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Somerset Amish Settlement

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 24.101.92.249 (talk) at 20:43, 10 July 2020 (we changed the number of Amish districts in Somerset County, as per "Raber's 2020 Almanac".). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Somerset Amish Settlement, located in Somerset County, Pennsylvania, is the second oldest Amish settlement that still exists. It was founded in 1772 by Amish from the Northkill Amish Settlement in Berks County, Pennsylvania.

Northkill Amish Settlement, founded around 1740, was the first Amish settlement in North America and remained the largest Amish settlement into the 1780s, but then declined as families moved on to areas of better farmland, mainly to Lancaster County, Pennsylvania and Somerset County, Pennsylvania in Pennsylvania, where they formed the Lancaster Amish Settlement around 1760 and the Somerset Amish Settlement in 1772.[1]

The Amish from Somerset County became the "vanguard of Amish settlers in Midwest", because "out of and through it most Midwest Amish settlements were founded". This movement either to Lancaster or Somerset resulted in a first major divide in the family tree of the Amish. The two groups differ not only in dialect (Midwestern vs. Pennsylvania forms of Pennsylvania German) but also in the selection of typical Amish family names.[2]

Today it is home to only seven church districts. The Somerset Amish hold Sunday service at meetinghouses, instead of practicing home worship, as almost all other Old Order Amish do.[3]

References

  1. ^ Steven M. Nolt: A History of the Amish, Intercourse, Pennsylvania 1992, p. 86.
  2. ^ Steven Hartman Keiser: Pennsylvania German in the American Midwest, Durham, NC 2012.
  3. ^ Somerset County at amishamerica.com.