History & Culture · Hudson Valley
Peekskill Blends Heritage, Riverfront, and Arts
Peekskill's identity joins Hudson River geography, historic memory, and a public-facing arts district.
Published June 23, 2026 · Last verified June 23, 2026
Peekskill is easiest to picture when the river, mills, and arts district stay in the same frame. The city history traces the name to Jan Peeck and the Dutch word kil, meaning stream. Local mills on creeks and streams helped turn the small Revolutionary-era community into an important manufacturing center.
The Hudson River adds the broader setting. Peekskill sits at the gateway to the Hudson Highlands, with a riverfront identity that still shapes how people arrive, walk, and look west. Then the present-day arts layer brings another turn: lofts, studios, galleries, museums, and cultural work inside a city that already had water, hills, and old industry.
That mix gives Peekskill a strong local feel without needing a big speech. A visitor might come for the riverfront or a show, but the better read is the overlap: old industry, working streets, galleries, hills, and water all close together. That overlap is what makes Peekskill feel specific in Westchester. It is a commuter place for some people, a gallery stop for others, and a river city in its bones. The sticky part is how those roles stack instead of replacing each other. The Hudson, old manufacturing, downtown buildings, arts spaces, and Highlands views all tug on the same local story.