Peekskill's first legal
incorporation of 1816 was reactivated in 1826 when Village elections took place. The Village was further incorporated within the
Town of Cortlandt in 1849 and remained so until separating as a city in 1940. In 1859,
Henry Ward Beecher bought a 36-acre farm at Peekskill. He made many improvements and established a summer home for his family. In 1902, the locally prominent McFadden family bought the property. In 1987, the
Beecher-McFadden Estate was added to the
National Register of Historic Places. In August 1949, following reports misquoting
Paul Robeson's speech to the
World Peace Conference in Paris as saying that
African Americans would not fight for the United States in any prospective war against the
Soviet Union, a planned benefit concert for the
Civil Rights Congress in Peekskill was canceled amid
White Nationalist and
anti-communist violence. An effigy of Robeson was
lynched in the town. The artists planned a second concert in nearby
Van Cortlandtville on a farm owned by a Holocaust survivor. (His house was subsequently shot into and brickbats thrown through his windows.) The publicity drew a crowd of around 20,000, and two men with rifles were discovered and removed before any violence during the concert. It was one of the earliest performances of
Pete Seeger's "
If I Had a Hammer"; Robeson sang surrounded by union guards and volunteers from the audience as protection against snipers. Afterward, area police and
state troopers directed exiting traffic down a single road into an ambush where rocks were thrown through car windows (even at cars with small children). Some were overturned and their occupants beaten without police intervention. These
Peekskill Riots were subsequently well-publicized in news reports and folk songs and formed a major event in
E.L. Doctorow's historical fiction novel
The Book of Daniel. Peekskill was the landing point of a fragment of the
Peekskill Meteorite, just before midnight on October 9, 1992. At least 16 people recorded the meteoric trail on film. This was only the fourth meteorite in history for which an exact orbit is known. The rock had a mass of and punched through the trunk of a Peekskill resident's automobile upon impact. The
Peekskill Evening Star and the
Peekskill Highland Democrat were two of the city's daily newspapers through much of the city's history. The
Evening Star published under various mastheads from the 19th century on, and as the
Evening Star from 1939 until 1985, when the paper folded into what became the nexus of the
Journal News, a conglomeration of local papers throughout Westchester County. But the
Journal News focused more on statewide and New York City issues, which led to the founding of the
Peekskill Herald in 1986. Although numerous prominent citizens came together to try to keep the paper afloat after a series of
New York Times articles about the paper's foundering fiscal situation, it folded in 2005, replaced by the
Peekskill Daily in 2009. The Centennial Firehouse, built in 1890, was under a
U.S. Route 9 bridge. During the bridge's original construction in 1932, part of the roof of the firehouse was removed. As part of a 2008 highway reconstruction project it was to be relocated to a new historic district. The city spent $150,000 in grant money in preparing the building. Unfortunately a mechanical failure during a turn caused the building to collapse. In 1984,
Richard E. Jackson became Peekskill's first African American mayor. ==Geography==