About Us

Mason Wright’s roots trace back to 1892 ...

… when an African-American real estate investor by the name of Primus Mason died, leaving $25,000 (nearly all of his estate) to “found a home for worthy old men.”

The first “rest home” opened at the corner of Walnut and Union Streets in Springfield. It was torn down in the 1920s to make room for a larger residence, where people continued to receive a room and meals.

Estate and trust gifts continued through the decades, culminating in 1944 when a Springfield cigar manufacturer, Horace Wright, died. We benefited first from $350,000 outright from his estate, then over $150,000 more through the years.

In the 1970s, the Wright Townhouse apartments were constructed. Our big leap in facilities and services came in the late 1990s when the old “rest home” was torn down and our present 90 apartment, licensed assisted living facility was constructed.

Throughout its history the Foundation, for many years known simply as Springfield Home for the Elderly, has operated with a Board of Trustees. The Board of Corporators was created in 2008 to increase our community outreach and governance capacity. The Professional Advisors Board was created in 2010 to further community outreach and as a resource group for residents, families and other stakeholders

Mission & Values

We are dedicated to serving traditionally underserved people by providing quality housing and daily living services to seniors and early education to children.

Our values guide us in service to our mission…

Respect – We are committed to treating people with compassion and dignity.
Excellence – We aspire to attain the highest standards of quality in all that we do.
Stewardship – We believe in caring for those we serve, caring for each other, and caring for our future.

The Mason Wright Foundation, first known as the Springfield Home for Aged Men, was launched with a generous bequest from Primus Mason, an African-American who was born as a freeman in 1817. Mason accumulated wealth by using his earnings as a teamster and a prospector, to invest wisely in Springfield real estate. Mason died in 1892, leaving the sum of $25,000 to found a “home for aged men.”

Mason’s desire was to have his funds accumulate before a home was opened. So, although our first Annual Report was published in 1898, our first home was not officially opened until 1903. It was proclaimed as one of the “active and permanent institutions of the city,” according to the Springfield Union of November 17th that year.

Over the decades to follow, the values of the Springfield community manifested as men and women gave generously to the Foundation, primarily through bequests and trusts. So great was the concern of some, that even during the Depression years a number of gifts ranging from $5,000 to $15,000 were made to the Foundation. Early gifts made possible the creation of Mason Hall, a rest home that ultimately served 40 men and women.

Subsequent to Mason’s gift, the largest gift to the Foundation was made in 1944 through a bequest from Horace P. Wright, a Caucasian cigar manufacturer. We initially received more than $300,000 as the residual of his estate; then, as the residual beneficiary of seven $25,000 trusts he had established for family members, we received more than $200,000. His initial gift, ultimately amounting to more than $500,000 was made in 1944. Wright made possible our initial expansion to include 28 independent living townhouse apartments in 1974.

In the late 1990s, the old rest home was leveled, and a modern, four story building was built. At that time our campus was named Mason Wright Retirement Community. Here we provide assisted living and assisted memory care in 90 one-bedroom and studio apartments.

By this time, the Foundation’s name had changed to Springfield Home for the Elderly; however, in 2008 the name was changed to Mason Wright Foundation, so that its name would align with the community it founded and continues to support—what we today call Mason Wright Senior Living.

As we have for more than 100 years, we proudly provide the greatest degree of independence and dignity to those who otherwise might find themselves aging at home without the support the need or in a nursing home without the independence they want.

Today, it is the Mason-Wright Retirement Community that stands proudly as a living, enduring legacy to Primus Mason’s concern, farsightedness and generosity towards low-income elderly men and women.Primus Mason was a 19th Century adventurer, business man and philanthropist. He was born a freeman to African-American parents in 1817, and apprenticed at an early age to a Monson farmer. At age 20, after he was severely mistreated by the farmer, Primus left Monson and settled in Springfield, where he worked early on as a teamster.

Swept up in the excitement of the 1849 Gold rush, Mason moved to California to seek his fortune, returning a wealthy man. He continued to prosper through real estate investments, in part due to his foresight regarding Springfield’s potential for growth. Once, when he learned that the farmer who had mistreated him was about to buy a parcel of land for $40, Primus pre-empted the purchase with his own offer of $60, then sold it to the farmer for $100. His revenge was sweet.

One notable venture was Mason’s purchase of a plot of land at the junction of Wilbraham Road and State Street. In 1856 he sold the land to the city for $65, but on the condition that the land be used for public purposes. The City built a much-needed firehouse on that land; then eventually named the area Mason Square.

Primus Mason died in 1892, outliving three wives and an only child. In his will, he left approximately $2,000 in amounts ranging from $5 to $500 to a handful of relatives and made provisions for his sister-in-law, a widow, to remain securely in her home for life. The remainder of his estate, $25,000 he left for the sole purpose of “the establishment of a Home for Aged Men.” His expressed intent was to have his funds accumulate before a home was officially opened. By 1903, the available funds had grown to $45,000, at which time the trustees purchased the estate of Charles Barrows on Walnut Street. The Springfield Home for Aged Men was poised to become “one of the active and permanent institutions of the city” according to historical documents.

Today, it is the Mason-Wright Retirement Community that stands proudly as a living, enduring legacy to Primus Mason’s concern, farsightedness and generosity towards low-income elderly men and women.

Horace P. Wright died at the age of 87 in 1944. Although he retired wealthy, having headed the prosperous W. H. Wright Co, a cigar manufacturing company on Springfield’s Main Street, little written record of his life exists. To date, no photos or portraits of Wright have been found.

In fact, research in the Springfield newspapers of the twentieth century’s first four decades produced only two articles, the first noting his death and the second noting that the executor of his will had filed an inventory in probate court.

On July 21, 1944, two months after Wright’s death, the Springfield Union wrote, the following, under the headline “Wright Leaves $719,167 in Estate”: The late Horace P. Wright, retired businessman, who resided at 281 State Street up to the time of his death on May 28, 1944, left an estate of $719,167.78 in personal property and real estate valued at $62,500, according to the executor’s inventory filed in Probate Court yesterday….The Springfield Deposit and Trust Company was executor of the will.”

The article went on to say that Wright’s personal property was comprised largely of numerous stock holdings, U.S. Treasury bonds and bank deposits, concluding “The deceased was a patron of the arts and had a collection of famous paintings valued in the inventory at $13,980.”

By the time of Horace Wright’s death, the Springfield Home for Aged Men was a well-established and highly regarded institution. Its mission and effectiveness inspired Wright to make the home the major beneficiary of his estate. His will specified a number of individuals, primarily relatives, as beneficiaries of such personal effects as art and jewelry. Wright’s specific bequests to other charitable entities were to the Springfield Hospital, to which he designated $150,000, and to the City Library Association, to which he donated $100,000.

For seven beneficiaries, Wright established trusts of $25,000 each, designating that the net income from those trust be paid to the beneficiaries for life, and, at the end of their lives, that the remainder of the trusts be transferred to the Springfield Home for the Elderly. There is more to Wright’s generosity for the elderly than those seven trusts.

The thirty-fourth and final paragraph of Wright’s will reads as follows:
All the rest, residue and remainder of all my goods and estate, both personal and real, of every kind and description and wherever situated, I give, devise and bequeath to the Springfield Home for Aged Men of said Springfield.

On January 12, 1946, the executor of Wright’s will distributed the sum of $375,000 to the Springfield Home for Aged Men, in accordance with the directives of that paragraph. Therefore, a total of approximately $550,000 out of an estate totaling just over $700,000 was ultimately conveyed to the Home.

Although news articles following Wright’s death described him as a patron of the arts, it is clear today that Wright’s concern for the elderly poor was of paramount concern.

“Your kindness and consideration that you have shown me at this time will always be remembered. Thank you ever so much Mason Wright staff.”
Joan B.
“My mother’s stay with Mason Wright has been very positive and I would like to thank you and the tremendous staff on the third floor.”
Frederick F.

Thank you for your interest in our community.

For information regarding admissions, please download our form and return it to us by email, fax or postal mail.

Email: Admissions@MasonWright.org

Fax: 413-747-8357

USPS:
Admissions
Mason Wright Senior Living
74 Walnut Street
Springfield, MA  01105

Thank you! We look forward to hearing from you.