| Margaret at Wode already mentioned. She died at
      Gravesend, although Ash was her birthplace arid she  had lately lived
      there.11  However, Margaret was a wealthy widow, possessed
      of lands in Stansted, Wrotham, Kingsdown and Meopham, and so rather too
      grand a person to give much clue as to the generality of the practice in
      the days before the Elizabethan Poor Law.The converse case of people being buried away from their home
      parish was not unusual. In such instances, the expression ‘Stranger’
      was often entered in parish registers, but it was rarely used at Ash.
      Almost always, strangers were buried in the alien parish because they had
      died there, but occasionally a person was buried in a parish with which he
      had no apparent link and in which he did not die.
 |  |  
         One burial at Ash for which there seems no very obvious
      reason was that, in September 1714, of ‘Martha d of Lionel Daniel Esqr
      & Martha his wife of ye parish of Fawkham’. Daniel hailed from
      Surrey and his wife was a daughter of James Master, who built the lovely
      Yotes Court at Mereworth; they had been married some four years previously
      at Kingsdown church.12  Subsequently, the Daniels lived
      for some years at Pennis and the little girl now buried was one of twin
      daughters born to them who were christened at Fawkham in April, 1713.
      The vagaries of this life are reflected in the fact that this child died
      an infant and her twin sister, Elizabeth, lived to marry her distant
      cousin, George Byng, third Viscount Torrington and became ancestress of
      a long line of Lords Torrington. In course of time, one of them  |