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A Downland Parish - Ash by Wrotham in Former Times by W. Frank Proudfoot

                   Chapter  4 - Fruits of the Reformation   page 42 

   Unlike Scotgrove, the three principal manors, Ash, alias North Ash, Holiwell and South Ash, had survived the Middle Ages, as also, although rather tenuously, had St John’s Ash. In the reign of Henry VII, it might have seemed that their owners were hardly less durable than the manors themselves. In the reign of Henry VIII, the Hodsolls alone remained impervious to death or dissolution. For a while, theirs was the only one of the manors not in the hands of the Crown. That situation did not last for long. New lords were waiting in the wings.
   Of St John’s Ash there is little more to say. The Hospitallers having largely fused it with their Sutton manor, it was natural that the King should choose the 

same lay owner for both St John’s Sutton and St John’s Ash. His grantee was Sir Maurice Denys, who is said to have been allocated so many possessions of the unfortunate Knights that ‘he acquired the addition of St John’s to his name’, a curious augmentation, to say the least. Thereafter, the descent of the Ash manor, which may have become mainly a matter of entitlement to quit-rents, seems to have followed the same tortuous course as that of the Sutton manor; the latter, at any rate, was divided into moieties in the eighteenth century, but eventually both parts fetched up with the Mumford family of Sutton.1
  
Much more of practical interest to the parish was

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