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Constituency of the
Massachusetts State Senate
Current 
 
–[[, Massachusetts|]]

The 2nd Hampden and Hampshire Senatorial District is one of 40 electoral districts that each send one senator to the Massachusetts Senate. The district is represented by state Sen. Donald Humason Jr. of Westfield, a Republican.

The district consists of several urban, suburban and rural communities in western Hampden and Hampshire counties, including Holyoke, Westfield and parts of Chicopee.

Under previous apportionment plans, the district was also known as the 2nd Hampden District and Western Hampden District.

Cities and towns[edit]

Under the apportionment plan of 2011, the largest cities to lie entirely in the district are Holyoke and Westfield. Smaller towns in the district are Agawam, Easthampton, Granville, Montgomery, Russell, Southampton, Southwick and Tolland. Some northwestern neighborhoods of the city of Chicopee are also in the district: ward 7, both precincts; ward 8, precinct A; and ward 9, precinct A.

Of the cities and towns in the district, only Easthampton and Southampton are in Hampshire County; the rest are in Hampden County. Apart from the four Chicopee precincts, which are directly across the river from Holyoke, the entire district lies west of the Connecticut River.

Senators[edit]

Senator Party Hometown Years Notes
Roger L. Bernashe Democratic Chicopee 1971 –
1974
Redistricted to Hampden and Hampshire District
District eliminated 1975-1978
Alan Sisitsky Democratic Springfield 1979 –
1982
Redistricted from Hampden and Berkshire District
Did not run for re-election
Linda Melconian Democratic Springfield 1983 –
1988
Redistricted to 1st Hampden District
Did not run for re-election
Brian Lees Republican East Longmeadow 1989–
1994
Redistricted to 1st Hampden and Hampshire District
Michael Knapik Republican Westfield 1995 –
2013
Resigned August 13, 2013
Donald Humason Jr. Republican Westfield 2013 –
present
First elected in special election

History[edit]

The 2nd Hampden and Hampshire District can trace its history back to the original state senatorial districts created in 1857. Before the 1857 apportionment, senators were elected by county, with some counties serving as multi-member districts. The towns that would become Hampden County were initially part of Hampshire County, and helped elect its four senators; after the formation of a separate Hampden County in 1812, the three Pioneer Valley counties shared three or four senators. After 1821, Hampden and Hampshire counties each elected two senators on their own.

1857-1876: Western Hampden[edit]

When a statewide system of single-member senate districts was established in 1857, Hampden County was split in two, with a Western Hampden District serving all of the Hampden County towns in the present 2nd Hampden and Hampshire District. This district included Chicopee and Ludlow, east of the river, and the entire portion of Hampden County west of the river: Agawam, Blandford, Chester, Granville, Holyoke, Montgomery, Russell, Southwick, Tolland, West Springfield and Westfield.

1876-1906: 2nd Hampden[edit]

In the redistricting of 1876, the Western Hampden District was renamed the 2nd Hampden District. It included all of the same towns, with the addition of Longmeadow (including the territory of the future East Longmeadow) from the former Eastern Hampden District.

In 1886, the town of Hampden, east of Longmeadow, was moved from the 1st Hampden District to the 2nd Hampden District. The 2nd Hampden District also lost three of its western towns, with Blandford, Chester and Russell moving to the Berkshire and Hampshire District.

1906-1970: 2nd Hampden[edit]

Radical reapportionment in 1906 curtailed the district's boundaries to the four communities of Chicopee, Holyoke, West Springfield and Westfield, which the eastern towns joining the largely rural Worcester and Hampden District and the southern and western towns joining the Berkshire, Hampshire and Hampden District.

In 1916, the district's footprint was reduced further, to Chicopee, Holyoke, and ward 1 (the northwestern corner) of Springfield. Its boundaries remained the same for the next 54 years.

1971-1973: 2nd Hampden[edit]

In the redistricting of 1970, towns outside Hampden County were added for the first time, though the 2nd Hampden District name was initially retained. Communities in the district now included ward 1 of Springfield; all of Chicopee and Holyoke; and the Hampshire County towns of Hadley, Huntington and Southampton.

Roger L. Bernashe was elected in this district in 1970, winning 45.8% of the vote in a five-way Democratic primary election. His opponents were Robert P. Foley (26.6%), Chal E. Chesky (15.8%), William H. Baker (7.6%) and Daniel C. Boyle (4.1%). He did not face a general election opponent.

Massachusetts Senate elections, 1972: 2nd Hampden District
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Roger L. Bernashe of Chicopee 34,449 75.4
Republican Henry J. DeSellior of Springfield 11,245 24.6
Total votes 52,478

The 2nd Hampden District was eliminated from the map in 1973. Its communities, minus Hadley, formed the core of the new Hampden and Hampshire District.

1979-1987: 2nd Hampden and Hampshire[edit]

While the Chicopee-Holyoke-Westfield area continued as part of the 1st Hampden and Hampshire District, the other western Hampden and Hampshire county towns were joined with western neighborhoods of Springfield in a new 2nd Hampden and Hampshire District in the apportionment of 1977. This district included wards 1, 3, 4 and 6 of Springfield; and all of Agawam, Blandford, Chester, Chesterfield, Cummington, Granville, Goshen, Huntington, Longmeadow, Middlefield, Montgomery, Plainfield, Russell, Southwick, Tolland, West Springfield, Westhampton and Worthington.

State Senator Alan Sisitsky, the incumbent from the former Hampden and Berkshire District, was re-elected in the 2nd Hampden and Hampshire District in 1978 after fending off a Democratic primary challenge from future Springfield Mayor Michael Albano.

Sisitsky defeated a primary challenger again in 1980, Anthony C. Bonavita of Agawam. Again he had no general election opponent. After a tumultuous feud with Senate leadership and increasingly "erratic" behavior, he announced he would not seek re-election in 1982.

Both major parties had contested primaries that year. Linda Melconian, a former aide to Congressman Tip O'Neill, got the Democratic nod with 36.1% of the vote, ahead of Leonard M. Wanger (35%), Brian A. Santaniello (24.4%) and Michael J. Julian (4.5%). For the Republican nomination, David A. Robinson beat Joseph V. Maruca, 54.4% to 45.3%.

Massachusetts Senate elections, 1982: 2nd Hampden and Hampshire District
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Linda Melconian of Springfield 23,533 59.1
Republican David A. Robinson of Springfield 16,281 40.9
Total votes 42,649

Melconian was re-elected with no opposition in 1984 and 1986.

This district was split up in the redistricting of 1987, with the northern towns joining the Franklin and Hampshire District, the Springfield-area communities forming the 1st Hampden District, and the western Hampden County core retaking the Hampden and Hampshire District name. Melconian was re-elected in the Hampden and Hampshire District.

1987-1993: 2nd Hampden[edit]

In the redistricting of 1987, the 2nd Hampden District name was attached for the first time to a district entirely east of the Connecticut River, containing wards 2, 4 and 5 of Chicopee, wards 2, 5, 7 and 8 of Springfield, and all of East Longmeadow, Hampden, Ludlow and Wilbraham.

With no incumbent running for re-election in this district, three Democrats sought their party's nomination. Springfield City Council President Francis G. Keough won 45.1% of the vote, ahead of Sean F. Cahillane (30.2%) and Edward L. Ryan (24.7%). Brian Lees was the only Republican candidate.

Massachusetts Senate elections, 1988: 2nd Hampden District
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Brian Lees of East Longmeadow 29,630 51.3
Democratic Francis G. Keough of Springfield 28,097 48.7
Total votes 60,550
Massachusetts Senate elections, 1990: 2nd Hampden District
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Brian Lees of East Longmeadow 33,751 68.2
Democratic Edward L. Ryan of Springfield 15,712 31.8
Total votes 52,704

In 1992, Timothy J. Rooke won the Democratic primary with two-thirds of the vote, over Alan S. Peck.

Massachusetts Senate elections, 1992: 2nd Hampden District
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Brian Lees of East Longmeadow 38,429 62.3
Democratic Timothy J. Rooke of Springfield 23,242 37.7
Total votes 65,126

This district, with slight modifications, was renamed the 1st Hampden and Hampshire District in 1993. Lees was re-elected in that district in 1994.

1993-present: 2nd Hampden and Hampshire[edit]

New lines in 1993 brought back the 2nd Hampden and Hampshire District, covering the western cities and towns of Hampden and Hampshire counties. The district included most of Chicopee and all of Holyoke, Montgomery, Russell, Southwick and Westfield in Hampden County, and all of Easthampton and Southampton in Hampshire County.

Most of these towns had previously been represented by state Senator Shannon P. O'Brien, who decided instead to run for state treasurer, leaving an open seat in the 1994 election. Michael D. Bissonnette, a future Chicopee mayor, defeated David K. Bartley of Holyoke, son of a former state House speaker, in the Democratic primary, 55.8% to 44.1%. Bissonnette faced Westfield Republican state Representative Michael Knapik in the general election.

Massachusetts Senate elections, 1994: 2nd Hampden and Hampshire District
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Michael Knapik of Westfield 28,965 60.2
Democratic Michael D. Bissonnette of Chicopee 19,120 39.8
Total votes 50,901

Knapik was re-elected with no opposition in 1996, 1998 and 2000.

Redistricting added the western Hampden County towns of Blandford, Chester, Granville and Tolland in 2001. In 2002, Knapik faced his first Democratic opponent in eight years, former Holyoke Mayor Daniel Szostkiewicz.

Massachusetts Senate elections, 2002: 2nd Hampden and Hampshire District
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Michael Knapik of Westfield 33,893 70.0
Democratic Daniel Szostkiewicz of Holyoke 14,501 29.9
Total votes 50,744

Knapik was re-elected with no opposition in 2004, 2006, 2008, 2010 and 2012.

Agawam joined the district in the redistricting of 2011, while the 2nd Hampden and Hampshire District's footprint in Chicopee was reduced, and Chester and Blandford were lost to the expanding Berkshire, Hampshire, Franklin and Hampden District

Knapik resigned mid-term in August 2013 to take a job at Westfield State University. In the special primary elections held later that year, state Representative Donald Humason Jr. of Westfield -- who held Knapik's former seat in the House -- defeated Mike Franco of Holyoke, garnering 87% of the GOP vote. On the Democratic side, David K. Bartley of Holyoke beat Easthampton Mayor Michael Tautznik, 51.4% to 47.8%. The special general election was held November 5, 2013, the same date as city elections in Agawam, Chicopee, Holyoke and Westfield.

Special election, 2013: 2nd Hampden and Hampshire District
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Donald Humason Jr. of Westfield 18,128 52.5
Democratic David K. Bartley of Holyoke 16,314 47.3
Total votes 34,613

In the regular elections a year later, Patrick T. Leahy polled at 70.6% to gain the Democratic nomination over Christopher J. Hopewell (29.1%).

Massachusetts Senate elections, 2014: 2nd Hampden and Hampshire District
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Donald Humason Jr. of Westfield 27,817 56.6
Democratic Patrick T. Leahy of Holyoke 21,275 43.3
Total votes 51,183
Massachusetts Senate elections, 2016: 2nd Hampden and Hampshire District
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Donald Humason Jr. of Westfield 43,097 59.5
Democratic Jerome Parker-O'Grady of Southampton 29,285 40.4
Total votes 51,183

References[edit]

http://electionstats.state.ma.us/