Existing Customers: Login

Homes For Sale By Owner in Keene, New Hampshire

Find homes for sale by owner in Keene, New Hampshire

Search Keene real estate listings in New Hampshire to find for sale by owner homes in the Cheshire County metro area. Access the largest selection of fsbo homes in your local area.

Sell home by owner in Keene, New Hampshire

List for Free on Largest FSBO Site
Save Thousands in Commission
Sell Home FSBO

Sell a home by owner in Keene and save thousands in commission. New Hampshire houses for sale by owner in Cheshire County sell faster with our preferred real estate listing services.

Keene, New Hampshire For Sale By Owner - Local Information

Keene is a city in Cheshire County, New Hampshire, United States. The population was 22,955 at the 2000 census. The estimated population was 22,834 in 2007, according to the State Data Center. It is the county seat of Cheshire County.

Keene is home to Keene State College and Antioch University New England, and hosts the annual Pumpkin Fest.

Map of Keene, New Hampshire FSBO Listings

Additional information about Keene, New Hampshire


The community was granted as Upper Ashuelot in 1735 by Colonial Governor Jonathan Belcher to soldiers who had fought in the war against Canada. Settled after 1736, it was intended to be a fort town protecting the Province of Massachusetts Bay during the French and Indian Wars. When New Hampshire separated from Massachusetts in 1741, the border between the two shifted south, and Upper Ashuelot became part of New Hampshire.

During King George's War, the village was attacked and burned by Indians. Colonists fled to safety, but would return to rebuild in the early 1750s. It was regranted to its inhabitants in 1753 by Governor Benning Wentworth, who renamed it Keene after Sir Benjamin Keene, English minister to Spain and a West Indies trader. Located at the center of Cheshire County, it became county seat in 1769. Land was set off for Sullivan and Roxbury, although Keene would annex from Swanzey (formerly Lower Ashuelot).

thumb

Timothy Dwight, the Yale president who chronicled his travels, called the town "...one of the prettiest in New England." Situated on an ancient lake bed surrounded by hills, the valley with fertile meadows was excellent for farming. The Ashuelot River provided water power for sawmills, gristmills and tanneries. After the railroad arrived in 1848, numerous other industries were established. Keene became a manufacturing center for wooden-ware, pails, chairs, sash, shutters, doors, pottery, glass, soap, woolen textiles, shoes, saddles, mowing machines, carriages and sleighs. It also had a brickyard and foundry. Keene was incorporated as a city in 1874, and by 1880 had a population of 6,784.

New England manufacturing declined in the 20th century, however, particularly during the Great Depression. Keene is today a center for insurance, education and tourism. The city nevertheless retains a considerable inventory of fine Victorian architecture from its flush mill town era. An example is the Keene Public Library , which occupies a Second Empire mansion built about 1869 by manufacturer Henry Colony.

Equal Housing Opportunity