Admitted to the New York bar in January 1785, Kent began practicing law in
Poughkeepsie, New York and neighboring areas. Voters in Dutchess County elected him in 1791 and 1792–93 as their representative in the
New York State Assembly. He was also the Federalist candidate in the January 1793 election for the
5th congressional district, losing to
Theodorus Bailey. However, he had married and supporting his growing family based on his scholarship and nearly rural legal practice proved difficult. In 1793, Kent moved his family to New York City, where he had been appointed the first professor of law in
Columbia College, where he would teach (part-time) for the next five years. He was soon appointed a
master in chancery for the city. Kent again served in the Assembly in 1796–97. In 1797, he was appointed
Recorder of New York City and in 1798, a justice of the
New York Supreme Court, in 1804 Chief Justice, and in 1814
Chancellor of New York. Kent was also elected a member of the
American Antiquarian Society in 1814. In 1821, Kent was a member of the
New York State Constitutional Convention where he unsuccessfully opposed the raising of the property qualification for
African American voters. Two years later, Chancellor Kent reached the constitutional age limit and retired from his office, but was re-elected to his former chair. He was elected to the
American Philosophical Society in 1829. He lived in retirement in
Summit, New Jersey between 1837 and 1847 in a simple four-roomed cottage (the original cottage no longer stands and has been incorporated into a large mansion at 50 Kent Place) which he referred to as 'my Summit Lodge', a name that has been offered as the derivation for the city's name. ==Work==