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First of all, they are not Holland-Dutch and they have no connection
with Holland-Dutch culture. They are the descendants of the 18th
Century German and Swiss wave of migration across the Atlantic,
with a few German dialect-speaking Alsatians and Lorrainers in the
bargain. In most cases the ancestors of the present Dutch were pre-revolutionary
Americans, colonial German dialect-speaking emigrants.
Actually the elements of the culture which we today call "Pennsylvania
Dutch" are very much of a mixture. Pennsylvania was never a
"Little Germany" where pipe smoking and beer-drinking
peasants transplanted their entire homeland way of life. There was
always, from the very beginning, the interplay of culture with Scotch-Irish
and Quaker neighbors, an-interplay, which spread both ways. The
typical "Pennsylvania barn" - the Swiss or bank barn -
that two-story affair with stables on the ground floor and the threshing
floors and mows approached from a drive-in entrance from a higher
level - is a Continental adaptation. The Quakers and Scotch-Irish
borrowed this barn pattern and Pennsylvanians spread it as far west
as Iowa. On the other hand, the typical Pennsylvania farmhouse was
English Georgian in pattern - and the Dutchman borrowed it from
his English-speaking neighbors. It was an even trade.
So general was this cultural adaptation between Continental and
British Isles groups here in Pennsylvania that we can say that the
American pattern of cultural interchange, of mutual adaptation,
began in the Middle Colonies and principally in Pennsylvania. Not
in homogeneous New England or homogeneous Virginia, but in the Dutch
Country, where the colonial emigrant peoples - brought hither by
William Penn's patent of freedom - mingled as nowhere else. And
while this mingling of cultures has not been without its problems,
as we point out as we outline, the concept of two opposing worlds
in the Dutch Country, we can be proud to say, "American began
here."
Through migration from Pennsylvania, these mixed patterns, American
rather than European, were transplanted elsewhere.
Hence the term "Dutch Country," as we use it, means
basically the dialect-speaking areas of Pennsylvania. Within Pennsylvania
the Dutch Country is roughly South-Eastern Pennsylvania - the triangle
you can draw yourself by connecting Stroudsburg with Somerset. It
overlaps however into parts of Central Pennsylvania (Centre and
Clinton, Union and Snyder Counties), and spilled over originally
into the counties of Western Maryland and the upper Shenandoah Valley
of Virginia which were until 1850 culturally part of the Dutch Country,
the Mason and Dixon line notwithstanding. It was this area where
the "Pennsylvania Dutch" dialect was spoken and where
the Dutch culture developed - all by 1800.
Nestled smugly amid the lush green valleys and along the lazy
streams of Southeastern Pennsylvania are the world's most elaborately
decorated barns. The Pennsylvania Dutch farmers who live in this
area exhibit to this day the flair for color and design their ancestors
brought from the German Palatinate when they migrated to the New
World in the 17th and 18th Centuries.
Using the expansive blank wall-space of his large barn almost
as a canvas, the Pennsylvania Dutchman expresses himself with a
variety of decorations
He puts scallops on the edges of the
forebay and on the door and window sashes; he paints in false doors,
windows and cornices; he depicts his farm animals in typical bard-yard
scenes. The remaining spaces he fills in with circular designs called
"hex signs", which employ much Christian and pre Christian
symbolism.
Possibly the best evidence to support the contention that these
symbols are "chust for nice" is the fact that only the
sides of the barn visible from the road are decorated. The sides
facing inward are as plain as the mid-western barn.
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