Of course yes, I do not know the numbers.
There were some there, before Elmo Stoll a post Amish elder, tried to start his own communal community, which has been parceled out after his death.
I believe two smaller splinter communities, of Elmo Stoll's still survive.
I know there are Amish communities in Kentucky, very near the border of Tennessee as well.
no they stay thre not live there
There are a few Amish settlements in Mississippi.
About 4,661,900 people live in Alabama.
Ohio i think
About 1500.
3,554
No Amish people also reside in Spain, Mongolia, and Canada. They originated in the back woods of Shri Lanka. They get there name from the ruler of Shri Lanka, Amish Shirala. Their native tongue is similar to that of the blue bottom baboon.
Faunsdale is a town in Marengo County, Alabama, United States. At the 2000 census the population was 87. The town was named for nearby Faunsdale Plantation.[1] Faunsdale is home to a medium-sized community of Amish Mennonites and the only Amish Mennonite community in this area of Alabama outside of Greensboro, Alabama. The town is also home to the only Amish Mennonite Church in the area, Cedarcrest Mennonite Church.
they grow crops and stuffs
The majority of the people in Alabama live in the urban areas.
Amish or Renaissance period.
Not usually. Most Jewish people prefer towns or cities, while the Amish are in such locales as rural Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois.
The population of Gallant, Alabama, is 855.