Website page: Mason Square monument honors first basketball game during Hall of Fame enshrinement week (August 9, 2010)
Description:
This is website that was downloaded from Masslive.com containing an article titled, "Mason Square monument honors first basketball game during Hall of Fame enshrinement week". The article was published in the Springfield Republican on August 9, 2010. The website page was accessed and the article printed out on June 3, 2013. The article talks about the unveiling of the monument honoring the spot where basketball was first played in 1891. The article describes the monument and the festivities at it's unveiling. There are four pages. Much of the pages contain links to other stories and advertising. Also, the photos from the article do not appear. The building has been known by many different names over the years including the Winchester Square Building, the Mason Square building and the Armory Hill building. Construction on the building was completed in the spring of 1886 and it was dedicated on June 1 of that year. The building consisted of a reading room, gymnasium, parlor, a recitation room, an amusement room and fifty sleeping rooms. The Armory Hill YMCA also rented rooms in the building. In 1891 James Naismith, while a faculty member at the school, invented the game of basketball in the gymnasium of the building. In 1890 the School for Christian Workers separated into two schools which continued to operate out of the same building, the YMCA Training School and the School for Christian Workers. In 1896 the Training School, now Springfield College, finished the transition to its new location on Alden Street and in 1897 the School for Christian Workers became the Bible Normal College and moved to Hartford, Connecticut. The original building was torn down in 1965 to create a parking lot. In 1995, McDonald’s Corporation bought the land, excavating the original foundation and bricks before building a restaurant on the site. Today, there is a monument commemorating the site as the birthplace of basketball.
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Publisher:
masslive.com; Springfield Republican (Springfield, Mass.)