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First Mennonite Settlement


Location
The Region of Niagara - Lincoln
In Jordan, at the end of the entrance driveway (Church Lane) at the Jordan Museum on the west side of Main Street north of County Road 81 just east of Twenty Mile Creek


Photographer
Alan L Brown
Posted
August 22, 2004

Text from the Plaque
Following the American Revolution, Mennonites living in Pennsylvania began to come to the Niagara Peninsula in search of good farm land. A small group settled on land west of Twenty Mile Creek in 1786. Then, in 1799, Jacob Moyer, Abraham Moyer and Amos Albright scouted land in the vicinity of Vineland and Jordan and secured a 1,100-acre tract. They returned later that year with a number of families. Others joined them the next year. These industrious German-speaking people soon developed a flourishing agricultural community. In 1801 they organized the first Mennonite church congregation in Canada, with Valentine Kratz as minister. Several Mennonite communities in other parts of Ontario were founded by members of this first settlement.

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