A common sight in Amish country is the “phone booth”. It was permitted beginning in the 1950s, when more Amish were forced to go into businesses and to use phones for emergency purposes and to contact doctors, dentists, veterinarians and food dealers. This community phone building, which often resembles an outhouse, is typically built at the end of a farm lane and shared by several neighboring families. The phone is not in the house and the number is unlisted and is used essentially for necessary outgoing calls, not socializing.

An uncommon sight are Amish cemeteries. They usually are hidden plots of land amongst the farmland surrounded by simple white fences.

