Beiler was born in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, one of eight children born into an Old Order Amish family, on January 16, 1949. When she was three years old, her parents made the decision to join the Amish Mennonite church, meaning that, though the family retained many Amish practices, such as farming and using a horse and buggy, they were allowed limited use of modern amenities, such as electricity. She didn't graduate from high school, instead leaving her studies after completing the 8th grade, as most Amish children did in that time.
Career
In 1987, Beiler started making hand-rolled pretzels at a market stand inMaryland. She then rented a stand in February 1988 in Downingtown, Pennsylvania, and called it Auntie Anne's Pretzels. The Beilers decided to tweak the recipe and found success. Anne had no previous business experience and only a ninth grade education, but she had eight stand alone stores and her first Auntie Anne's Soft Pretzels store in a mall after a year. The only advertising the company had was the rave reviews from their customers. In 1989, the first Auntie Anne's franchises opened throughout Central Pennsylvania.
Written works
In 2002, Beiler wrote a story book style autobiography entitled Auntie Anne: My Story with illustrations by artist Frieman Stoltzfus. In 2008, Beiler penned a memoir with her nephew Shawn Smucker entitled Twist of Faith: The Story of Anne Beiler, Founder of Auntie Anne's Pretzels published by Thomas Nelson Inc.
Beiler has two sisters, Fi and Becky, and is married to Jonas Z. Beiler, an author and family counselor, by whom she has three children, daughters LaWonna, Angela Joy, and Joy LaVale. Her middle daughter, Angela Joy Beiler, died at 19 months old, in a farming accident involving a Bobcat tractor driven by Beiler's sister Fi on the family's property in Pennsylvania. Jonas and Anne married in 1968, when she was 18 years old and he was 21. Like Beiler, her husband was raised in an Old Order Amish family. By LaWonna, she has grandchildren, Trinity and Ryan, and through her seven siblings, she has more than thirty nieces and nephews. Dyslexia affects several members of her family. Beiler describes, in her memoir, her church's pastor having maintained secret sexual relationships with her and her sisters, and that he had also molested her daughter LaWonna. Beiler holds two honorary doctorates, one from Elizabethtown College and another from the Eastern University, both schools located in Pennsylvania. Like most Amish children in her time, she did not complete high school but she did go onto obtain her G.E.D. at the age of 50. Beiler also serves on the Board of Directors for the Museum of the Bible, affiliated with David Green, the founder of Hobby Lobby, which opened in 2017.