Ohio Amish

My Top Five Amish Settlements

My Top Five Amish Settlements

Who loves rankings? (everyone loves rankings) – today I offer my personal top-five favorite Amish settlements.  I hope you’ll indulge my self-indulgence for this one day (I’ve been wanting to do this post for a long time!). I haven’t been everywhere, but of the 17-or-so communities I’ve visited, these are the ones I would most readily revisit (and do when I can), and why. For…

John Hostetler on Amish food

From Amish Society, Fourth Edition: ‘…there are many myths about Amish foods.  There is the legend of “seven sweets and seven sours” on Amish tables.  The only place I have ever eaten seven sweets and sours is in a tourist hotel.  The tourist industry has done well in capitalizing on myths, judging by the number of restaurants that cater to “Amish” foods.  Advertised items such…

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Trading a pilot’s license for a buggy: an Amish convert’s story

Kudos to Matthew for the link to a story about a Geauga County, Ohio man who joined the Amish in 2000. David Rapinz adopted the lifestyle around a decade ago.  He met an Amish woman, Martha, who ‘took a chance on him before his baptism’, and later married her.  Rapinz found beards, horses, and the Pennsylvania Dutch language all a bit unwieldy at first, but…

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Visiting an Amish School

The nine-year-old daughter of my friends ‘Aden’ and ‘Elizabeth’ invited me to visit her school last Monday.  I couldn’t pass that up.  Elizabeth and I walked up a few minutes beforehand;  ‘Naomi’ was already there, so not to miss out on the half-hour of playtime before the first bell. A vigorous game of six-square was in session when we arrived.  The kids let me join. …

Ohio’s “Nebraska” Amish (Andover, OH)

Ohio’s “Nebraska” Amish (Andover, OH)

Many people have seen photos of the fairly well-known ‘white-top buggy’ Amish.  This group is based mainly in Pennsylvania’s diverse Big Valley region. They are most commonly known as the Nebraska Amish, named after a Nebraska-based bishop who helped the group get started in the late 1800s. Traditionally considered one of the most conservative Amish groups, they have also been called the “Old School Amish”….

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Safety issues

I dropped in on Safety Days today, held at the Mount Hope Auction yards. Most of the hundreds in attendance were Amish.  People slowly filed by educational booths promoting early learning, fire safety, and eye care.  One fireman admonished listeners to ‘label their liquids’ since children could not tell the difference between potables and more lethal liquids such as kero or diesel. Besides the useful…

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West Lebanon, Ohio: Churchbound

I happened upon this pair of buggies as they headed to church service yesterday morning.   There’s a good chance their occupants were going to Communion. Many Holmes County Amish churches held their bi-annual communion services this past weekend.  Some will do so this upcoming weekend.  Two weeks before Communion, a church will hold a service called Counsel. Preaching on this special day consists of a…

Expansion plans

Chili (pronounced ‘CH-EYE-LIE’) is at the southern tip of the Holmes County settlement. The hamlet itself is actually located well inside Coshocton County.  It’s not much more than a few ramshackle homes at the juncture of a couple of country byways.  Leaving town, a partially-covered sign alerts drivers to the presence of horse-drawn traffic just ahead, marking the start of the world’s largest Amish community….

Can Amish Men Be Teachers?

Male teachers are a rarity in the Amish school. Primarily an occupation for young unmarried women, one father, ‘Robert’, estimated that there were only about a half-dozen male teachers in the Holmes County vicinity, out of approximately 170 one-room schools.  A quick count in the 2005 church directory actually turned up closer to 20, but with many schools having more than one teacher, males still…