In the Rector’s chancel of Ash church is
a small mural monument the effigies whereof, a man and a woman, have
kneeled opposite each other these three hundred and seventy odd years. The
man, bald, bearded and wearing the gown of a doctor in Divinity, is the
Thomas Maxfield who succeeded his father as rector of Ash in 1575. The
woman is his wife Joan, but whether his first wife Joan or his second wife
Joan is a matter of some nicety. Unlike some other parts of the memorial,
the effigies are not of the highest quality.1 They now look the
worse for wear.
Shepherd of his flock, preacher, a man of handsome presence
and powerful intellect, such, according to his epitaph, was Thomas
Maxfield. The tribute is rendered in Latin, but there is no reason to
suppose that the |
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parishioners of Ash would have dissented, had they
been able to understand it.
Maxfield had become rector of Ridley in 1562, an even more
improbable cure than Ash for a man of such learning. He continued
incumbent of Ridley for more than forty years, but for the last thirty
years of his life his activities centred upon Ash.2 In
his first year at Ash, his wife Joan presented him with a daughter, who
was christened Dorothy. A son, William, was born in 1578, but no more is
learnt of him and it was Dorothy who eventually became the doctor’s
heir. In Elizabethan times, marriage at the age of fifteen or sixteen
would have been nothing out of the way and she was probably the Dorothy Maxfield
who was married |