The Outdoors · Hudson Valley
Croton Point Park Makes the Hudson Peninsula Public
Croton Point Park gives Westchester a Hudson River peninsula with camping, events, shoreline, and county park access.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Croton Point Park gives Westchester a Hudson River place with real shape. Westchester County Parks describes it as a park on a peninsula on the east shore of the river, with year-round events and activities. That peninsula detail matters because the water feels present on more than one side.
The park puts shoreline, open space, trains, village life, camping, and county recreation close together. Croton-on-Hudson and Cortlandt make more sense when the point is on the mental map. This is the part of Westchester where the Hudson moves from train-window view to public place. It becomes a setting for walking, gathering, camping, and watching the wide water change with the weather.
Croton Point also helps explain why Hudson-side towns feel different from inland suburbs. The river broadens local life. It gives people a view, a breeze, a route, and a reason to think about tides, seasons, and storms.
The park’s story is simple and strong: a public peninsula pushing into the Hudson, close to village life, with enough room for events, campsites, and quiet river watching.