain, in Eaton. You can drive there from the Snowvillage Inn – it’s less than two miles to a small parking lot at the trailhead, then an easy hike to the summit, which gives you a spectacular 270 degree view of the Presidentials, including Mount Washington. (There is also a lovely view of Washington from the Inn.)
However, it’s a challenging drive: somewhat steep, narrow unpaved roads which are closed in the winter; I did it in my Corolla, to the surprise of another driver who arrived in a pickup, and I needed to have my wheels realigned when I got back home. Worth it, though!
Here’s their website, with more information: https://www.fossmountain.org
Love New Hampshire and wish I could visit more often. Would add the lovely small city of Portsmouth to this list. It’s a gem.