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Zoarist Village in Zoar, Ohio
A group of 300 German
Separatists, who thought that religion should be simple, bereft of
ceremony, and peaceful, arrived from Wurttemburg in Philadelphia in 1817, and, with a loan from the Quakers, bought
5,500 acres in central Ohio and built a village, as was common in Germany,
called Zoar, "a sanctuary from evil." At the beginning, they had
a difficult time surviving; consequently, they pooled all their
resources as communal property in 1819. The Zoarist contracted to build a portion of
the Ohio and Erie Canal that crossed their land and sold food and other
supplies to the workers of the canal; consequently, the community became
worth more than $1 million by 1852 without debts.
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