Land, Piety, Peoplehood: The Establishment of Mennonite Communities in America, 1683-1790The Mennonite Experience in America Series weaves together the histories of all Mennonite and Amish groups in the United States. It offers something new in Mennonite and Amish history: an attempt to tell not only the inside story but also how one religious people, or set of peoples, has lived and developed along with the pluralism of the nation.Richard K. MacMaster follows the Mennonite migration to the New World and analyzes the economic, social, political, and religious forces which drove these people out of the Old World into America. MacMaster paints a portrait of the lives of the early American Mennonite people: their wealth, migration patterns, social structures, family patterns, and changing attitudes toward education. He traces the influence of such movements as Pietism on these people and shows how they fit into the total context of colonial and revolutionary America. Volume 1. |
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Page 151
... meetinghouse with a schoolroom and the community school then moved into the Mennonites ' building . The case was similar in Earl Township of Lancaster County . In 1765 when a local school there received title to land at least seven of ...
... meetinghouse with a schoolroom and the community school then moved into the Mennonites ' building . The case was similar in Earl Township of Lancaster County . In 1765 when a local school there received title to land at least seven of ...
Page 185
... meetinghouse , or perhaps built two buildings at the same time . Usually when Mennonites began to use meetinghouses they built their own . But in some cases they too shared union buildings . Indeed , they did so often enough to suggest ...
... meetinghouse , or perhaps built two buildings at the same time . Usually when Mennonites began to use meetinghouses they built their own . But in some cases they too shared union buildings . Indeed , they did so often enough to suggest ...
Page 188
... meetinghouse was built . At the Hernley meetinghouse in Lancaster County a wall cupboard dated 1787 , with handmade lock and hinges , probably housed the congregation's Ausbund hymnals and possibly the pewter communion cup13 In the 1766 ...
... meetinghouse was built . At the Hernley meetinghouse in Lancaster County a wall cupboard dated 1787 , with handmade lock and hinges , probably housed the congregation's Ausbund hymnals and possibly the pewter communion cup13 In the 1766 ...
Contents
Editors Foreword by Theron F Schlabach | 11 |
1 | 19 |
Motives and Mutual | 50 |
Copyright | |
14 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Abraham acres Alms Book America Amish and Mennonite Anabaptism Anabaptists Archives Ausbund Baptists Beiler Berks County Best Poor Man's Boehm Brecknock Township Burkholder Christ Christian Christopher Colonial Conestoga Conscience in Crisis courthouse Creek Dunkers Dutch Mennonites Dutch Papers Earl Township eighteenth century faith farmers farms Fraktur Funk Germantown Goshenhoppen Graeff gregations Henry Herr Hinke historian Historical Society History Ibid immigrants Indian Jacob John Kauffman Kolb Krefeld Lancaster County land leaders Lemon Lutheran MacMaster Martin Martin Boehm Martyrs Mirror Maryland meetinghouse Mennonite Church Mennonite communities Mennonite congregation Mennonite emigration Mennonite Historical Mennonite preacher Mennonites and Amish Mennonites of Franconia Menonists ministers Moravian neighbors nonites nonresistant Palatinate patriots Penn Pennsylvania German Pequea persecution persons Philadelphia Pietism political Poor Man's Country preaching Quakers records Reformed religious Samuel Schwenkfelders Scottdale settlement settlers Shenandoah County Shenandoah Valley Skippack Swiss Mennonites tion Township Tax Lists Tschantz United Brethren Virginia Wenger William