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Hampden Massachusetts
is a small country town captured by the gentle hills and sloping mountains
that surround it. The Scantic River meanders through town and brings reminiscences
of the old plowshops, tanneries and blacksmith shops that once edged its
shores.
The Historical Society, housed in
Old Academy Hall, displays the Sunday-go-to-Meeting clothes, diaries and
yellowed letters that tell poignant stories of those who once called Hampden
home. Today, new homes dot the hillsides but the population has hovered
under 5,000 for many years. This is due in part to its topography and in
part to its wetlands, and it is this very feature that has brought to Hampden
the Audubon Society's Laughing Brook Wildlife Sanctuary, built around the
former home of Thornton W. Burgess, well-known storyteller and author of
children's nature books. Young people are very important to Hampden and
the town's schools reflect that fact.
Hampden has a volunteer fire department,
a town meeting form of government with three elected selectmen, a small
post office where people call each other by name and residents or visitors
can walk its unsidewalked roads at any hour in complete safety and without
fear. All in all, town residents feel it is a place one is reluctant to
leave in the morning and relieved to find waiting at the end of the day.
Hampden, its citizens feel, is changing yet changeless, quiet yet alert,
remembers its past yet ensures its future. The town is a true bit of Americana,
residents feel, an oasis in a driven world.
Hampden Massachusetts is located
in Southwestern Massachusetts, bordered by East Longmeadow on the west;
Wilbraham on the north; Monson on the east; and Somers and Stafford, Connecticut,
on the south. Hampden is 10 miles southeast of Springfield, 48 miles southwest
of Worcester, 82 miles southwest of Boston. |