
Grapevine, Texas – Before Anne Baylor became the founder of Anne Anne Anne, she was a barefoot girl raised on an Amish farm, growing up in a world of tradition, simplicity and work ethic. Her life appears to follow the classic American arc, from her seemingly understated roots to the construction of a global soft pretzel empire.
But behind that journey is a story of faith, survival, suffering and redness.
“I grew up in an old-order Amish house. It didn’t meant horses, buggies, or electricity,” Baylor told Christian Post. “In the end, my parents moved to the ‘Black Car Amish’. This has made modern convenience possible. But the value remained the same.
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From her early days, Baylor learned that faith and family were paramount. Her parents taught faith through example, consistency and strength, she said. Around the dinner table, a sacred and three ritual, she absorbed the mantras directing most of the younger years. “Life is good, and God is tough.”
“I wanted to be a good girl and follow all 10 commandments,” she recalls. “I lived with the fear that if I did something bad, God would be unhappy with me.”
In 1975, five years after her marriage to her high school girlfriend, Jonas, Baylor’s 19-month-old daughter, Angela, was killed in a tragic farming accident. “It was just the beginning of my sadness,” she said. “I knew where Angie had gone, but she descended into emotional and spiritual darkness.”
After that, it was a quiet sadness for years. Outwardly, she remained the same strong, loyal woman that everyone had expected to become her. She was dismantling inwardly.
“Everyone told me how strong I was, but I wasn’t. I was a little dead every day,” she said.
The turning point came when her pastor invited her to his office. On the surface, they provided counseling. Instead, he sexually assaulted her, and the abuse lasted almost seven years.
“I didn’t understand what happened. I knew I wasn’t allowed to tell anyone,” she said. “He told me that no one would believe me, and I believed him.”
Baylor said she lived in a world of secrets, shame and mental chaos for years. The abuse was torn apart through her marriage, her identity, and God’s understanding. At her lowest point, she weighed only 90 pounds and felt totally alone.
“I was a bad wife, a bad mother. I felt I was not allowed. I believed I had to pay for my sins,” she recalled.
But one morning, after praying for rescue for years, something changed. “The Holy Spirit spoke to me: “I will rise from your knees and go and tell Jonas,” she said. That moment changed everything in 1982.
In tears she confessed to her husband about her years of abuse and silence. His response was the first spark of healing, she said. “He said, “If you feel you have to go, I’ll help you pack your bags. But don’t leave in the middle of the night. And I’ll take the girl with you. They need a mother.”
Instead of leaving, they stayed. together.
Remembering that the path to healing was long, the couple sought help from the counselor whom they told Jonas. That supernatural love saved them, Baylor said.

Five years after that confession, in 1987, Anne and Jonas opened a soft pretzel stand in the Pennsylvania farmers’ market. It was meant to be a modest business to support Jonas’ new counselling centre, but the pretzels took off and Anne’s Aunt was born.
“There’s no capital, no business plan, no education outside of 8th grade,” she said. “But God had a plan. He saw who I really was. He taught me and led me at every stage of the road.”
Today, Antie Anne’s is the world’s largest hand-rolled soft pretzel franchise with over 1,700 locations. The chain has locations in over 25 countries, with most units located in malls, airports and outlet centres, but according to Franchise Times, the chain’s first drive-thru location recently opened.
Baylor believes that the power of her story lies not in her success, but in her willingness to break the silence. “The secret will kill you, but confession, it will break the base,” she said.
She is now traveling through a country that shares her testimony, empowers women to speak up, and helps others understand the transformative power of transparency, prayer and grace. In 2018, she founded Broken Silence. This is a ministry focused on helping women live a confession and recovery lifestyle.
Her 2019 book, The Secret, is inside, telling the pain she endured and the redness she found. “I want others to know that there is more in life than they see right now. On our darkest day, we can’t imagine it,” she said. “But there is more God.”
Beiler is currently serving as a member of the Bible Museum and continues to defend faith, healing and vulnerability. Her mission, she said, is to help others find freedom that she is attacked through Christ.
“I’m right now, the truth is that life is difficult, but God is good,” she said. “I’m not confused about it anymore. Jesus said, “In this world, you are troubled and guaranteed, but I will cheer for overcoming the world.”
“Jesus is not a partial Savior,” she said. “He doesn’t just hand over a piece of what you’ve lost. He offers you complete redemption. But we have to work together. It starts with a confession.”
Leah M. Crett is a reporter for the Christian Post. She can contact leah.klett@christianpost.com