In 1683, New York City merchants
Francis Rombouts and Gulian Verplanck purchased in Dutchess County from the
Wappinger confederacy of Native Americans for a quantity of goods including rum, powder, and tobacco. In 1685 it was granted as the royal
Rombout Patent. Neither ever lived on the land, intending to use it only for fur trading. The first white settlers were Rombout's daughter,
Catheryna, and her husband, Roger Brett, who built a mill at the mouth of
Fishkill Creek as it flows into the
Hudson River. Originally, the boundaries of Fishkill extended far beyond the boundaries of the present-day Town of Fishkill. When the town was
incorporated in 1788, Fishkill's land area included the present-day City of
Beacon and Village of Fishkill, as well as the
Town of Wappinger, Village of
Wappingers Falls, Town of
East Fishkill and a portion of the Town of
LaGrange. During the 19th century, as other towns incorporated, Fishkill's area was reduced until the incorporation of the City of Beacon in 1913 resulted in Town boundaries approximate to modern town lines. A number of areas within the town retain their Native American names, including Matteawan Road and the hamlet of Wiccopee, which overlaps into the modern town of East Fishkill.
Daniel Nimham, the final
sachem of the
Wappinger people, was born in the Wiccopee area in 1726. Fishkill played a pivotal role in the
American Revolutionary War when a huge military encampment known as the Fishkill Supply Depot was established one mile (1.6 km) south of the village of Fishkill to guard the mountain pass to the south. Signal fires lay in readiness on tops of the surrounding mountains. The Fishkill encampment became the
main supply depot for the northern department of the
Continental Army. The first copies of the
New York State Constitution were printed at Fishkill in 1777. Upon his death, Washington bequeathed a sword to each of his five nephews, and nephew Samuel Washington received the Bailey sword. He donated it to
Congress in 1843. The sword now lies in the
Smithsonian Institution, as part of the
National Museum of American History. Today, the town's economy is diverse, comprising tourism, medical care, retail and restaurants, warehouses, recreation spots and a wealth of small businesses. In 1996, the animal rights group
PETA suggested the town change its name to something less suggestive of violence toward fish. The name derives from the
Dutch vis kill, meaning "fish creek." For this reason, the town declined. In 2021, the Town commissioned an eight-foot bronze statue depicting
Daniel Nimham from noted Hudson Valley sculptor Michael Keropian. The statue was installed at the Arrowhead intersection of NY-52 and NY-82 (41° 32.685′ N, 73° 52.16′ W.) in May 2022 and dedicated on June 11, 2022. Town Supervisor Ozzy Albra hosted the ceremony which featured comments from elected officials, educators, the sculptor, and a number of special presentations by Native American community groups. ==Government==