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Gosper County, Nebraska Amish Settlement, 1880-1904


The windmill is a lone sentinel of an extinct Old Order Amish settlement in south-central Nebraska. It turns in the wind on the former property of Bishop Yost H. Yoder, whose death in 1901 closed the door on this 24-year dream to establish a church "without spot or wrinkle" on the Great Plains.

The first settlers were nine Yoder families from Juniata County, Pennsylvania, led by Bishop Yost H. Yoder. Others came and some left, but the settlement never grew much larger than a dozen families. There were years of sufficient rainfall and good harvests, but drought and a depressed economy had a devastating effect on the transplanted Pennsylvania farmers. Eventually the community scattered to various other settlements, including Mifflin County, Pennsylvania.

I visited here, camera in hand, in September 1999. The homesteads of the Amish were gone. In their place were acres of lush irrigated corn. Corn like this grew only in the hopes and dreams of the former Amish farmers. The only structure left to mark a homestead was the windmill. The cemetery was well hidden by the tall corn and weeds, though it was marked by a weathered wooden sign made some years ago by a boy from a neighboring farm who earned his Eagle Boy Scout Award by caring for the cemetery. Now the half dozen gravestones were nearly lost in the uncut grass.

I found the gravestone of Bishop Yost H. Yoder. I remembered that it was he for whom the Yost H. Yoder Gravestone"Nebraska Amish" in my home community of Mifflin County had been named. In 1881 Yoder had been called to the Kishacoquillas Valley of central Pennsylvania to help organize a conservative splinter group. Because Yoder was living in Nebraska at the time, the group was nicknamed the "Nebraska Amish," a name still used to designate this most conservative of all Old Order Amish groups.

Janet RenkenI wondered whether anyone here still remembered that this Amish settlement had existed. I was pleasantly surprised to discover neighbors who did, indeed, remember. I found Janet Renken, a schoolteacher, who has a deep interest in this community's history. From her files she retrieved a hand-drawn map of the former Amish landowners, a number of them on land within the square mile that she and her husband owned and farmed. She had newspaper accounts of the Amish settlement and the names of various Amish families from Mifflin County, Pennsylvania, who had visited the cemetery in recent years. They sometimes left a bit of money for the upkeep of the cemetery. She also pointed me to another neighbor, Caroline Langenberg, who had also, on occasion, received Pennsylvania pilgrims, looking for the cemetery of their ancestors. And I recognized the names, some of whom had been my neighbors in the Kishacoquillas Valley. Behind Caroline's house stood a schoolhouse that had been used by the Amish, and since had been moved to her farm to shelter, not scholars, but farm tools.

I drank coffee in Bertrand, the little village of 300 across the Phelps County line. Bertrand was the post office that served the Amish after the coming of the railroad. I thought of Abe Yoder, Sr., a neighbor and friend of my grandfather, who wrote about growing up in the Gosper County settlement. He wrote about their sod house, prairie fires, drought, grasshoppers, unselfish sharing with strangers--even a last sack of flour, leaving home, riding the train to Mifflin County to marry and raise his family, and a later visit with former neighbors in Gosper County. They were all good years, even the tough times. But then, Abe Yoder would think so. I remember him as congenial and optimistic. He would admit that the settlement failed, but I doubt he would think of it as futile. Of course, they had discovered some spots and wrinkles of their own. Perhaps the most contentious wrinkle was the marriage of two young people despite of the disapproval of the bride's parents. This flaunting of the parents' authority and the resulting dissension was more than the small community could bear. At least that's how a descendant of the disapproving parents remembered it. But of course, the Gosper County settlement was not unique in discovering its spots and wrinkles. Nor was this the only short-lived settlement, as David Luthy makes apparent in his volume on extinct Amish communities.

Despite the demise of this settlement, I'm sure Abe Yoder, who died in 1968, would be well pleased to know that the rather tenacious Amish impulse to create visible spiritual communities continues in many places beyond Gosper County, Nebraska.

Neighborhood Map Clipping-Yoder Relatives


Photos and text by John E. Sharp, 12 January 2000

For more see:
Hostetler, John A., "The Amish in Gosper County, Nebraska," Mennonite Historical Bulletin, October 1949, p. 1-2; Kauffman, S. Duane, Mifflin County Amish and Mennonite Story, 1791-1991, 1991, pp.157-159; Luthy, David, The Amish in America: Settlements that Failed, (Aylmer, Ont. and LaGrange, Ind., 1986), pp. 271-276; and Yoder, Abraham S., My Life Story, 1965.

Last updated 12 January 2000