Ohio Amish Country, ca 1970
Wilbur Evans published this unused postcard from the 1970s. The blurb at the upper left on the reverse: “Ohio Amish Country. During the summer months the AMISH hold Sunday Church Meetings outdoors. White shirts, black vests, and straw hats if the dress of the Amish gentlemen.” One woman can also be seen in the picture. She is wearing the traditional bonnet, black jumper style dress with a long-sleeved blouse. The card is identified as a “Lusterchrome” product made by Tichnor Bros. of Boston, Mass. The trademark for the company was filed in 1955 and expired in 1996.
Holmes County has the largest settlement of Amish in Ohio with Geauga County coming in second. There are approximately 84,000 Amish people living in Ohio. They are one of the religious groups that formed from Anabaptist Christianity. Those groups include: Old Order Amish, New Order Amish, Beachy Amish, Old Order Mennonites, and Conservative Mennonites.
The Ohio settlement began when Jacob Miller and his sons, Henry and Jacob, came from Somerset County, Pennsylvania in 1808 and built a cabin at Sugarcreek, Tuscarawas County. Henry wintered over on the claim while his sons returned to Pennsylvania. The rest of the family returned the next year. By 1810 and 1811 eight more families had joined the group now at Walnut Creek. By 1818 prices per acre had been reduced by the government encouraging more people to move to Ohio. By 1835, 250 Amish families had settled in Holmes County.
The traditional source of income is farming. They use manual and horse powered labor only. There is a cooperative wholesaler, Green Field Farms, of organic agricultural products. Membership in the co-op is limited to only those who use horse-drawn vehicles. Many of the Amish people supplement their farming income with sales of hand-made goods, such as brooms, baskets, quilts, leather goods, woodworking, and other items sold from homes or from local shops.
I remember when my son and his wife, who had just moved to Ohio, joined a “box” cooperative that supplied vegetables and other produce in season. Part of the requirement was to work a certain number of hours at the farm. My son, a college professor, was there one summer day when a few Amish girls or young women arrived and began working the fields, planting and digging. He marveled that they could be out there all day in the heat and humidity wearing long dark dresses and bonnets, while he had to retreat several times to the cool shade and have drinks of water.
For additional information, see:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ohio_Amish_County








