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Amish Mennonites
Amish Mennonites are that segment of the Swiss-Alsatian-South
German Anabaptist-Mennonites and their descendants in North America who are the
offspring of the group who under the leadership of Elder Jakob
Ammann, of Erlenbach, canton of Bern, Switzerland, in 1693-1697 separated from
the main body in Switzerland.
Since the full story of this division is told in the Amish Division article, it remains
only to say that Ammann must have visited the Markirch (Alsace) congregation
about the same time, where he excommunicated some members, and that he almost
immediately got into a controversy with the ministers of the Palatinate who
tried to effect a reconciliation. He found almost united support from the
ministers of Alsace, but proceeded to place most of the Palatine ministers under
the ban. In a few years Ammann and his associates
decided they had been too rash and tried to effect a reconciliation, failing
largely because they confessed only to an error in method and spirit while
refusing to surrender their demand for the Meidung. Thus the division was
made permanent because of the intransigence of Ammann. Ammann also held strict
views on other points, including the wearing of the untrimmed beard, uniformity
in dress, including style of hats, garments for the body, shoes and stockings,
and prohibition of attendance at services of the state church. He seems to have
held that the Treuherzigen (those friends of the Anabaptists who shared
many of their views and helped them in times of persecution but for some reason
would not join the group openly, perhaps out of fear) will not be saved, meaning
that no one will be saved outside the Anabaptist fold. He also introduced
footwashing as an ordinance, which was hitherto not practiced by the Swiss
Anabaptists, but was practiced in Holland.
The proper name of the followers of Jakob Ammann is
"Amish Mennonite" although frequently they are referred to simply Amish. Not all of the descendants have retained the name and the principles of
the original group—none at all in Europe—most of them having reunited with
the main body. However, there are still in the United States and in Canada those
who retain the name in some form. In Europe there have been Amish settlements in Montbéliard, Holland, Bavaria, Galicia, and Volhynia, all of lesser size and
significance, but in the United States many large and important Amish
communities have been established. Because the Amish have kept few records, are
highly traditional, and have produced practically no literature, not even
historical, it is difficult to trace their history.
History in Europe
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Switzerland. Originally there were two
groups of Amish in Switzerland—(a) a few ministers and members in the
Emmental; (b) all of the Anabaptists in the Lake Thun settlement. Very early
(1696?) some of these emigrated to the Markirch area in Alsace, and soon
after others went to the Neuchâtel (Jura) region of Switzerland. When the
general emigration from the canton of Bern to the area of the Bishopric of
Basel (Jura-Porrentruy) began, the Amish joined the movement establishing
two congregations, La Chaux de Fonds and Neuenburg. By 1750 all the Amish
were out of Bernese territory, although when the Bishopric of Basel was
incorporated into Bern (1810?) the Amish congregations were still there.
They gradually lost their distinctive identity and by the end of the 19th
century were no longer considered Amish, being a part of the Swiss Mennonite
Conference. A Swiss leader, probably Elder Samuel Baehler of Langnau,
writing in 1886 in the Mennonitische Blätter (34-35) says: "I
may add that there are also two so-called Amish Mennonite congregations
here, one in the Neuchâtel Jura [La Chaux de Fonds] and the other in Basel
[Holeestrasse]. As far as the Neuchâtel group is concerned they are quite
closely related to us [the Swiss Mennonite churches], however they still
practice footwashing among themselves." The Basel Amish congregation
never associated with the Swiss Mennonite conference since it was actually a
part of the Alsatian Amish group. Few Amish emigrants came directly from
Switzerland to the United States.
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Alsace-France. When the Amish division
occurred there were several Anabaptist-Mennonite congregations in Alsace (at
that time not a part of France). All of these followed Ammann's lead and
Ammann himself settled in Ste-Marie-aux-Mines (Markirch) in 1696. When heavy
pressure and actual persecution forced emigration from this area (1710-1730),
a considerable number of families migrated to the territory of Montbéliard (in German, Mümpelgart), at that time and until its incorporation into
France in 1790(?) an enclave belonging to the Protestant duchy of
Württemberg in South Germany. Others settled in the region of Birkenhof on
the Alsatian-Swiss border. Under pressure some of the Ste-Marie-aux-Mines
group moved across the nearby border into Lorraine. Gradually Amish families
migrated to other places until small congregations had been established well
into the interior of France proper, and by 1815, a small settlement in Luxembourg. Emigration also took Alsatian Amish families eastward and
northward into Germany and after 1815 to North America. Small groups were
settled by 1759 in southern Baden across the Rhine in the Breisgau and by
1802 in Southern Bavaria near Ingolstadt, Regensburg, and Munich. Direct
emigration from Alsace-Lorraine and Bavaria to the United
States and Canada
resulted in large Amish communities: in Waterloo County, Ontario (1824 ff.),
Central Illinois (1829 ff.), Stark County, Ohio (Canton), and Fulton County,
Ohio (Archbold, 1835 ff.). A heavy drain from the
Alsace-Lorraine-Montbéliard Amish communities to these North Central states
took care of excess population and kept down their further expansion in
France. A continuous small trickle of Swiss Mennonite families into southern
Alsace from 1880 on gradually diluted the Amish stock, especially around
Mulhouse and Altkirch. About 1790 a small number of Montbéliard (and Ibersheim, Germany) Amish families migrated to the Lemberg region in Galicia and from there to Volhynia, Russia, whence they reached Kansas and South
Dakota as a part of the great Russian emigration in 1873 ff.
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Germany. Of the Swiss Mennonites living
in the Palatinate at the time of the Amish schism only a small number
followed Ammann, chiefly in the region of Kaiserslautern. Later a settlement
from Alsace was made at Essingen near Landau. The Amish did not expand in
the Palatinate but did send out emigrants in three directions (largely
supplemented by families from Alsace and Lorraine). The first of these was
to middle Germany in the Hesse-Cassel region, where as early as 1730 certain
families appeared in Wittgenstein, then Waldeck (by 1750), then in the Lahn
Valley near Marburg (by 1800). A small settlement also existed for a time
near Neuwied and also in the Eiffel region. By 1830 these groups began to
disintegrate by direct emigration to the Amish settlement in Somerset
County, Pennsylvania, Garrett County, Maryland (region of Grantsville-Springs), and to the
Amish settlement in western Waterloo County, Ontario. An Amish settlement in
Hesse north of Wiesbaden sent large numbers of settlers to Butler
County,
Ohio, 1817ff. These are known as the Hessian Amish. All the European Hessian
Amish congregations died out by 1900. The second Amish movement from the
Palatinate (and from Alsace-Lorraine) was to Bavaria (Ingolstadt,
Regensburg, and Munich). The Ingolstadt and Munich groups ultimately became
extinct by emigration (to Ontario and Illinois). The Regensburg group
continued, however, diluted with Mennonite additions from other places in
South Germany, and the Munich congregation was reconstituted with a mixed
Amish and Mennonite population from other places. The third emigration was
to Galicia and Volhynia 1785 ff. This group emigrated in toto to the
United States in the great Russian emigration of 1873 ff., settling at two
places, viz: Moundridge, Kansas, and Freeman, South Dakota. Meanwhile the remnants of
the original Palatinate Amish settlements merged with the Mennonite
congregation of Kaiserslautern in 1915.
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Russia. The only Amish settlement was
that in Volhynia, made by families who had at first settled near Lemberg in
Galicia, founded in 1803, becoming extinct by migration to the United
States in 1875.
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Holland. Two Amish congregations were
established near Groningen and Kampen by immigration from Switzerland and
the Palatinate about 1750. They continued a separate existence there until
about 1850 when they were absorbed into the Dutch Mennonite congregations
nearby.
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Amish Conferences and Literature in Europe.
Two Amish general conferences are known to have been called for the purpose
of giving guidance in church policies and discipline, with formulated
resolutions which have been handed down in manuscript form: at Essingen near
Landau, Palatinate (at that time Alsace) in 1759,
and at Essingen again in 1779. The Amish churches used the Dordrecht
Confession of Faith (1632, adopted by the Alsatian churches in 1659)
together with the Elbing catechism of
1783, reprinted at Waldeck in 1797 and henceforth known as the Waldeck Catechism.
They also adopted the Ernsthafte
Christenpflicht (1739) as their prayerbook and
reprinted the Ephrata German Martyrs' Mirror at
Pirmasens in 1780. No permanent conference of distinctively Amish churches
in Europe was ever organized, although after the incorporation of Alsace-Lorraine
in Germany in 1870 the churches there affiliated loosely with the Badische
Verband and
organized their own separate conferences in 1901 and 1907. After the
reincorporation with France in 1918 two separate conferences were formed,
a French-speaking and an Alsatian German-speaking, both of which continue.
Distinctive Amish practices and customs persisted until into the 20th
century but gradually died out—wearing of the full beard, hooks and eyes
and special costume, shunning and footwashing. Two congregations alone, Birkenhof and Diesen, still retain the practice
of feetwashing. The Luxembourg group retained this practice until 1941 when their aged bishop died. Thus any distinctive contribution
of the Amish to European Mennonitism was lost, and the effects of the schism
of 1693 were completely overcome by attrition without any conscious formal
reunion. The churches at Regensburg and Munich, it is true, never joined
the Mennonite conference of this region, known as the Badische Verband, although
this was due more to personalities than to principles except that these
churches do not desire to submerge their autonomy into the rather close
corporate government of the Badische Verband. They have however
joined both the South German Mennonite Conference (formed in 1886) and the
all-German Vereinigung (in 1908).
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Old Order Mennonites in North America, ca. 1950. Mennonite Encyclopedia, vol. 1, p. 94
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North America
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Pennsylvania. The first scattered Amish
settlers arrived in Pennsylvania possibly as early as 1720, and not being
able to fellowship with the Mennonites already there, settled in Berks and
Chester counties adjoining the Lancaster County settlement in the east, as
well as in Lancaster County proper, forming three congregations about
1740-1760: one north of Reading which became extinct by 1786 as the result
of Indian raids, one in Chester County near Malvern, which died out before
1800, and one near Morgantown which soon developed into a very large
settlement and spilled over into Chester County, ultimately extending over
a block of 40 miles north and south and 20 miles east and west, which in 1950
contained at least 4,000 baptized descendants of the pre-Revolutionary
settlers. This group always remained sharply distinct from the larger Lancaster Mennonite Conference group with which it was in the closest
geographical proximity. Because of lack of land, all later Amish immigrants
passed by this region, except for transient halts, and the surplus
population also migrated westward. Direct settlements were established from
the Berks-Lancaster-Chester settlement only in Somerset County (1767
ff.), Mifflin County (Kishacoquillas Valley) 1793 ff., and Union County, Pennsylvania (Buffalo Valley) 1810, extinct by 1890, and in Fairfield
County, Ohio,
1810 ff., extinct by 1890 also. A few scattered families continued to go
west during the next century, but not until 1940 was a true daughter colony
established, and then only on a small scale in St. Mary's County, Maryland. The
Somerset County settlement was actually populated more by direct immigration
from Hesse 1830-1860 than from Eastern Pennsylvania, spilling over into
adjacent Garrett County, Maryland. The Somerset County group was in three distinct
locations, north around Johnstown, middle around Berlin, and south around
Springs-Grantsville. Only the south settlement survived the 19th century.
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Ohio. The chief daughter colony of the
Somerset County settlements was the large Holmes County, Ohio, colony, begun
in 1807, but not flourishing until after the War of 1812, although some
Somerset County families moved directly to the Johnson County, Iowa,
settlement 1845 ff. and to Elkhart County, Indiana, about the same time. Yet
both these latter settlements were predominantly offshoots of the Holmes
County settlements. This Holmes County group gradually expanded into
Tuscarawas County eastward and into Wayne County northward, ultimately
becoming the largest single settlement of Amish, exceeding even the
Berks-Lancaster settlement, with a baptized population of about 5,000
in 1990. Daughter settlements from Holmes County are Geauga County (1880),
Stark County (Hartville), and Plain City, Ohio, and Arthur, Illinois. (1880).
The Fairfield County Amish settlement disintegrated when
some families moved to Wayne County, near Smithville, and to the West
Liberty, Ohio, settlement, and later largely to Lagrange
County, Indiana, near Topeka and Ligonier. However, the Smithville and West Liberty settlements
were actually founded directly from Mifflin County and Union County, Pennsylvania
(with some Lancaster-Berks additions), in 1810 and 1845 respectively.
Daughter colonies from these latter two settlements were those of Cass
County (Garden City), Missouri. (1880) and Hubbard, Oregon. (1890).
Direct Alsatian Amish settlements were made in Stark
County (near Louisville) 1830, Wayne County 1830 ff., and Fulton County,
Ohio, 1835 ff. (the latter with a large element from Montbéliard).
Some emigration from these settlements helped establish the Washington-Henry
County, Iowa, colony near Wayland (1847) and the Allen
County, Ind. (Leo-Grabill) and Adams County, Indiana (Berne),
both about the same time, although direct immigration from Alsace to
both contributed. There was cross-immigration also from the Amish settlement
in Ontario to these
settlements.
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New York. A single Amish settlement was
established in New York State direct from Alsace and Bavaria in 1845 in
Lewis County (Croghan) with cross-migration from the Ontario Amish
settlement.
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Indiana. There was no substantial
original direct Amish immigration from Europe to Indiana. The Allen
County-Adams County Alsatian type settlement of 1850 have been mentioned. In
Elkhart County immigrants direct from Somerset County, Pennsylvania, established the
largest Amish settlement west of Holmes County (with additions from this
latter place) in 1842, east of Goshen, and slightly later around Nappanee west of Goshen. Today these two settlements together (not geographically
one) have a baptized population of at least 4,000. The Howard-Miami
settlement (north of Kokomo) 1860 and the Daviess County colony southwest of
Indianapolis, were both established from Holmes County and never became
large.
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Illinois. A large Alsatian Amish
settlement was established 1829 ff. in Central Illinois east of Peoria with
later outposts at Hopedale, Flanagan, Tiskilwa (the latter chiefly from
Bavaria), and Fisher. A small Lancaster-Mifflin County Amish colony was
established near Danvers in 1854.
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Iowa. The Iowa Amish came in two groups
about the same time (1845) settling in two distinct colonies: the Alsatian
Amish in Henry-Washington County, near Wayland (with additions from
Ontario), and the Holmes County-Somerset County group near Kalona (Johnson
County).
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Nebraska. Nebraska received a
considerable Alsatian Amish settlement near Milford, largely by way of the
Central Illinois, Wayland, Iowa, and Ontario settlements. A daughter
settlement was established at Tofield, Alberta, north of Edmonton about 1910.
Another settlement was established at Albany, Oregon, by way of Thurman,
Colorado, in 1894.
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Kansas. In 1888-1890 Harper County
received an Amish migration of the Somerset-Holmes County strain, with some
additional contingents from Elkhart County, Indiana, Arthur, Illinois, and Johnson
County, Iowa. Earlier in 1875 the Volhynian Amish had come to Moundridge but
with connections only with the Russian Mennonites, not with the older
American Amish.
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South Dakota. The Volhynian Amish group
settled near Freeman in 1875.
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Ontario. The large Amish settlement in
Waterloo County west of Kitchener was established in 1824 ff. by Amish from
Bavaria and Alsace-Lorraine. A small outpost of this group was established
near Zurich, some 90 miles farther northwest.
Thus, in 150 years a large number of Amish settlements were
gradually scattered across the United States from Eastern Pennsylvania to Oregon, as well as into Canada. These consisted of three major strains: the
earliest 18th century immigration from Switzerland and the Palatinate to Eastern
Pennsylvania, the 19th century Alsatian-Bavarian-Hessian Amish movement to
western Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, and Ontario, and the Volhynian Amish of
the 1874 immigration to Kansas and South
Dakota.
Of these three the last group had almost lost its Amish
character before it came and soon was assimilated almost completely into the
Western and Northern District General Conference groups. The Alsatian-Bavarian
Amish ultimately all were assimilated into the (Old) Mennonite
Church (MC) group, with a few exceptions which have broken off in a conservative reaction to
remain outside the main stream. The Lancaster-Mifflin-Somerset segment, the
first migration with its daughter colonies, has broken up into four phases: (1)
the largest which remained strongly in the original (old) Amish pattern,
independent, non-assimilated; (2) a medium-sized progressive phase which was assimilated into the (old) Mennonite group along with the Alsatian
Amish; (3) and another group of about the same size which held the middle of
the road, remained independent but organized into the Conservative Amish; (4) a
still more progressive phase, which in turn was broken up into two
sub-phases, the Central Illinois (Stucky) Amish group now merged with the
General Conference, and the smaller (Egli Amish or Defenceless) Evangelical
Mennonite group, an independent organized conference.
A large number of the family names among the Amish are unique
and characteristic of that group although, since before 1693-1697 Swiss and
Alsatians were a united group, some family names will be found in the
descendants of both groups today. The following list includes all the more
numerous and characteristic Amish family names.
The Amish communities which were settled in America before
1870 experienced a number of serious schisms which broke the unity of the group.
Even apart from this, the earlier pre-Revolutionary immigrants of the
Berks-Lancaster settlement and the latter Alsatian Amish immigrants never really
formed a harmonious working relationship although the Amish General conferences
1862-78, called Diener-Versammlungen, represented a partially successful
attempt. The following schisms and resultant branches are to be noted:
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Old Order versus Progressive 1850-1880. The Old Order Amish group resisted change and has continued to this day as unorganized but
close-knit group settlements with communion fellowship of about 14,000 baptized members. The progressive element
organized three district conferences after 1882: Eastern Amish Mennonite,
Indiana-Michigan Amish Mennonite, and Western District Amish Mennonite, all
of which later merged with the Mennonite Church (MC) conferences and are now
an integral part of that branch.
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An in-between group of congregations which did not accept
either the Old Order or the progressive position organized the Conservative
Amish Mennonite Conference (which later dropped the name Amish) in 1910,
which with allied independent congregations numbers about 4,000 members. In
the mid-20th century, over 20 congregations with nearly 1,500 members,
standing between the Old Order and the Conservative Amish, have been formed
from groups breaking away from the Old Order.
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On the other hand, two schisms occurred among the
Alsatian Amish settlements of Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio 1865-1875 which led
to the formation of the Evangelical Mennonite Church (at first called
Defenceless Mennonites), with about 1,500 members, and the Central
Conference (Illinois) later a member of the General Conference Mennonite Church,
with some 3,000 members. In the Defenceless group about 1898 a schism
resulted in the formation of the Missionary Church
Association with over
5,000 members. The Volhynian Amish settlements of Freeman, South Dakota and
Moundridge, Kansas never formed a separate conference but joined the General
Conference Mennonite Church as individual congregations.
The characteristic practices, customs, and attitudes known as
"Amish" are actually characteristic only of the Old Order Amish today.
See also Old Order Amish for an earlier more detailed
description of the Old Order Amish written in the 1950s by John A. Hostetler. See Amish for a description of the Old Order Amish in the second half of the 20th century. See Amish Division for a description of the origins of the Amish.
Bibliography
Hostetler, John A. Annotated Bibliography on the Amish.
Scottdale, 1951, an exhaustive bibliography of publications in North America
by or about the Amish of all groups.
Adapted by permission of Herald Press, Scottdale, Pennsylvania, and Waterloo, Ontario, from Mennonite Encyclopedia,
Vol. 1, pp. 93-98. All rights
reserved. For information on ordering the encyclopedia visit the Herald Press website.
©1996-2009 by the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. All rights reserved.
To cite this page: MLA style: Bender, Harold S. "Amish Mennonites." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1953. Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 07 November 2009 <http://www.gameo.org/encyclopedia/contents/A4594ME.html> APA style: Bender, Harold S. (1953). "Amish Mennonites." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 07 November 2009 <http://www.gameo.org/encyclopedia/contents/A4594ME.html>
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