Keyes was born in Vershire, Vermont on January 3, 1810, the son of Thomas and Margaretta (McArthur) Keyes.[1][2] He was raised and educated in Vershire, and moved to Newbury at age 15 to work at the Reed & Gould store.[2] In 1831, he left Reed & Gould to go into business with his brother Freeman.[1] The brothers operated the F. and H. Keyes Store, which became the largest general store in the Connecticut River Valley.[1]
Business and farming career
In addition to the store, Keyes was active in several other business ventures.[1] In 1843, he was an original incorporator of the Connecticut and Passumpsic Rivers Railroad.[1] Keyes served as a director and succeeded Erastus Fairbanks as president in 1854.[1] Under Keyes's leadership, the railway completed a connection to the Grand Trunk Railway in 1870.[1]
Keyes's other business interests included ownership stakes in Boston's United States Hotel as well as mines, steamboats and stagecoaches.[2][3][4] Keyes was also a large shareholder in the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway.[1] He was appointed the company's president in February 1869.[1]
He also owned and operated a farm that included land on both sides of the Connecticut River in Newbury and in Haverhill, New Hampshire, where he raised Durham cattle and Merino sheep.[5] Keyes also served as president of the Vermont State Agricultural Society.[3] From 1853 to 1855, Keyes served as a trustee of Norwich University.[2]
In 1856, Keyes was the Democratic nominee for governor and lost to Republican nominee Ryland Fletcher.[2] He ran again in 1857 and lost again to Fletcher, and was the unsuccessful Democratic nominee in 1858, losing to Hiland Hall.[2]
In mid-September 1870, Keyes became ill.[1] He died in Newbury on September 24.[1] Keyes was buried at Oxbow Cemetery in Newbury.[1]
Family
In May 1838, Keyes married Sarah A. Pierce of Stanstead, Quebec.[2] They had no children and she died in 1853.[2] In May 1856, Keyes married Emma F. Pierce, a sister of his first wife.[2] They were the parents of five children—Henry, Martha, Ezra, George, and Charles.[2]