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All the United States Pennsylvania Lancaster Landis Valley Museum
AO Edited

Landis Valley Museum

This museum focuses on the history and culture of the German settlers in Pennsylvania.

Lancaster, Pennsylvania

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slgwv
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Landis Brothers’ House.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Firehouse, a replica (built 1970) of a late 1800s village firehouse.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Education building   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
The log barn (replica of ca. 1760s-1780s construction)   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Brick Farmstead, expanded ca. 1812-1840 by Jacob and Elizabeth Landis.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Mechanical thresher, run by an external engine.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Farm machinery, late 19th-early 20th century.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Conestoga wagon. These iconic wagons were invented in this area.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Farm machinery, late 19th-early 20th century. Thresher in the background.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Gallery in the Farm Machinery & Tool Technology exhibits.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
The Farm Machinery & Tool Technology exhibit building.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Landis Valley Hotel, built in 1856 by Jacob Landis, Jr.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Isaac Landis complex, constructed ca. 1875.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Interior of the country store. A manual coffee grinder is in the foreground at the corner of the counter on the left.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Prices ca. 1900.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Clothing and fabric counter in the dry goods store.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
The Yellow Barn, built from lumber salvaged from earlier buildings.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Displays in the Textile Barn.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Spinning wheels in the Textile Barn.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Display in the Visitor Center museum.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Display in the Visitor Center museum.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Display in the Visitor Center museum.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Landis Brothers stable   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Interior of blacksmith shop. Originally built in the 1870s and moved from Gettysburg.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Late 1800s steam tractor. This tractor was not used for plowing but for running farm machinery. It could travel at about 5 mph.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Crockery and the cash register at the country store.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Tavern, a replica (built 1940-41) of a ca. 1800 building. It was also a lodging and restaurant.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Replica (1970) of 1760s-1780s log farmstead.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
The Country Store, a replica built in 1970 of ca. 1880-1910 store.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
The Tin Shop, a replica built in 1970.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Erisman House, built ca. 1800 and moved from downtown Lancaster.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
The Textile Barn (built 1960), containing period exhibits of spinning and weaving equipment.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Hay barrack (movable awning to keep a haystack dry)   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Flax breaker in the Textile Barn. Flax stalks were smashed with the hammer end (at left) to free the flax fibers from the stalk. The fibers were used to manufacture linen.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Table setting and hatrack in the Tavern.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Dry goods counter at the country store.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
The Visitor Center. The blue flag underneath the U.S. flag is the Pennsylvania state flag.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Display in the Visitor Center museum.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Hearth in the Tavern.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Gun shop (l) and Tavern (r)   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Sexton’s House, built ca. 1850 next to Landis Valley Mennonite Church.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Round Smoke House.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Loom in the textile barn.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Pot-bellied stove in the country store.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
“Just for pretty” flower garden, late 1800s style.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Surveyor’s Shop, now housing the Pottery Barn.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Surveyor’s Shop, now housing the Pottery Barn.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
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About

Several waves of German immigrants settled in Pennsylvania in the 17th and 18th centuries. The first wave, invited by William Penn himself, consisted largely of Anabaptists, including Amish, Mennonites, and Dunkers. These groups were seeking religious freedom after the chaos of the Thirty Years' War, which had devastated much of Germany.

After around 1720 they were joined by mainstream Protestant denominations such as Lutherans, Moravians, and members of the German Reformed church. On the eve of the American Revolution, around one-third of Pennsylvania's population was German-speaking.

Of course, as for other immigrants, the draw was not just religious freedom, but the availability of land. A single family could own a farm a quarter of the size of what an entire village farmed in the German homeland.

Although some groups such as the Amish maintain their separateness to this day, assimilation between the "English" and the German settlers progressed steadily over the 19th century. The assimilation was not all one-way, either. Some Pennsylvania German culinary customs have become part of the larger American culture, such as Christmas cookies and decorated Easter eggs. The log houses the settlers built, patterned on medieval German architecture, also may have helped inspire the traditional "log cabin" of pioneer American lore.

In fact, the assimilated Pennsylvania German customs may even include the American custom of driving on the right side of the road. Conestoga wagons (invented by Pennsylvania Germans in the 18th century) were guided from the left side, as German speakers from Central Europe customarily drove the team from the left.

As agriculture prospered, flour mills and associated crafts such as cooperage (barrel making), blacksmithing, and textiles also grew up, which further fostered trade over a developing network of roads. Brothers Henry and George Landis, born after the Civil War and descended from early Mennonite settlers, had built farmhouses in this area but branched out by building a hotel, the Landis Valley Hotel, to take advantage of the growing demand by travelers.

The brothers also started collecting Pennsylvania German artifacts in the late 19th century, realizing that assimilation into the broader culture threatened the survival of some of the folkways. They opened a museum, centered on their farmstead, by the 1920s. It was donated to the state of Pennsylvania at their deaths.

Over time other buildings were added to the site. Some period buildings were moved in later from elsewhere in the area, including the Sexton's House, the Erisman House, and the Blacksmith Shop. Replicas were also constructed, as of a tavern and inn as they might have looked circa 1800, a tin shop, and the firehouse. A log cabin farm as it might have looked in the late 18th century was also built, using contemporary accounts as guides for construction.

Visitors are free to wander about among the buildings. Some buildings also contain museums and interpretive displays. Extensive exhibits of household furnishings and goods are found in the Visitor Center. A general store is still furnished with goods for sale as it might have been ca. 1900. A textile museum displays equipment for extracting fibers from plants, for spinning thread and yarn, and looms for weaving cloth. The Farm Machinery & Tool Building hosts extensive displays of farming equipment, ranging from horse-powered through steam through the first gasoline-powered tractors.

The Landis Valley Museum also presents living history and interpretive demonstrations, and maintains an active program of preserving heirloom seeds. 

Related Tags

Museums History & Culture Immigration

Know Before You Go

The Landis Valley Museum is just off Pennsylvania State Route 272 about 5 miles northeast of downtown Lancaster. It sits northwest of the intersection of SR-272 and Landis Valley Road. There is ample free parking. Check the website for hours, admission fees, and current events.

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slgwv

Published

July 5, 2024

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Sources
  • Landis Valley: Pennsylvania German Heritage 1750-1940 (video), produced for the Pennsylvania Historical & Museum Commission, 1999.
Landis Valley Museum
2451 Kissel Hill Rd
Lancaster, Pennsylvania, 17601
United States
40.092931, -76.282918
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