Pynchon Park


Pynchon Park, also known as Hampden Park and League Park, was a sports venue in Springfield, Massachusetts. It was opened in 1853 by the Hampden Agricultural Society and was destroyed by fire in 1966.
The venue hosted various events, including horse racing, bicycle racing, and college football. It also served as home grounds for the minor-league baseball team primarily known as the Springfield Ponies.

Hampden Park

In 1853, the Hampden Agricultural Society paid $15,405 for the land on the site with the intention of creating a venue for the National Trotting Organization to hold its meetings. The facilities were also used for a broader range of recreational activities. With the advent of the American Civil War, Hampden Park was used as a muster point for the 10th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment. The 46th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment was primarily recruited in Hampden County
In 1885 and 1896, cycling's hour record was unofficially broken multiple times at Hampden Park.
Renamed in 1940 for early settler William Pynchon, the park came down in a blaze in 1966.

College football

DateWinning teamResultLosing teamReferences
November 24, 1881Amherst0–0Dartmouth
October 30, 1889'20–17
November 9, 1889Harvard67–2Wesleyan
November 16, 1889Yale52–0Wesleyan
November 22, 1889Lehigh11–11Wesleyan
November 23, 1889Dartmouth20–9Williams
November 23, 1889Yale6–0Harvard
November 12, 1890Harvard64–0Amherst
November 21, 1890'34–6Brown
November 22, 1890Harvard12–6Yale
November 21, 1891Yale10–0Harvard
October 26, 1892Yale50–0
November 19, 1892Yale6–0Harvard
November 25, 1893Yale6–0Harvard
October 17, 1894Yale34–0Dartmouth
November 24, 1894Brown20-4Dartmouth
November 24, 1894Yale12–4Harvard
November 25, 1905Dartmouth24–6Brown
October 27, 1906Dartmouth0–0'
November 24, 1906Brown'''23–0Dartmouth

The Hampden Park Blood Bath

Hampden Park provided a neutral venue between Cambridge and New Haven suitable for the annual Harvard-Yale game between 1889 and 1894, but the 1894 edition led to such violence and injury that the match was suspended for two years. It subsequently became known as the Hampden Park Blood Bath, also known as the Springfield Massacre.