| Community
Collaborations
The YMCA is continuing its long track record
of collaborating with area schools, health and human service agencies,
local communities and businesses. Working together we are making
efficient and effective use of funds, while demonstrating that the
YMCA is a strong and stable leader and an effective vehicle for
improving the quality of life in Hampshire County.
Local collaborations
Hampshire Community United Way, Hampshire Educational Collaborative,
REACH, Smith College, City of Northampton, Jessie’s House,
Cooley-Dickinson Hospital, ServiceNet, Smith Campus School, Solomon
Schecter, Northampton Chamber of Commerce, Clarke School for the
Deaf……and many more!
The Hampshire Regional YMCA’s
History
J.H. Pillsbury, a biology professor and inventor, called
a meeting in Northampton on February 2, 1880, to discuss the possibility
of a YMCA. In October, the first board of directors was elected
and a three-year lease was signed for a suite of rooms at the Smith
Charities Building on Main St. By the fall of 1890, over $2,000
had been pledged, and 165 members had enrolled in a YMCA that, as
yet, offered no programs, no gymnasium, and no pool.
It was only a short time before the Northampton YMCA
needed a space of its own. It took nine years, but in 1903, the
Y was offered property across from the Northampton Hotel. Built
for $38,000, the YMCA building on King Street and Merrick Lane was
dedicated in 1904. There was a reading parlor, an auditorium, bowling
lanes, a gym, and after 1914, a pool. However, the pool was so narrow
that only two racers could swim in the pool at one time, and the
ceiling was so low that boys could jump off of the diving board
and grab bits of plaster before hitting the water. In 1915, land was purchased for a day camp called
Camp Nonotuck. In 1922, the Y allowed Girl Scouts to use the pool
at designated times for the first time. By the ‘60s, there
were “more girls than we could handle,” one Y official
wrote. In 1936, a flood ruined the gym floor and bowling
lanes of the YMCA. Then in 1957, the pool’s filtration system
wore out. The staff repaired the building, but in 1963, a fire broke
out that caused considerable and irreparable damage. The YMCA began
to look for a new site. In 1967 the original YMCA on Prospect Street was erected. In 1996 major renovations began to take place for the current Y as we know it today. Continued improvements to the facility ensure members the benefit of state-of-the-art fitness equipment, progressive fitness and wellness programs for every age group, two pools, a Fitness
Wing, a Free Weights Room, and a Child Watch Wing. Information from the Daily Hampshire
Gazette, October 6, 1990. |