Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
According to Albrecht Powell, the Pennsylvania Amish has not always been the largest group of U.S. Amish as is commonly thought. The Amish population in the U.S. numbers more than 390,000 and is growing rapidly (around 3-4% per year), due to large family size (seven children on average) and a church-member retention rate of approximately 80%."
In many communities, the Amish operate their own schools, which are typically one-room schoolhouses with teachers (usually young, unmarried women) from the Amish community. On May 19, 1972, Jonas Yoder and Wallace Miller of the Old Order Amish, and Adin Yutzy of the Conservative Amish Mennonite Church were each fined $5 for refusing to send ...
The Amish are permitted to travel by bus and train in order to shop, work at markets, and reach more distant destinations. Regular bus service between Amish communities has been established in some areas. The Amish are not permitted to travel by airplane as air travel is regarded as too modern. [27]
The Daily Yonder reports that as the Amish population in America grows, Amish communities — and their rural neighbors — are finding ways to adapt.
You can go to 10 different Amish communities and they have 10 different ways of doing it. We didn't have Rumspringa — where the Amish youth go out and sow their wild oats, drugs, alcohol, sex ...
Feb. 14—This is the 22nd article written to commemorate the Rush County Bicentennial. Forty-eight years ago I wrote a graduate paper about Amish education. The paper was titled The Educational ...
The Amish Country Byway is an Ohio Scenic Byway, designated in 1998, that runs 164 miles (264 km) through many Amish communities in Holmes County. [32] The byway focuses on backroads with views of rolling farmland and concentrations of Amish homes, farms, and home businesses. [33]
The Amish community dates back to 1850 and is Maryland's oldest Amish community. The community has become associated with the New Order Amish, with electricity permitted inside of homes. [2] The Amish community in Oakland has a small number of converts to the Amish faith, known as "Seekers", a rarity in the Amish world. There are only between ...