| Three people died from smallpox and ague and fever,
      brain fever and rheumatic fever each claimed one victim. 'Fever' which
      no doubt covered a variety of ailments not more precisely diagnosed,
      accounted for a further twenty-nine deaths, five being of children.Sixteen adult deaths were attributed to dropsy and another to
      dropsy of the chest. Bowel disorders, sometimes merely described as such,
      caused the deaths of six adults and. seven children. Five adults died from
      paralytic strokes and two from apoplexy. Cancer is only specifically
      mentioned in three cases. Rather surprisingly, there were only two deaths
      in childbed; these occurred within a few weeks of each other. Whooping
      cough claimed six children and measles two. Causes of death entered in
      either one or two instances included abscess, asthma, croup, fistula,
      flux, jaundice, pleurisy, rupture, stone and thrush.
 In five cases, the diagnosis was no more explicit than
      ‘Sudden death’ or ‘Suddenly’. Some, not all, of these were deemed
      to merit further light by way of the ‘Occasional Remarks’ column.
      That, for example, was called in aid to explain that Thomas Gladdish, a
      local farmer who died in 1801 at the age of forty-seven, ‘Dropp’d from
      his horse at Ridley’ and that Elizabeth Gladdish, who died aged seventy-three
      in 1804, was ‘Pound dead in a field near the Church’.
 A few instances of accidental or violent death are
 |  |  recorded. In 1801, Samuel Tiesdell, a farmer in his
      middle thirties, was accidentally drowned in a pond at West Yoke. An
      infant died from ‘A Burn’ in 1809. In the following year a boy aged
      five died, allegedly from ‘Bruises’, after being ‘run over by a
      waggon in the hay-field’. The most sombre entry is of a boy of thirteen,
      buried in 1811. The cause of death is given as ‘Strangulation’; there
      is no occasional remark.In seven cases, no cause of death was attempted. Five were
      infants, one an elderly widow who had died at Maidstone and the other an
      old man who had been ‘Found dead in his own house’.
 The wealth of detail provided by Mr Lambard and his successor
      relates only, of course, to people who were buried at Ash. Those included
      nearly thirty who had died elsewhere, usually not far away, and were
      brought to Ash for burial. That figure can, at best, give only rough
      guidance as to the number of people likely to have died in Ash and been
      buried in other parishes.
 A man buried in 1807 had died in Guy’s Hospital. The only
      comparable reference is to the death of Joseph Wiffen in 1794; he had been
      ‘Sent to the hospital’ (not named) ‘but returned uncured’. When
      reflecting upon this seeming dearth of hospital treatment, it should be
      remembered that of their nature successes would not have found mention in
      this register.
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