In a small village cemetery, 34 tiny iron crosses poke up through the soil.
Many are twisted and a few are missing completely. On some, the nameplates are visible. On others, they are not.
Each cross is a reminder of a patient once cared for by a hospital that looked after people with disabilities in Nayland – a village that sits between Sudbury in Suffolk and Colchester in Essex.
Most of the patients at the long defunct Jane Walker Hospital, says Tom Weston, a former nurse there, were left and forgotten by their families.
“Ninety per cent were not visited, easily,” he says. “The staff, the maintenance men, the drivers and the cleaners – they became their family.”