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

               Chapter 12 - The Fulljames Survey of 1792 continued  page 156

Between them the holdings of the nine major proprietors, Multon Lambard, Mrs Hodsoll, Thomas Whitaker, William Evelyn, James Lance, Thomas Coventry and Messrs Kebble, Cox and Budgen, made up rather more than two-thirds of the parish. Of the remaining one thousand-odd acres, upwards of three hundred acres were accounted for by ninety-nine acres that formed the Ash portion of Pells Farm in Kingsdown, owned by a Mr Round and let to a Mr Taylor, the seventy-nine acres lying to the south of Billet Hill that belonged to Mr and Mrs Tasker 13 and were tended by Joseph Oliver, the seventy-six acres of Upper Pettings, which belonged to Mr Thorpe and were farmed by Henry Thorpe and the fifty-eight acres of Rands House Farm, owned by Joseph Fletcher and worked by Michael Fletcher.
   The two biggest tenant farmers in Ash itself were Charles Whitehead and Henry Thorpe. Numerically, Thorpe was a very short bead in front of Whitehead, his mixed bag of holdings at Pettings and elsewhere in the Hodsoll Street area totalling three hundred and fifty-five acres, whereas Whitehead’s much more compact Ash Place and Pease Hill Farms together comprised about one acre less. Whitehead had more under 

the plough, two hundred and seven acres as opposed to Thorpe’s one hundred and sixty-seven; that difference has largely accounted for by Thorpe having one hundred and thirty-four acres of woodland, as against Whitehead’s eighty-three. Charles Hodsoll no doubt farmed more extensively than either Thorpe or Whitehead, but his South Ash Farm, or rather that part of it that lay in Ash parish, extended only to two hundred and ninety-one acres. That was five acres more than the sum of John Middleton’s two holdings, West Yoke and North Ash, alias Turner’s.
   In 1792 Idleigh Farm, of which one hundred and thirty-nine acres were in Ash, was in the tenure of James Wade, but it is first appropriate to say something of his predecessors and, more especially, of the Allen family, one of whose number was, in the nineteenth century, to become owner as well as occupier of Idleigh.
   The story begins with Robert and Mercy Allen, who flourished at Hadlow in the second half of the seventeenth century. Of the family born to them at that place, Robert Allen, the son and heir, settled at Scadbury, in Southfleet, and one of the daughters, Mary,

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