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Revision as of 14:06, 17 June 2021
In 1822 Christian Nafziger, an Amish layman from Bavaria, Germany, appeared in the pioneer Mennonite settlement in Waterloo. Living conditions in Bavaria were very difficult. He left his family, set out with little more than his walking stick, faith and hope to find something better in North America. The Dutch Mennonites answered his plea for help. He left Amsterdam Christmas Day 1821 on a sailing vessel bound for Philadelphia. For some unknown reason he arrived in New Orleans on 2 March 1822. With further Dutch assistance he continued his journey up the Mississippi River to Ohio and overland to Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. The leaders there advised him to go to Canada for cheap land, and supplied him with a horse and provision for the trip. With the help of the Mennonites in Waterloo (who had earlier emigrated from Pennsylvania) he contacted the Lieutenant-Governor of Upper Canada in August 1822 and asked for land for 70-80 Amish families from Europe. The Lieutenant-Governor offered 50 acres of free land for every immigrant family. Waterloo Mennonites set up a committee to help plan for a new settlement immediately to the west in a "German Block."
Probably because of their family involvement in land purchase in Canada in 1807, Bishop John Stoltzfus and Minister Christian Koenig were sent to Waterloo by horse-drawn carriage to organize the new immigrants into an Amish Mennonite congregation in 1824. Two ministers and a deacon were ordained to meet the spiritual needs of a pioneer settlement. For sixty years the Amish met in their homes for regular worship and became known as the Wilmot Amish Mennonite Congregation. In 1884 they built their first "Mennonite style" meeting house at Steinmann's corner where the church is still located. The next year an identical meeting house was built on Erb's Rd. west of St. Agatha. Sunday services alternated between the two meeting houses for many years but in 1957 St. Agatha Mennonite and Steinmann's became separate congregations.
In 1946 the first meeting house was replaced by a new structure with an addition in 1975. The Amish Mennonite Conference was organized in 1923. Forty years later it was renamed Western Ontario Mennonite Conference. The language of worship gradually changed from German to English by mid century although many members are still bilingual. The three area Mennonite conferences merged in 1988 into Mennonite Church Eastern Canada which affiliated with Mennonite Church Canada in 1995.
Bibliography
Bender, Kenneth. "A History of the Wilmot Congregation." Research paper, Eastern Mennonite College, 1958.
Kennel, Lillian. History of the Wilmot Amish Mennonite Congregation: Steinmann and St. Agatha Mennonite Churches, 1824-1984. Baden: Steinmann Mennonite Church, 1984, 56 pp.
Mennonite Reporter (13 November 1989): 12.
Roth, Lorraine. The Amish and Their Neighbours: the German Block, Wilmot Township, 1822-1860. Waterloo, ON: Mennonite Historical Society of Ontario, 1998.
Steinmann, Pauline. "Congregational History of Steinmann Mennonite Church." Research paper, Canadian Mennonite Bible College, 1977, 33 pp.
Archival Records
Archival records at Mennonite Archives of Ontario.
Additional Information
Address: 1316 Snyder's Road West, Baden, ON N3A 3K8
Phone: 519-634-8311
Website: Steinmann Mennonite Church
Steinmann Mennonite Church Ministers and Bishops
Minister/Bishop | Years |
---|---|
;Joseph Goldschmidt (1798-1876) | 1824-1831 |
John Brenneman (1766-1848) | 1824-1848 |
Peter Nafziger (b. 1789) | 1826-1831 |
Christian Steinman (1792-1865) | 1826-1831 |
John Oesch (1791-1850) | 1829-1848/9 |
Christian Fahrni | 1829-1831 |
Rudolph Roth (1798-1853) | 1835-1850 |
Jacob Gardner | 1845-1850 |
Peter Litwiller (1809-1878) | 1845-1878 |
Christian Miller (1806-1850) | 1829-1847 |
Christian Wagler (1775-1851) | 1848-1851 |
Christian Wagler (1810-1887) | 1848-1887 |
John Gascho (1830-1909) | 1872-1909 |
Michael Kennel (1834-1898) | 1877-1898 |
Christian Litwiller (1848-1924) | 1877-1924 |
Daniel H. Steinman (1857-1935) | 1894-1935 |
Christian Gascho (1857-1943) | 1894-1943 |
Peter Boshart (1870-1942) | 1927-1942 |
Peter Nafziger (1886-1969) | 1936-1969 |
Menno Wagler (1884-1958) | 1932-1958 |
Benjamin Gingerich (1883-1958) | 1932-1958 |
Moses O. Jantzi (1884-1965) | 1936-1965 |
Elmer Schwartzentruber (1909-2006) | 1951-2006 |
Orland Gingerich (1920-2002) | 1951-1972 |
Albert Zehr (1938- ) | 1965-1971 |
Ephraim Gingerich (1917-2010) (Interim) |
1972-1973 |
Vernon Zehr (1920-1999) | 1973-1984 |
Mark Erb (1948- ) | 1973-1976 |
Fred Lichti (1954- ) | 1979-1993 |
Jeff Steckley | 1987-1989 |
Jan Steckley | 1987-1989 |
Ingrid Loepp Thiessen | 1991-1997 |
Gordon Bauman (Interim) |
1993-1994 |
Herb Schultz (1935- ) | 1994-2001 |
Scott Brubaker-Zehr | 1995-2000 |
Gail Roth | 1998-2001 |
Ken Bechtel (Interim) |
2001-2003 |
Phyllis Kramer (Interim) |
2001-2003 |
Laurence Martin (Interim) |
2003 |
Steve Drudge | 2003-Present |
Ilene Bergen | 2004-2017 |
Myrna Miller Dyck | 2004-2020 |
Steinmann Mennonite Church Membership
Year | Members |
---|---|
1925 | 450 |
1965 | 377 |
1975 | 421 |
1985 | 422 |
2000 | 436 |
2008 | 448 |
2015 | 427 |
2020 | 429 |
Map
Map:Steinmann Mennonite Church (Baden, Ontario, Canada)
Original Mennonite Encyclopedia Article
By Orland Gingerich. Copied by permission of Herald Press, Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Mennonite Encyclopedia, Vol. 4, p. 628. All rights reserved.
Steinmann Amish Mennonite Church, located one mile west of the village of Baden on Highway 7 and 8, in Waterloo County, Ontario, is a member of the Ontario Amish Mennonite Conference, and with the St. Agatha congregation had a combined membership of 520 in 1957. The congregation, first called Wilmot, was organized about 1826.
In 1822 Christian Nafziger, of Bavaria, Germany, purchased land in Wilmot Township for settlement; he returned to Germany and brought his family and others of his congregation to Canada. During his absence a number of families from Pennsylvania moved to Wilmot and a congregation was organized. Most of the settlers however came directly from Europe, mostly Alsace and Lorraine. Names of some of the early settlers include Fahrni, Roth, Litwiler, Gardner, Miller, Gingerich, Steinman, Wagler, Oesch, Lichti, Gascho, etc.
The congregation worshiped in homes until 1884, when the Steinmann meetinghouse was built. A year later another church was built one-half mile west of St. Agatha, and services were held alternately in the two buildings until 1939. Since then services have been held every Sunday in each church. The old Steinmann church, a white frame building, was removed and replaced in 1946 by a new brick structure, with a seating capacity of 600. Pennsylvania-Dutch is still spoken at home, but church services are all in English.
The congregation is active in the support of missions, evangelism, and church schools.
The ministers serving the congregation in 1958 were Moses O. Jantzi and Orland Gingerich, bishops; Peter Nafziger and Elmer Schwartzentruber, ministers.
Author(s) | Orland Gingerich |
---|---|
Alvin Gingerich | |
Date Published | December 2013 |
Cite This Article
MLA style
Gingerich, Orland and Alvin Gingerich. "Steinmann Mennonite Church (Baden, Ontario, Canada)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. December 2013. Web. 24 Nov 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Steinmann_Mennonite_Church_(Baden,_Ontario,_Canada)&oldid=171696.
APA style
Gingerich, Orland and Alvin Gingerich. (December 2013). Steinmann Mennonite Church (Baden, Ontario, Canada). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 24 November 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Steinmann_Mennonite_Church_(Baden,_Ontario,_Canada)&oldid=171696.
©1996-2024 by the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. All rights reserved.