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9 posts categorized "Settlements that Failed"

May 01, 2008

Photos from the Martins in Poland

 Cows_in_poland

It's the 'long weekend' in Poland (a combination of the traditional May 1st communist worker's holiday and Poland's May 3 constitution day), and I've just paid another visit to my friends Jacob and Anita Martin, whom I've written about a few times on the blog.
Birch_home_poland
The Martins, who've lived in Poland since 1993, struggled a bit at first, but have been able to build themselves a very basic but cozy home in a birch forest outside of Warsaw. 
 

Anita says that at first the home was not much more than a kitchen, with she and Jacob sleeping on one end and the kids on the other.  The Martins have gradually added on and now have quite a bit of square footage.
Cimg9786
It was not until about five years ago that they got an indoor bathroom, but now enjoy a few small luxuries, including a nice-sized fridge and a washing machine.  Anita showed me her new stove, which she uses to bake bread.

The Martins live simply but happily.  They say they get along well with most of the neighbors, who are a mixture of Warsaw 'city people' and long-time locals.  Jacob has a reputation as a dependable worker with 'farm-smarts'.  He gets called out to deliver calves from time to time.
Amish_poland_2 
Little Krzysiek (Chris) spent most of our walk yesterday trying to feed my brother and I what he called 'chocolate'--dried-up chunks of mud found by the side of the lane.  This got the other kids worked up into a near riot.  'We want you to try it first,' we told the four-year-old, who adamantly refused.

Beachy_amish_poland

The Martins originally came to Poland with the intention of starting a Beachy Amish congregation, but soon realized that it would be more difficult than they had hoped. 


Two of the original three families soon returned to the US.  Left alone, the Martins now attend a Pentecostal church in Warsaw.Birch_trees_sunrise_poland

Photos here are from late April and early March.

Click for more on the Beachy Amish from the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online.

April 04, 2008

Montcalm County, Michigan Amish reader photos

Amish_farmer_michigan

Shannon shares some nice photos from the Amish settlement at Montcalm County, Michigan.

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Shannon says that the family she knows here belongs to the 'Troyer Amish' group.

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There are currently 24 Amish settlements in Michigan, according to the latest Calender, the almanac-and-guide to Amish church districts.

Amish_buggy

The oldest Michigan settlement, that in the vicinity of Centreville in St. Joseph County, dates to 1910.  It is also the largest of the Michigan settlements, with 11 church districts as of this year.

Amish_home

St. Joseph County may contain the oldest Michigan settlement, but it wasn't the first to be founded.

 Amish_buggy_sign

According to David Luthy's The Amish in America:  Settlements that failed, six settlements had already been founded in Michigan by 1910, five of which were still in existence at the time of the founding of the St. Joseph settlement.

Amish_corn_field

All of these communities 'went extinct' at some point, though most were fairly long-lived, lasting 20, 30, 40 and one over 50 years.

Amish_buggy_michigan

The longest-lasting of these early settlements that went extinct was that of Mio in Oscoda County, way up in the northern part of the Michigan 'hand'.

Amish_house_winter

 Mio is unusual because after its 'extinction' in 1954, no Amish lived in the area until 1970, when families from Geauga County, Ohio began to settle in the area of the former community, creating a new settlement that numbers three churches today.

Amish_buggy_winter

Shannon says that the family she is acquainted with in Montcalm County is quite friendly with outsiders, even running a dinner service for visitors, as Amish families sometimes do.

Amish_buggy_winter_3

At the same time, the group leans to the more technologically-conservative side of the spectrum, with open-front buggies and oil lamps in use.   

Amish_horse

Thanks again to Shannon for the nice photos--see more of them at her blog Speaking in Plain Shamish.

March 06, 2008

Amish settlements that failed

The Amish Studies site based out of Elizabethtown College tells us that as of mid-2007, there were approximately 400 separate Amish settlements comprised of approximately 1,600 church districts in 27 states and Ontario. 

The Amish continue to grow at a rapid pace and can today be found in such unlikely places as Mississippi, Florida and Montana.

1740_northkill_amish

photo:  Mennonite Church USA

Throughout their 250-plus years of existence on the continent, Amish groups have made many unsuccessful attempts to settle in places as far afield as California and Latin America.

In David Luthy's excellent book, The Amish in America, Settlements that Failed, 1840-1960, we can read about dozens of settlements which for one reason or another failed to get off the ground, sputtering out within a few short years. 

Other communities documented in Luthy's book lasted many years before gradually going extinct.  In some settlements you may find buildings or cemeteries left behind by the Amish inhabitants.  In others there remains hardly a trace.

In a companion pamphlet to the work, Luthy outlines reasons why settlements fail, including a lack of ministry and harsh economic conditions.  Drought, Indian attacks, and community disunity also play a role in many settlements' downfall. 

Settlements that Failed is an ongoing feature on the Amish America blog.  Look for more posts on the topic in the near future. 

In the meantime, you might enjoy the following posts on Amish communities that didn't make it:

NC 'Swamp Amish' battle killer mosquitoes and flammable marsh dirt

Nuclear power wipes out one Ohio settlement

Amish in New Orleans?  The fate of the original urban Amish

Amish remains at a Colorado ghost town

California dreaming--Why are there no Amish in America's 'foremost farm state?' 

October 20, 2007

Credit cards, nuclear power, and funny cigars

Okay, just a bit lazy today on the Amish blog and trying to get my act together to go run however many miles in the freezing Polish weather (snowed yesterday!), so I am going to do a little roll call of some of my favorite posts from the past year:

Do the Amish use credit cards?

Settlements that failed:  an evangelistic Amish group in Ohio gets 'nuked'.

Selling the Amish:  from upscale furniture to Amish cigars.

Hope you like 'em, thanks to all for reading!

July 25, 2007

Settlements that failed: Skeeter birds, flaming muck, and the Dismal Swamp

Today, a small New Order Amish settlement is found in western North Carolina, near the town of Union Grove.

Before this settlement came about, (and not counting a short-lived community in the late 50's), the only other full-fledged attempt to settle in the Tar Heel State occurred in 1918, lasting a full quarter-century before extinction in 1944.

800pxmap_of_north_carolina_highli_2

The Amish who originally came here, mainly from Geauga County, Ohio, as well as from Pennsylvania, Indiana, and Kansas, settled in Currituck County near the town of Moyock, on land reclaimed from the not-too-invitingly named Dismal Swamp.

The settlement was a slow-grower--Luthy tells us that by its ninth year, it had only 12 families--and seemed to be something of a waystation for itinerant Amish in search of better pastures, with one resident commenting 'some came and others left all the time we were there.'

Despite the settlement's 'reluctance to launch', there was at least a substantial basis for farming in the fairly productive 'black, muck soil' of the reclaimed swamp. 

Other interesting facts about the settlement:

  • It was home to one of the first Amish parochial schools, and probably the only one to be held in a hotel, a temporary setup the Amish used in the year 1925.
  • Amish from other settlements nicknamed the Moyock Amish 'talking machines', referring to their habit of commenting incessantly on their homes in NC while visiting other settlements, in the hopes of attracting more settlers.
  • Corn, soybeans, peas, potatoes, and peanuts were all suitable to be raised here, but the best money-maker turned out to be peppermint.

Mind your butts

Although it seemed quite suitable for farming after being drained, the Dismal Swamp had a peculiar, some would say inconvenient, characteristic-- flammability.

The black muck soil would become so dry that it would easily ignite.  Hunters from the cities often dropped cigarettes and matches, causing wildfires that 'would burn until the next rain'.

Another drawback of the area:  according to one Norfolk, Virginia resident, 'it was kind of a mosquito paradise.  The natives  said the mosquitoes were so big they would sit on the trees and bark--(bark of the trees)'--yuk,yuk.


Dismal_swamp_amish
photo: Hyde slides

But it was neither fiery turf nor beastly skeeters that finally drove the Amish from Moyock--in the end, it came down to a much more commonplace reason.

No ministry. 

Only one spiritual leader had ever settled there, and only briefly.  'Lack of ministry' is one of the nine cardinal reasons Luthy gives for failure of Amish settlements.  No word on why ministers were not enticed to Currituck County, but going out on a limb, the prospect of being eaten alive by bird-sized mosquitoes while their croplands flamed around them might have served as a deterrent.

Luthy closes the Moyock chapter:

'Today all the buildings which the settlers constructed on the reclaimed swamp land have vanished. A person who visited there in 1975 reported:  "All traces of the former Amish settlement that once was at Moyock is completely gone--not one building these folks built is still standing."'

(Source:  David Luthy's The Amish in America: Settlements That Failed, 1840-1960.)

May 23, 2007

Settlements that failed: California dreaming

Throughout the 1800's and 1900's through today, adventurous Amish have set out to pioneer new settlements in places hitherto unknown to their people.

521pxmap_of_california_highlighti_2

One such group set its sights on California in 1913--the first and only attempt to settle in America's 'foremost farm state'.  With it's vast farmlands, you'd think the location would make a good match for the agrarian Amish.

But apparently not--a year later, the settlement had gone extinct.

The Amish community at Salinas in Monterey County was largely comprised of families from an Oregon settlement that had experienced disunity.  The congregation divided, seven families chose to follow their bishop and set up shop in California. 

Like many others, the settlement had a good start, but quickly fell apart, as settlers began moving away, the first of which, a deacon, left inexplicably just two months after arriving.


A poison pen

Over the settlement's short existence, disparaging letters appeared in The Budget, an Amish-and-Mennonite gazette originating in Sugarcreek, Ohio.  The comments likely came from one or more vindictive acquaintances from the original Oregon group. 

In the letters, the writer portrays the area as one needing lots of hard work to provide irrigation, which was in fact not the case.  The California settlers apparently enjoyed the warm winter climate and generally seemed to be doing well.


Thus the end of the settlement remains something of a mystery. 


A grandchild claims her grandfather, Jake K. Miller, father of the settlement's bishop, had a weakness for land speculation.  She claimed that he took off hunting the next big land opportunity. 

David Luthy, the Amish historian responsible for this account, finds this unlikely.  He explains why:  first, it would have been a purely selfish act, and more importantly, Miller actually was one of the last to leave.

357980_storm_tree

Another possible cause? 

Superstitious Spanish-American Catholics. 

It turns out that an extremely rare, and frightening, thunderstorm struck Salinas one day in the summer of 1914.  Fearful natives placed blame squarely on the Amish.

Whether thunder-and-lightning, dreams of real estate riches, or bone-dry turf did this settlement in, no one will likely ever know.  In any case, it's very possible there may be other reasons for the break-up.

 

Over the course of a year, all but one of the California Amish left for other settlements (with the sole remaining member joining a Mormon group), bringing a swift end to the Amish 'California experiment'.

(Source:  David Luthy's The Amish in America: Settlements That Failed, 1840-1960.)

April 29, 2007

Settlements that failed: Stuck in the Big Easy--with the original 'urban Amish'?


A small haphazard settlement of Amish apparently once existed in New Orleans.

Orleans_parish_louisiana
David Luthy explains that migrant Amish in the 1800's often entered America from Europe by way of the Mississippi River port.

Sometimes it happened that an Amish family lacked the funds to continue upstream and onward to established settlements, often in Illinois.  Previous to 1850, stranded families formed a small and short-lived community in the city.

Information on the community is scant, but apparently bishops from midwestern settlements cared enough to make the long trip and minister to the congregation there.  Bishop Peter Naffziger even walked there on two occasions to care for the settlement's spiritual needs--apparently from his home in Ohio.
Normans_new_orleans_map_1849
1849 New Orleans map from Louisiana State Museum
New Orleans, at the time, was nothing like it is today, of course.  However, it was a city in the true sense of the word, with an 1840's population around 100,000.  Most of the inhabitants were French-speaking, so Luthy speculates that the Amish, from Alsace and Lorraine in France, likely felt more at home here than they would have in other ports.

It seems that the few Amish that lived here, if they did not move onward after raising the necessary funds, eventually may have adopted urban ways, lost traditions and assimilated.

(Source:  David Luthy's The Amish in America: Settlements That Failed, 1840-1960.)

April 22, 2007

Settlements that failed: The Amish get 'nuked'

The Amish settlement at Piketon, Ohio was an odd one to begin with.
Pike_county_ohio_amish_settlement
A few things made the Amish who settled here in 1949 different from most.

One was their evangelistic emphasis.  Amish traditionally do not try to convert others.  Piketon, Ohio was begun by a minister sympathetic to the idea of spreading Amish beliefs.

Secondly, they were the first Amish congregation ever to publish their own rule book, otherwise known as the Ordnung, and traditionally existing in oral form only.  Far more copies than were necessary for the congregation were produced, which hints that they were meant to be used as an evangelical tool.

Finally, the Amish of Piketon promoted the idea of assurance of salvation.  Most Amish take the approach of 'the best we can do is follow the Lord's commands and hope we make it'.  The Piketon Amish, however, followed a doctrine that stated that they could be certain of their fate beyond the grave. 


The settlement was comprised of settlers from various communities, who started up a close-knit farm community in the rolling hills of Pike County in southern Ohio.  Interestingly, despite the fact that they supported quite an unorthodox approach to the faith, the were 'in fellowship' with a number of other Amish communities, having preachers visit from Indiana and Ohio, including from the giant Holmes County settlement.

According to David Luthy, the Amish who settled there appreciated the sparsely populated rural setting, and got on well with non-Amish neighbors.

So just what did this settlement in? 

Word came in 1952 of government plans to built an atomic energy plant within a few miles of the settlement.

  Portsmouth_gaseous_diffusion_plant

This messed up the Amish on two counts:  the massive influx of government workers and associated people would destroy the rural calm and make buggy-driving, for one thing, much more dangerous.  Secondly, the fact that a power plant would be located nearby would denote the area as a military one and a potential bombing target, and with the Korean War going on, this weighed heavily on Amish minds.  Soon after getting the news, the local Amish were looking for fresh pastures.

The facility which resulted, containing 'some of the largest industrial structures in the world', made nuclear material for both weapons and commercial plants.

The setlement itself was relatively tiny, maxing out at seven households.

The fate of the families? 


Most of them ended up moving to the Amish settlement in Aylmer, Ontario, at least partially to protect their sons in the face of the US military draft.

The Piketon plant, one of only two uranium enrichment plants in the country, stopped production in 2001.

(Source:  David Luthy's The Amish in America: Settlements That Failed, 1840-1960.)

March 12, 2007

Settlements that failed: Ghost towns and dream towns

Typhoid fever and bad 'plumbing' did this bunch in.

David Luthy, Amish convert and historian, explains in his Settlements that Failed that the Amish settlement at Ordway, Colorado started off promisingly enough in 1910.   

800pxmap_of_colorado_highlighting_crowle

The area had been heavily promoted by a realty company for settlement, and proved attractive enough for some families to move there.   A town named  Dayton was meant to arise  in what was supposedly a very rich river-valley, and would foreseeably serve as a market and support center for the Amish.

Next, a minister was found who was willing to join the group--a key ingredient for any Amish community hoping to survive. 

An important step was taken when an irrigation system was installed, which allowed the Amish to produce good crops of alfalfa, sugar beets, and cantaloupes.  They even had to hire Mexican migrant workers to bring it all in at harvest time.

Irrigation ended up causing the group's downfall, however.

The water turned out to be bad, sickening some of the Amish with typhoid fever.   A few died.

Additionally, the system was set up so that water often wasn't turned on until late in the evening.  Farmers had to work during the night as a result. 

Or, it would not come until Sunday, when nothing could be done with it, Sunday being the strictly-observed 'off day' in the Amish week.


In the end, Ordway entered the history books as one of the dozens of Amish settlements that have failed over the past two centuries. 

As you read through the cases in Luthy's book, it is interesting to note the frequent tone of near-desperation of settlers in struggling locations. 

Disparaging letters from Amish in other settlements in the Budget, a national Amish paper, often served to discourage further migration to new settlements.  Reading through the excerpts, some seem to poke fun at new settlers' efforts, or to cast doubt on claims made as to an area's viability for farming.   


Apparently the Ordway Amish seemed not to get so much outwardly negative press, but rather suffered from the rumors (which turned out to be true, despite the realty company's protests to the contrary) of irrigation difficulties.

As is often the case with a new settlement, if the initial group fails to rally enough families from other settlements to join them, or is not able to grow 'organically', it falters and eventually disintegrates. 

192569_3801

Settlements fade for other reasons as well, such as financial difficulties, drought, urbanization, squabbling among church members and leadership, lack of leadership, and conversion to other faiths.

Here, Luthy summarizes the aftermath of pioneering in Colorado:

Driving along mountainous roads in Colorado, a person can come to a completely deserted town.  The handful of frame buildings sag with age.  Shingles have been blown off their roofs, and their windows have long ago lost their glass.  Colorado has many of these "ghost towns"--towns which sprang up around mines and later were abandoned when the ore suddenly gave out.  During the last half of the 1800's, Colorado gave birth to hundreds of such towns....Besides its ghost towns, Colorado also has what might be termed "dream towns."  These are the proposed townsites which never developed farther than a realtor's dreams and advertising campaign.  "Dayton" in Crowley County was just such a dream town.

Finally, a haunting eulogy for the settlement in the closing segment: 

Time passes.  New generations are born.  History is forgotten.  It is very likely that no one in the Ordway area today remembers that Amish lived there in 1910-1917.  But there is a lone, mute memory of the Amish which still remains--the grave of Sarah Hochstetler in the public cemetery [dead of typhoid fever].  Also buried there is her brother, David A. Hochstetler, who died in 1956 but had never joined the Amish Church.  When some of his relatives attended his funeral, they looked for Sarah's grave and reported that it was "taken good care of."

(Excerpts from David Luthy's The Amish in America: Settlements That Failed, 1840-1960.)