History & Culture · Central New York
Oneonta's College Town Life Meets Neahwa Park
Oneonta's identity includes SUNY Oneonta, Hartwick College, a downtown college rhythm, and Neahwa Park with historic Damaschke Field.
Published June 23, 2026 · Last verified July 4, 2026
Oneonta has a college-town rhythm, but it does not float above the rest of the city. SUNY Oneonta began in 1889, and Hartwick College moved into Oneonta in 1928. When both schools are in session, the population doubles. That is a big swing for a place that still has a small-city Main Street feel.
Neahwa Park is where a lot of that energy gets room to spread out. It sits within easy walking distance of downtown and works like one of Oneonta’s busy shared yards. Historic Damaschke Field is at the heart of it, which means a walk through the park can turn into a baseball memory without much warning.
Damaschke has been carrying stories for a long time. It opened in 1906 as Elm Park, hosted Babe Ruth and Rogers Hornsby, and later saw John Elway play for the Oneonta Yankees in 1982. Today it is home to the Oneonta Outlaws. Even if you do not follow baseball closely, that is a pretty good chain of names for one small-town field.
The rest of Neahwa keeps the park from feeling like a single landmark with grass around it. There are ballfields, a skateboard park, courts, pavilions, playgrounds, Hodges Pond, and nearby Catella fields. The bandstand by the pond hosts summer concerts, and the short Mill Race Trail gives families an easy place for a small nature walk.
That mix is what makes Oneonta feel more layered than a plain college town. Students bring motion. Downtown gives it a center. Neahwa Park gives kids, neighbors, athletes, concert-goers, and summer baseball fans a shared place to land.