Author: Erik Wesner

Erik Wesner is the creator of amishamerica.com, and author of Success Made Simple: An Inside Look At Why Amish Businesses Thrive. Erik began visiting Amish communities in 2004 – eventually meeting thousands of Amish families while selling books.

He began writing about the Amish on this website in 2006, and is often cited in national media, including USA Today, The New York Times, and others on a wide range of Amish topics. A native of North Carolina, Erik has visited dozens of Amish communities across the country, and loves spending time with Amish friends and discovering new Amish places.

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Drug & Alcohol Concerns for Ohio Amish

Drug & Alcohol Concerns for Ohio Amish

From WKBN: Approximately 200 Amish residents in Trumbull County gathered at the Mesopotamia fire station Monday evening for an open forum to discuss drug issues relating to heroin and methamphetamine. The meeting was called at the request of bishops within the Amish community, who reached out to police for help. Our station was asked not to show video from inside the meeting, but two police…

The Amish & Steam Engines (9 Photos)

One of the few places you might find an Amish person “behind the wheel” (see below) is at the various steam engine shows taking place in Amish areas. Today a reader shares photos from the annual event of the Northeast Indiana Steam and Gas Association, “a group of people who are interested in preserving and sharing…the engines, implements, crafts, and activities of America’s past.” This…

What’s a good gift for an Amish person?

What’s a good gift for an Amish person?

This is a question that comes up from time to time, most recently asked by reader Treva. The sense I get is that people: want to buy something culturally appropriate that the receiver will appreciate, and above all to not offend anyone with their gift. Getting a gift for an Amish person is not as tough as it might seem.  I’ve put together a couple…

The Camels of Lancaster County

Sounds like the title of an off-beat Amish fiction series, doesn’t it? While these Camels of Lancaster County have not shown up in any novels I am aware of, they did make an appearance in the news article on Amish camel milk which we looked at last month. I don’t expect Amish camel farming to become a new focus of interest here, but since we’ve…

Ohio Amish Teens Shot, Expected to Recover

If you hadn’t heard, last weekend (two Saturdays ago) two Amish teenagers were shot in a bizarre incident in Ashtabula County, Ohio. The teens were picking up stereo equipment from a local English home where it was stored, as they had done numerous times before, when they were fired upon by the property owners. The teens were driven by an English person who was interviewed…

Head-Scratching Business Signs, Lancaster County

Reader Ed took these photos a couple of days ago in Lancaster County.  Let’s just say both these signs would have me doing a double-take. First, Hershey Farm Restaurant & Motor Inn.  “Is this the New Amish cuisine?” asks Ed. Yesterday, I got a follow-up email: “The Hershey Farm sign has been changed; the last line now reads “Elvis Burger”. Somehow I don’t find that reassuring,…

The Horseless Solar-Powered Buggy

From the Decatur, Illinois Herald & Review: SULLIVAN — If something is worth inventing, it’s worth inventing again. Armed with that kind of reassurance, Sullivan entrepreneur Larry Yoder has gone ahead and reinvented the horseless carriage “because I had a ball doing it.” And it really is a carriage: He’s taken a former Amish buggy and built solar panels into the roof to feed batteries…

How do Amish keep frozen food?

When we hit the dog days of summer, there are times I just feel like crawling into the freezer, closing the door and hanging out in there awhile (I guess I’d need a bigger freezer to make this dream happen). Home freezers are another one of those once-luxuries, now-conveniences which we use, really 24/7, but tend to take for granted.  Not all Amish have such easy…

Cory Anderson on the Journal of Amish and Plain Anabaptist Studies

At last month’s Amish technology conference, I had a chance to meet Cory Anderson, one of the founders of a new publication called the Journal of Amish and Plain Anabaptist Studies (JAPAS). I asked Cory a few questions about JAPAS, which you’ll find below.  I have been enjoying the articles in the inaugural issue, which you can access online, for free, here. Amish America: How would…

Rockome Gardens and the Arthur Amish, 50 Years Ago

Rockome Gardens and the Arthur Amish, 50 Years Ago

On my latest visit to Indiana, a friend gave me an interesting document–an old booklet for Rockome Gardens, a long-running tourist destination featuring rock gardens, intricate stonework and other attractions, located in the Arthur, Illinois Amish settlement (2023 update – unfortunately, Rockome Gardens closed several years ago – but I still hope you’ll enjoy this look back in time!). The booklet is entitled “Your Visit…