Old & New
Actually, I don’t know the precise ages of these two homes, though one has certainly got a fresher-looking paint job. Â Taken in the Holmes County, Ohio Amish settlement. Watch the drive when it rains.
Actually, I don’t know the precise ages of these two homes, though one has certainly got a fresher-looking paint job. Â Taken in the Holmes County, Ohio Amish settlement. Watch the drive when it rains.
Similar Posts
Continuing our look at relics of the past, the one-room schoolhouse. I think the country schoolhouse definitely fits the category of cultural items that have come and gone in North America (but for a few pockets here and there). Â The Amish are probably the most obvious example of a group maintaining the small rural school tradition. I love old one-room school buildings. Â You still see…
“My way of thinking is keeping it in the centre is the right path. One extreme is as bad as the other.” That’s Amishman Chris Hershberger, in a new CBC story on the Amish in Manitoba. This summer reader Urs Christen shared a look at the first Amish community in the province. Manitoba had just become the fourth Canadian province with an Amish population, joining…
Continuing the “10 views” series, today we have photos of Juniata County, Pennsylvania. A couple months ago we had a post on the Juniata County Amish. Â This community is one of the many lesser-known Pennsylvania settlements. With 8 church districts, it’s actually a pretty sizeable one. Â That’s about 1000 Amish, give or take. But Juniata County is overshadowed by nearby Big Valley, nearly 4 times…
From time to time, Amish America features published articles from the Journal of Plain Anabaptist Communities (JPAC). This one was published in Volume 3, No. 1 (2022) issue of JPAC, written by Edsel Burdge, who is a research associate with the Young Center for Anabaptist and Pietist Studies at Elizabethtown College in Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania. Edsel devotes a great deal of time to keeping track of…
Halifax County on the NC/VA border in southern Virginia is home to a tiny Amish community. Â On my recent Amish trip I paid a brief visit. Halifax County is one of just 4 Amish communities in Virginia. Â If you missed it I shared some photos of one of the others here: Charlotte County, Virginia Amish. The Halifax County community was founded in 2005, and is…
15 Comments
Most of the conservative communities in New York that I visit have homes that look like the unpainted portion.
Tom backroadstraveller.blogspot.com/
shingles for siding
The local (SE Kansas) Amish, fairly conservative horse and buggy folk, use shingles as siding. Is more weather proof than any other kind of siding, they say, and lasts longer with easier maintenance. Sara
I love that picture and the contrast with the old and the new. Great job ~
That would be a Swartzentruber amish place. They are not allowed to have gravel on their driveways.
I’m wondering if the unpainted, fading one is the original home with the newer home being the Dawdi house.
They may have gravel if they spread it out themselves. That means they will have to load the gravel on wheelbarrows and spread it around with shovels and rakes. Nobody has time and energy to go to that bother, so they do without.
Tom, I love your NY pictures! I couldn’t make a comment because I don’t know how to put in a “profile”?
Of course I love all the Amish links especially AmishAmerica.
The many pix I have seen always have nicely painted homes.
Ia the home shown actually occupied?
I’d guess that it is George. The homes of more conservative Amish are often not kept up to the same aesthetic standards as the mainline Amish homes.
The book, An Amish Paradox, has some photos of Swartzentruber homes compared with those of “higher” orders, the difference can be quite striking.
Of course that’s probably not what is going on here — one house in this photo just seems to be in need of painting, or perhaps is newer.
I agree that they sure look like Swartzentruber homes. Red barns, overgrown fence rows, no evidence of flower beds by the house…
The architecture of the older looking home is characteristic of Swartzentruber homes as well.
Extended family
Do you think the newer looking house could have been built when a son took overthe the farm of his parents and needed a home of his own for his growing family?
These pictures are interesting. It helps remind us that there
certainly are differences in Amish farmstead scenery. This
picture reminds me of the Riceville, Iowa settlement which I
believe is very conservative Old Order, but not Swartzenbtruber.
Concerning gravel — in the Orleans, Indiana Swartz. settlement,it seems that gravel is widely used. I think especially of one
family who have a produce stand on their farm that
does a big business every season. Their driveway has been well-maintained for a long time, but about a year ago they enlarged
their parking area and brought in much, much gravel which makes
it very nice to drive around and park. May be differences in
ordnung in different Swartz. settlements. Or does it have more to do with money a household has available to pay for gravel?
The photos is beautiful and makes me home sick for a visit.