Kent graduated
Harvard College in the class of 1727. where charges of heresy were soon leveled against him "due to his public questioning of the doctrines of the Trinity, of Absolute Election, and of Infant Damnation." Following his dismissal, Kent successfully sued the Town of Marlborough for the balance of his fees and salary due. He handled divorces, and represented numerous slaves in their attempts to gain their freedom, including the case of a slave Pompey suing his master Benjamin Faneuil. Kent was the first lawyer in the
United States to win a case to free a slave,
Jenny Slew, in 1766. He also won a trial in the
Old County Courthouse for a slave named Watson (1771). Kent also handled Lucy Pernam's divorce and the
freedom suits of Rose and Salem Orne. On 1 April 1776, Kent became Attorney General of Massachusetts. Kent was occasionally a guest at the
Old Colony Club, whose members included
John Adams. Kent has been described as one of Adams's "role-models in the elite of the Boston bar."
American Revolution Kent was a senior member of the
Sons of Liberty in Boston and maintained correspondence with
John Wilkes. In response, Adams assured Kent that the "'Declarations in Words' of What is every day manifested in Deeds of the most determined Nature" was forthcoming. On August 4, 1776, Kent wrote
Samuel Adams, "It is GOD's doing the bringing about his truly astonishing and unparalled'd
union the
declaration of Independence." The loyalist
Sampson Salter Blowers married Kent's daughter Elizabeth. When the Revolutionary War began, as Attorney General, Kent was forced to briefly to hold his son-in-law Blowers in jail for being a loyalist. Governor
Thomas Cushing sent Kent to Halifax to retrieve the probate records for
Suffolk County, Massachusetts after the Revolution in 1784. The records had been taken by the son of
Edward Winslow (scholar) and given to the loyalist judge
Foster Hutchinson, who had left Boston on the eve of the Revolution (1776). Nova Scotia Governor John Parr facilitated the negotiations with Foster, which led to Cushing returning to Massachusetts with the legal documents. ==Personal life==