Mennonite Life is committed to providing you with engaging content that celebrates history, promotes education, and fosters community.
May 6
Mennonite Life joins our global faith community in celebrating the 500th anniversary ...
Learn MoreMay 10 @ 9:30 am
Celebrate 50 years of the Biblical Tabernacle Experience in Lancaster County! This ev...
Learn MoreMay 31 @ 7:00 pm
Join us for a community hymn sing celebrating the 500th Anniversary of Anabaptism. So...
Learn MoreJune 9
This is a week-long day camp for youth age 11–15. All participants must be register...
Learn MoreJune 26 @ 7:00 pm
Join Mennonite Life for an evening with Christopher Scott, author of Chain of Title:...
Learn MoreJuly 11 @ 6:30 pm
Join us in the Community Room for a Rare & Used Book Auction. The auction is held...
Learn MoreJuly 22
Mennonite Life joins the Young Center for Anabaptist and Pietist Studies in presentin...
Learn MoreAugust 4 @ 7:00 pm
Join us for our Annual Storytelling Night at Landisville Mennonite Church, featuring ...
Learn MoreAugust 22 @ 10:00 am
Join us for a unique behind-the-scenes look at the essential work that goes into pres...
Learn MoreSeptember 11
This year’s Bookworm Frolic takes place Thursday, September 11 through Saturda...
Learn MoreOctober 4 @ 10:00 am
The annual Maize & Snitz Fest will take place at the 1719 Museum on Saturday, Oct...
Learn MoreOctober 23 @ 6:30 pm
Join Mennonite Life for an evening with Mark Kelley, author of An Uncommon Woman: Th...
Learn MoreWe’re working towards a world where people learn their own and others’ stories, across boundaries!
Mennonite Life does our small part in bringing about that world. We share items and stories featuring the lived experiences and faith values of Lancaster Mennonites and interrelated communities. What’s your story? How are you preserving it, and who have you shared it with?
Chances are, someone else has wondered the same thing! Start here with your questions.
The sandstone used for the Herr House was quarried on-site.
Christian Herr was a prominent leader in the 18th century Mennonite Community. Years after his death Lancaster Mennonites were still referred to as the Christian Herr Party.
Indigenous Peoples taught the Herr family and other Mennonites how to hunt game, clear heavily forested land, and how to identify native plants.