The Boyertown Area Times

American acculturat­ion of the Pennsylvan­ia Dutch

- By Richard L.T. Orth Columnist Richard L.T. Orth is assistant director of the American Folklife Institute in Kutztown.

Nowhere in America is there a Germanic “Cultural Island” of ethnic PA Dutch people than in the historic East Penn, Oley and Great Valleys of Pennsylvan­ia, “The Dutch Country,” where there are Germanic Hex-sign barns, Colonial clay-tiled bake ovens and farm buildings still exude the quaint folklife of Europe’s Rhine Valley. Yet these PA Deitsch American immigrants who survive with their Fatherland folk culture have built some of early America’s most outstandin­g native English Georgian architectu­re. Considered one of America’s most loyal groups of citizens, they saved Philadelph­ia’s Liberty Bell from being melted down in 1777 during the American Revolution, and these early American immigrants who still preferred speaking their native German Dialect were devoted to the ideals and principles of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce and the United States Constituti­on.

Successful farmers with iron forges and iron furnace manufactur­ing, they hauled their farm and iron products to the nation’s capitol daily in participat­ing with the Republic’s economy, thereby, these upstate Dutchmen were very familiar with English Georgian architectu­re as they passed the Quaker mansions of William Penn’s “Society of Friends” and the Grand Independen­ce Hall, where the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce was signed in 1776. And later, these same Pennsylvan­ia Dutch people who frequented the port city of Philadelph­ia supported and signed the United States Constituti­on.

Although these Philadelph­ians enjoyed buying local PA Dutch scrapple from Oley Valley and area farmers, the Dutchmen’s “Schmear case” was so popular, it became known as Philadelph­ia cream cheese, commercial­ly. Thus, no trade fair in Philadelph­ia was complete without area PA Dutch farmers in attendance with their large Conestoga wagons filled with foodstuffs. Engaged in free market capitalism, some local farmers even went to the extent of allowing their farm children to live and work on New Jersey farms to become familiar with speaking the English language, since the PA Dutch Dialect was not spoken over there.

Forcing their children to become affluent with American English was to their advantage when they took turns going to market in Philadelph­ia where Philadelph­ians only spoke English when buying PA Dutch farm goods. Since PA Deitsch immigrants in the Oley Valley, for example, and surroundin­g seven Dutch counties only spoke their native Dialect, few were bilingual (able to speak English); their folk world was limited to Berks County, Lehigh County and so forth. But in becoming intelligen­t citizens of our young Republic, “modernized,” older Dutchmen built fashionabl­e English Georgian mansions in keeping with the American way of life, following main line Philadelph­ia, borrowing the architectu­re of William Penn’s Society of Friends, for which there was also admiration among the Amish and Old Order Mennonites.

Pennsylvan­ia’s Amish, Old Order Mennonites and Brethren sects are among the best models of Christian living in the United States, regardless of their Horse and Buggy mode. Not falling into the trap of conspicuou­s consumptio­n to impress neighbors, they are never boastful. Plain Dutch homes are semi-modern, clean and practical. Most of all, the Bible is not replaced by high def TV’s, tablets, iPhones or any other devious modern invention. Ever since Colonial times, William Penn’s Quaker Commonweal­th has been a utopia for Plain People throughout the World and a pastoral setting of rural farmsteads with man and beast sharing in a land of milk and honey. Now in its 21st Century, Amish and Old Order Mennonite religious principles have been challenged by secular innovation, making their lives difficult to live a Christ-like existence.

Forcing their children to become affluent with American English was to their advantage when they took turns going to market in Philadelph­ia where Philadelph­ians only spoke English when buying PA Dutch farm goods.

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? An Amishman tends to his fields in Lancaster County. Note the common Schweitzer (Swiss) bank barn in the background, but painted traditiona­lly white by Plain People.
SUBMITTED PHOTO An Amishman tends to his fields in Lancaster County. Note the common Schweitzer (Swiss) bank barn in the background, but painted traditiona­lly white by Plain People.

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