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Iowa Amish 20 images Created 4 Aug 2011

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  • A horse and buggy travels past a row of cars outside a business in Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
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  • An Amish farmer rides a disc plow drawn by six horses west of Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish05.JPG
  • An Amish farmer rides a disc plow drawn by six horses west of Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish07.JPG
  • An Amish man rides a horse carriage south of Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish23.JPG
  • An Amish farmer pitchforks heaps of alfalfa to his goat herd in his barn near Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish20.JPG
  • An Amish farmer leans on his pitchfork while feeding alfalfa to his goat herd on a farm near Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish21.JPG
  • A horse and buggy travels a roadway west of Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish03cg.JPG
  • Mud-caked wheels on horse carriages line up outside Brodhead Collar Shop, where horse collars are made by hand near  Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish16.JPG
  • An Amish worker gathers leather to be sewn into a horse collar inside Brodhead Collar Shop near  Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish13.JPG
  • Handwritten messages on a tabletop mix with buckles and leather straps inside Brodhead Collar Shop, where the Amish make horse collars by hand near  Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish11.JPG
  • Scraps of leather cover the floor as an Amish worker uses a foot pedal to drive a sewing machine inside Brodhead Collar Shop, where the Amish make horse collars by hand near  Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish12.JPG
  • An Amish man operates a press cutting large sections of leather inside Brodhead Collar Shop, where horse collars are made by hand near  Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   The Amish live life without modern-day conveniences such as electricity, and most businesses conduct their work with hand tools by window light.  Davis County is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish14.JPG
  • A worn pair of work gloves lies near a scale inside Brodhead Collar Shop, where the Amish make horse collars by hand near  Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish10.JPG
  • Notched wood panels wait to be constructed into dresser drawers inside the shop at the Amish-owned T-Corner Furniture store in Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish09.JPG
  • An Amish man in a horse carriage shares the road with a vehicle east of Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish02cg.JPG
  • An Amish woman walks a gravel road south of Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish17.JPG
  • A horse and buggy shares a gravel road with an automobile south of Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish19cg.JPG
  • Amish schoolchildren play outside their schoolhouse south of Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish24.JPG
  • An Amish store, lower left, playground and schoolhouse fill the horizon along a country road south of Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish25.JPG
  • An Amish farmer walks along a clothesline on his farm near Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish22.JPG