In Western Massachusetts, across Springfield, Amherst, and Northampton, there’s an undeniable influence on the way American culture has developed over time.
As the birthplace of basketball and home to the nation’s first federal armory, Western Massachusetts holds more history in one region than most would expect. It is located in the New England region along the Atlantic Coast and is the only state with both an Atlantic Ocean coastline and a coastline along Cape Cod Bay. Additionally, it is one of the original 13 colonies that played a central role in the founding of the United States. Without Massachusetts, it’s hard to imagine this country reaching 250 years, but with all its complexities, it has endured long enough to tell its story and honor those who came before it.
At the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, Alex Pedro, a curator at the museum, put Springfield’s basketball history into perspective. He explained that “the greatest thing about basketball is we can pinpoint where it was invented and who invented it,” which is not something every sport can say. The game started in 1891, just a few miles from where the museum is now, when James Naismith had to come up with something for students to do during the Massachusetts winter. It began with 18 students, peach baskets, and 13 original rules, with no dribbling and a much slower pace than the game people know today.
Courtesy of Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame
Walking through the museum also showed how much the game has grown since then. Pedro pointed out pieces connected to players across every level of basketball, from NBA legends to international stars and WNBA players. He spoke about the women’s side of the game too, including early women’s uniforms from Smith College, the fact that women were playing basketball less than a year after the game was invented, and exhibits highlighting players like Lisa Leslie, Candace Parker, Cheryl Swoopes, Brittney Griner, and Tamika Catchings. Those details made the Hall of Fame feel less like a museum about one version of basketball and more like a place that traces how the sport has expanded across generations.
Over at the Springfield Armory, the larger story of America felt directly tied to the history of Western Massachusetts. The site first served as an arsenal during the Revolutionary War before becoming one of the first federal armories in 1794. Its location in Springfield mattered, since it was close to the Connecticut River and major roadways, but still far enough inland that British warships could not easily reach it. Today, the armory is preserved as part of the National Park Service and remains open to visitors, guests, and researchers alike.
At the Springfield Armory, the focus wasn’t just on firearms but on how things were made. The site helped push the idea of interchangeable parts, where pieces could be produced to the same standard and used across different builds without needing to be adjusted by hand. One example was the work of Thomas Blanchard, who developed a duplicating lathe that could carve a gunstock out of wood in minutes, something that previously took hours of skilled handwork. More than speed, it introduced consistency, enabling the same shape to be replicated over and over again. That same technology expanded into other industries, from furniture making to shoe production, where manufacturers could produce identical shoes at scale.
Courtesy of Springfield Armory National Historic Site
The region became known for precision manufacturing, with skilled workers using the same techniques across different industries. Early carmakers like the Duryea brothers built some of the first gas-powered cars nearby, while companies like Smith & Wesson and Milton Bradley also grew out of that same environment of innovation. As it was described, the armory was “like a microcosm” of what was happening across industries, where advancements in tools, measurement, and production methods shaped everything from machinery to consumer goods. In that way, Western Massachusetts shaped not just what was produced but also how production itself evolved across America.