She was married to former mayor John Kent.[1][2] Together, the couple joined the Mistery of Mercers in 1447.[4]
When her husband died in June 1468,[5] their children were still minors and thus she took over the management of his merchant business.[6] The business dealt in a variety of goods, including cloth, oil, iron and timber through the Port of Hull. Kent was a supplier of iron and other materials to York Minster and sold timber to the York Guild of Corpus Christi.[1] She also invested in at least sixteen business ventures exporting lead and cloth.[2] Kent continued to maintain the businesses until her son Henry came of age in the late 1470s. Unusually for a woman at the time, she was a member of several guilds, including the prestigious St Christopher and St George guild, the Corpus Christi guild and held a seat on the council of the mercer's guild between 1474 and 1475.[1]
She also owned various properties in York and its surrounding regions, including a messuage in Hertergate, which she rented at an annual rate of 1 mark in 1468–1469.[1] In 1468, Kent received a license to have an oratory in her house.[5]
When she wrote her will in 1488, her household included only female servants.[1] Also in her will, she expressed a wish to be buried at All Saints' Church, Pavement, York, the same church where her husband was interred.[5] She also left her son Henry and his children £30. Kent died twelve years later in 1500.[2]