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1 post categorized "Louisiana Amish"

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.)