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  1. history of Beacon. In Beacon. …when the 17th-century villages of Matteawan and Fishkill Landing were united in 1913. The name was inspired by the fires that blazed atop Mount Beacon during the American Revolution to warn George Washington of British troop movements; the mountain was later a resort, and the Mount Beacon Incline Railway (operated…

  2. Matteawan State Hospital for the Criminally Insane, established in 1892 as the Matteawan State Hospital by an 1892 law (Chapter 81), functioned as a hospital for insane criminals. It was located in the town of Fishkill just outside the city of Beacon, New York; today its buildings form part of Fishkill Correctional Facility.

  3. The town was named after Matteawan (now called Beacon), a town in Dutchess County, Upstate New York. Matteawan was the home town of Erskine Hazard, a civil engineer from the Norfolk and Western Railway who laid out the town in 1890 and drew up the first map of the new community. Local residents, however, changed the spelling and pronunciation.

  4. In popular culture. Beacon, New York. Appearance. Coordinates: 41°30′15″N73°57′56″W41.50417°N 73.96556°W. "Matteawan" redirects here. For other articles with similar names, see Matawan (disambiguation). Beacon is a city located on the Hudson River in Dutchess County, New York, United States. As of the 2020 census, the city's population was 13,769.

  5. This page was last edited on 6 December 2006, at 20:44 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4.0; additional terms may apply.

  6. Apr 27, 2021 · He had come to the U.S. alone at age 15 aboard a steamer but was arrested during the voyage for theft. After spending nearly three years at the Elmira Reformatory, he was ruled insane and sent to Matteawan. In 1896, New York Gov. Levi Morton commuted the sentence of a man who had escaped from the Matteawan State Hospital.

  7. MATTEAWAN, a village of Fishkill township, Dutchess county, New York, U.S.A., on the eastern bank of the Hudson river, opposite Newburgh and 15 m. S. of Poughkeepsie. Pop.