North America

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The first Mennonites in North America were Dutch "Menists" reported to be in Manhattan (now New York City) and Gravesend, Long Island, near New York City, as early as 1644. Nothing is known of them except these reports, and no permanent settlement was made. Pieter Cornelisz Plockhoy's ill-starred colony on the Delaware, south of Chester, Pennsylvania (1663-1665), was scarcely Mennonite. Permanent Mennonite settlement began in 1683 (really not until 1685) at Germantown, near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, with a small group from the Lower Rhine and Hamburg (ca. 100 families 1683-1705). The major immigration began in 1707-1710 from the Palatinate and Switzerland into the territory north and west of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, continuing until about 1756, when it was relatively stopped by the French and Indian War (1756-1763), and was not resumed in force until after the close of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815. By that time Eastern Pennsylvania was filled, and the new groups located west of the Alleghenies and on west to central Illinois or to Ontario. The major element in the migration of 1815-1860 was of Amish from Alsace, Bavaria, and Hesse, although also a considerable body of Swiss came in this period to Ohio and Indiana. While the German and Swiss immigration slowed to a trickle after this, a very large migration from Russia brought another ethnic group to North America in 1874-1880, followed by a later, still larger movement from Russia in 1922-1925, a small one 1930-1939, and a larger one again in 1947-1950. A minor movement of this ethnic element came from South America (chiefly Paraguay) to North America in 1950-1957. (For a fuller account, see Migrations.)

Until 1824 all Mennonite immigrants from Europe to America settled only in the United States. Internal migration from Eastern Pennsylvania to Ontario in 1785-1840 established a substantial Mennonite base there. This furnished the attraction for all later substantial Mennonite movements to Canada. First were the Amish from Alsace-Lorraine and Bavaria in 1824-1850, located adjacent to the Pennsylvania Mennonites west of Kitchener. The very large migration from Russia to Manitoba in 1874-1880 was made possible largely by the leadership of Jacob Y. Shantz, a Mennonite of Kitchener, and the financial aid of the Ontario Mennonites. The large later movements from Russia to Canada (almost all the Russian immigrants of 1922-1925 and later came to Canada) were made possible largely by the aid of Russian Mennonites already in Manitoba and Saskatchewan. The freer immigration policy of the Canadian government, in contrast to the restrictive policy of the United States, together with the greater availability of land for settlement in Canada, of course played a major role in the diversion of the 20th-century immigration to Canada. Since 1880 almost no Mennonites have immigrated to the United States, whereas the majority of the Canadian Mennonites are descendants of immigrants who arrived after 1920. This fact, coupled with the conservatism of the Manitoba Mennonites in general resulted in longer retention of the German language among the Canadian Mennonites (with the exception of Ontario), in contrast to the United States where the use of German was effectively ended by World War I.

The third country of North America to have Mennonite settlements, Mexico, received them first in 1922 from Manitoba. Except for a very few who came from Russia in 1922-1925, all Mennonites in Mexico came from Manitoba and Saskatchewan. All of them are of Russian origin, and all have maintained the German language, including the Kleine Gemeinde group, which came from Manitoba in 1947-1949. The only substantial Mennonite emigration from North America has been that of the Old Colony Mennonites from Manitoba and Saskatchewan in 1926-30 (later groups 1945-1948) who went to Paraguay.

Internal migration has scattered the Mennonites of North America westward from Pennsylvania, the east-central states, and the midwestern and prairie states and provinces to the Pacific Coast in both the United States and Canada.

In 1956 North America had 215,000 baptized Mennonites, with a total population of some 300,000. The baptized members were distributed as follows by groups and countries.

North American Mennonite Population

Compiler: Harold S. Bender (author of the article) and Sam Steiner (2006 figures)

Table 1. Distribution of Mennonite Membership by Group and Country, 1956 & 2006


Body United States
1956
Canada
1956
Total
1956
United States
2006
Canada
2006
Total
2006
Mennonite Church* 64,928 6,586 71,514 110,696 34,000 144,696
General Conference Mennonite Church* 35,764 14,005 49,769
Mennonite Brethren Church 11,095 12,967 24,062 33,498 35,770 69,268
Old Order Amish 16,794 260 17,054 90,000 1,800 91,800
Old Order Mennonite 3,887 1,915 5,802 20,300 3,000 23,300
Church of God in Christ, Mennonite 4,161 1,439 5,600 13,560 4,540 18,100
Conservative Mennonite Conference 5,585 0 5,585 11,199 0 11,199
Mennonite Brethren in Christ (PA)
(Bible Fellowship Church)
4,635 0 4,635      
Sommerfelder 0 3,785 3,785 0 4,590 4,590
Beachy Amish 2,677 0 2,677 7,976 258 8,234
Evangelical Mennonite Brethren
(Fellowship of Evangelical Bible Churches)
1,564 936 2,500 2,031 1,748 3,779
Evangelical Mennonite
(Fellowship of Evangelical Churches)
2,210 0 2,210 5,981 0 5,981
Old Colony Mennonites (All groups) 0 2,155 2,155 0 7,981 7,981
Rudnerweide
(Evangelical Mennonite Mission Conference)
0 1,824 1,824 466 4,294 4,760
Krimmer Mennonite Brethren** 1,527 176 1,703      
Chortitzer Mennonite Conference 0 1,408 1,408 0 1,650 1,650
Evangelical Mennonite Conference
(Kleinegemeinde)
25 1,000 1,025 0 7,270 7,270
Reformed Mennonite Church 662 218 880 171 131 302
Stauffer Mennonite Church 357 0 357      
Weaver Mennonite Church 60 0 60      
Independent & Unaffiliated       38,620 3,444 42,064
Amish Mennonite       1,509 0 1,509
Biblical Mennonite Alliance       1,993 0 1,993
Reinland Mennonite (All Groups)       1,200 3,874 5,074
New Reinland Mennonite (Ontario)       0 260 260
Markham-Waterloo Conference       0 1,400 1,400
La Crete Bergthaler (Alberta)       0 1,000 1,000
Bergthaler Mennonite (Saskatchewan)       0 777 777
Total 155,931 48,674 204,605 339,200 117,787 456,987
Brethren in Christ***     7,066 22,901 3,728 26,629
Hutterian Brethren 2,900 7,500 9,400 4,000 10,000 14,000
  • Merged to form Mennonite Church USA and Mennonite Church Canada in 2002.
    • Became part of Mennonite Brethren Church in 1960
      • 1956 number from Yearbook of American Churches, 1958

Source: Mennonite Yearbook and Directory, 1957; Mennonite World Conference website, 2007. 

Although the table has been updated, the commentary remains that of the 1957 article.

The above table indicates that North American Mennonitism at the mid-20th century was not unified in one common fellowship. It is true that most, except the Old Colony group in Manitoba and Mexico, the Reformed Mennonite Church, and the Old Colony Mennonites in the United States and Canada, cooperated organizationally in the Mennonite Central Committee in relief work, peace work, and service projects. But denominationally they remained distinct. The groups were, however, by no means all the result of divisions, at least in North America. The Old Order Amish division and the Mennonite Brethren and Krimmer Mennonite Brethren divisions were imported from Europe and were maintained in North America. The latter two groups have merged, and a large block of the Old Order Amish gradually merged with the Mennonite Church branch. Of the groups formed by division in North America (see pertinent denominational articles) the Central Conference merged with the General Conference Mennonite branch (1950), the Evangelical Mennonite and Evangelical Mennonite Brethren groups worked together in a joint conference, and the Conservative Mennonites almost joined the Mennonite Church. The spirit of cooperation and mutual recognition was growing among the various major and minor groups, but no further organic union was in prospect in 1957.

The history of North American Mennonitism cannot well be viewed as a whole, not only because of the lack of organic union, but also in part because of difference in time of arrival of the successive waves of immigrants, and in part because of the relative isolation geographically and culturally of the various groups from one another. The national boundary between Canada and the United States has had little significance. However, a more detailed account of the general and spiritual history of the North American Mennonites will be found under the articles Canada and United States, so divided for convenience only.

Bibliography

Bender, Harold S. "The Mennonites of the United States and Canada." Mennonite Quarterly Review 11 (1937): 50-75.

Smith, C. Henry. The Mennonites of America. Goshen, IN, 1909.

Smith, C. Henry. The Story of the Mennonites. Berne, IN, 1941.


Author(s) Harold S Bender
Date Published 1957

Cite This Article

MLA style

Bender, Harold S. "North America." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1957. Web. 19 Mar 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=North_America&oldid=175168.

APA style

Bender, Harold S. (1957). North America. Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 19 March 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=North_America&oldid=175168.




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Adapted by permission of Herald Press, Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Mennonite Encyclopedia, Vol. 3, pp. 914-915. All rights reserved.


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