It is strange that the Middletons should
have faded from the picture so quickly after the Lances. For centuries the
two families had tilled the soil of Ash, latterly, maybe always, side by
side. Of the 11 families who had been major farmers in the pariah, only
the Hodsolls now remained and the sands were running out for them.
It must have been the Middleton family who gave their name to
Middleton Farm across the parish boundary in Longfield, but they have left
no such memorial in Ash. Nor, apparently, has Ash any claim to the longest
lived of Middletons in these parts - John, erstwhile shepherd of Hartley,
who died in the Dartford Union workhouse in 1891 at the age of one hundred
and three.
Begining with the burgling of Thomas Scudder’ a house at
Horton Kirby in the year 1451, references to the Scudders or Skudders in
the records of North-West Kent are legion. One branch of the family long
remained by the banks of the Darent, farming much land around South Darenth
and, in the seventeenth century, |
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providing a Puritan flank to the Cavalier enclave up
stream and an unwelcome presence to a Gifford who lived in their midst.
Some Scudders had by that time already followed the Pilgrim Fathers to the
New World, where a flourishing Scudder Association now admirably combines
with its philanthropic purposes a watchful eye on family history. Others
still live in these parts.
Unlike the Hodsolls, the Lances and the Middletons, the
Scudders did not maintain a continuous presence in Ash, although entries
for them recur in the ancient registers from 1571 to 1810 and they were
never far away. Actually, some of those who were christened or buried at
Ash were brought from Stansted, which parish bites into Ash within hailing
distance of Ash Street itself. There can be little doubt that some of the
Scudders lived nearer to Ash church than to Stansted church and, not
improbably, their abode may have been Rumney Farm, just down |