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Towne Crier Cafe is a club and restaurant located in Beacon, NY. The restaurant fare is accompanied by live music. A diverse roster of famous artists has graced its stage. The intimate venue seats 170 guests.[1] It was founded in 1972. After a period of decline, it has enjoyed increased popularity in recent years.[2]
Founder Phil Ciganer discovered the first location for the club while delivering a piece of art to a friend in the Town of Beekman, Dutchess County, NY.[3]
“It was an interesting, charming little setting,” he recalls. Part of the building dated back to the 1600s and had once been a stagecoach stop and post office. By 1972 the new enterprise, appropriately called the Towne Crier Cafe, was up and running.[4]
Issues with the building and insufficient parking prompted Ciganer to seek a new location. After 16 years in Beekman, The Towne Crier moving to Pawling in 1988.
Though not as historically interesting as its predecessor, the Pawling location accommodated more people and offered expanded dining facilities. Decorated inside and out with a Southwestern motif, the club sported a stage set into a corner of an open, tiered room furnished with tables and chairs. The enclosed bar adjacent to this area was decorated with photos of the many artists who performed at the Towne Crier.[5]
Situated on the Route 22 corridor along a major commuter route, the Pawling venue was frequented by many New York City-based musicians such as Jimmy Vivino, Sid McGinnis, Paul Shaeffer.
Eventually, Ciganer's ambitions outgrew the Pawling location and the club relocated to Beacon, New York,[6] which has enjoyed a cultural "rebirth" in recent years.[7] Ciganer cites this cultural renaissance as the main factor in choosing to relocate the Towne Crier Cafe to Beacon.[7]