Estimate: A New Amish Community is Founded Every 3.5 Weeks in U.S.
7/30/2012

Editor: This news release was also distributed earlier today by Ohio State's Office of Research and Innovation Communications.
COLUMBUS, Ohio – A new census of
the Amish population in the
United States estimates that a new Amish community is founded, on average,
about every 3.5 weeks, and shows that more than 60 percent of all existing Amish
settlements have been founded since 1990.
This
pattern suggests the Amish are growing more rapidly than most other religions
in the United States, researchers say. Unlike other religious groups, however,
the growth is not driven by converts joining the faith, but instead can be
attributed to large families and high rates of baptism.
In all, the census counts almost
251,000 Amish in the United States and Ontario, Canada, dispersed among 456
settlements, the communities in which members live and worship. The 1990 census
estimated that there were 179 settlements in the United States.
If the growth of the Amish
population continues at its current rate, the Ohio State University researchers
predict that the census could exceed 1 million Amish and 1,000 settlements
shortly after 2050, and these numbers will bring economic, cultural, social and
religious change to the rural areas that attract Amish settlement.
Among the changes the researchers
predict: Amish will buy up land vacated by farmers in rural areas close to
community services, but the availability of farmland might not keep pace with
population growth. This means many Amish men will likely look for nonfarm jobs
such as woodworking and construction trades, which could affect land prices and
potentially enhance local economies through the establishment of business
startups.
The census restricts the count to
Amish among the “Old Orders,” those who maintain a horse-and-buggy lifestyle
and avoid or limit their use of most modern technologies.
The researchers who compiled the
census used a variety of sources to produce this count, including current and
archival settlement directories and statistics from publications that cover
some of the largest Amish communities, as well as by calculating estimates
based on research-based facts about Amish settlement characteristics.
It took about two years to develop
the census, which was commissioned by the Association of Statisticians of American
Religious Bodies for the recently released 2010 U.S.
Religion Census.
“The Amish are one of the
fastest-growing religious groups in North America,” said Joseph Donnermeyer, professor
of rural sociology in Ohio State’s School
of Environment and Natural Resources, who led the census project. “They’re
doubling their population about every 21 to 22 years, primarily because they
produce large families and the vast majority of daughters and sons remain in
the community as adults baptized into the faith, starting their own families
and sustaining their religious beliefs and practices.”
Donnermeyer compiled the count with
Elizabeth Cooksey,
professor of sociology, and Cory
Anderson, a graduate student in rural sociology, both at Ohio State.
Anderson presented a paper Friday (7/27) in Chicago at the annual meeting of the
Rural Sociological Society.
The researchers describe the Amish
as largely misunderstood based on their limited depiction on television reality
shows or in the news media. The Amish represent a branch of the Anabaptist (or
rebaptized) movement dating to the Protestant Reformation of the 16th
century. Based on their interpretation of the Christian bible, the Amish settle
where they can separate themselves from the world, minimize disturbance from
others and use the land for farming or other livelihoods, Donnermeyer said.
The church is central to Amish life
and is intentionally small-scale in its organization in keeping with their
religious philosophy of separation, Donnermeyer said. Larger settlements are
composed of multiple church districts, which typically consist of a few dozen
families whose baptized members use a lottery system to select leaders. Worship
services are held in members’ homes.
The absence of a centralized church
registry makes it complicated to produce an accurate estimate of the Amish
population, Donnermeyer noted, but he said this census is likely the most
comprehensive scholarly count of the Amish population to date.
He and his colleagues relied on more
than 60 settlement directories they obtained from the Heritage Historical Library
operated by the Mennonite Church and three publications that cover news about
various Amish communities, both large and small. Those publications are The Budget in Sugarcreek, Ohio, The Diary in Bart, Pa., and Die Botschaft in Millersburg, Pa.
The researchers also used
demographic data from established settlements to produce average household
estimates for newer or similar communities that had not published directories. A
settlement, by definition, must contain at least three households and include members
who are able to hold a church service; these criteria were the basis for estimating
the population of settlements that were less than a year old.
Baptism into the Amish church is
offered only to adults – a fundamental tenet of the Anabaptist movement. Of the
250,784 Amish adherents identified in the census, 145,235 are considered
nonmembers because they are children who have not yet been baptized.
The census provides Amish
population figures for each state with at least one Amish community. The
researchers included Ontario, Canada, home to 15 settlements and almost 4,400
Amish, in the census. The Amish live in 29 states, mostly in the Midwest and Great
Lakes region but also as far south as Florida and Texas, into the northeast
reaches of Maine and as far west as western Montana.
According to the research, Ohio is
home to the most Amish community members – 60,233 – and Pennsylvania is a close
second, with 59,078 Amish residents. Indiana has 44,831 Amish citizens. The 456
settlements contain a total of 1,868 Amish church districts of the “Old
Orders.”
No state has seen more recent growth
in settlements than New York, where 15 new settlements have been established
since 2010. But 34 of Ohio’s 54 settlements have been founded since 1990, a
trend that contributes to the state’s large Amish population, Donnermeyer said.
Ohio is also home to Holmes County, the U.S. county housing the highest
percentage of Amish, with 42 percent. The Greater Holmes County settlement,
which sprawls across six counties (Holmes, Wayne, Tuscarawas, Coshocton, Stark
and Ashland), is the largest settlement, with nearly 30,000 Amish, followed by
the Lancaster/Chester County settlement in southeastern Pennsylvania.
“My guess is that in 15 years,
we’ll witness a county whose population is majority Amish, and Holmes County is
likely to gain that distinction first. Perhaps LaGrange County in Indiana will
not be far behind,” Donnermeyer said.
Donnermeyer has a partial appointment with the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center. Both the center and the School of Environment and Natural Resources are part of Ohio State's College of Food, Agricultural, and Environmental Sciences.
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Writers
Emily Caldwell 614-292-8310 Caldwell.151@osu.edu
Sources
Joseph Donnermeyer 614-292-9167 Donnermeyer.1@osu.edu
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