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          There is no evidence that the Johnson
      family had such very deep roots in Ash as the Lances, nor did they achieve
      similar prosperity. The Johnson entries in the registers begin with the
      burial of Joan, wife of John Johnson, in 1563 and are sufficiently
      numerous to suggest a continuous occupation into the eighteenth century,
      although not to build a satisfactory pedigree. An unusual number of the
      menfolk were twice married, but neither the first nor the second ventures
      seem to have produced many children. Some of those only once married had
      largish families, but by and large the Johnsons were not a very prolific
      family. 
         In 1664 there were two Johnson households, each headed by a
      William Johnson. One house was rated at three hearths, the other at one
      hearth. The occupant of the more modest establishment may have been a
      William, son of William Johnson, who had been   | 
    
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        christened in 1633. He was not charged to the tax, so
      either his abode was worth less than twenty shillings per annum and not
      subject to parish rates or he was in receipt of’ poor relief. 
         Save for a Thomas Johnson who died in 1780, the last entry
      for this family is of the burial of Henry Johnson in 1718. Three sons and
      two daughters of Henry and his wife Sarah had been christened during the
      years 1690 to 1702, but there is no further record of any of them. On the
      occasion of the baptism of the youngest son, John, in 1702, his father was
      described as blacksmith of ‘ye Borough of Ash’. 
         It is tempting to suppose that the family lived at and gave
      their name to Johnson’s Farm at West Yoke.4 There would have
      been nothing unusual in someone engaged   |