Kent family.

Ira Rich Kent (1876-1945) and Louise "Lulie" Andrews Kent (1866-1969) had three children, all of whom were born in Brookline, Massachusetts, and raised in Brookline and Calais, Vermont. The eldest child, Elizabeth Van Rensselaer "Kenty" Kent (1913-1985), was born on April 28, 1913, attended the Park and Winsor schools in Brookline, and graduated from Bryn Mawr College (Pa.) in 1935. She married Lorie Tarshis (1911-1993) of Toronto, Canada, a professor of economics, in 1936. They had three children, Susan Hollister (b. ca 1942), Andrew Lorie (1944-2006), and Janet Hope (b. 1946) Tarshis. In 1952, Kenty divorced Dr. Tarshis and married Albert Gay, an artist. They had a daughter, Olivia Gay. That marriage later ended in divorce. Kenty earned two master's degrees, one in psychology and one in social work. She authored several books and articles for Houghton Mifflin and other publishers, both alone and in collaboration with her mother, and served as Arts in Review editor for Vermont Life magazine. Beginning around 1970, she was employed as a social worker in Hanover, New Hampshire.

Hollister "Sam" Kent, the second child of Ira Rich and Louise Andrews Kent, was born on March 1, 1916. He was educated at the Milton (Mass.) Academy, Harvard College (B.S. in fine arts and architecture), and Cornell University (Master of Regional Planning and Ph.D. in Regional Planning and Public Administration). While a teacher at Fountain Valley School in Colorado, he was drafted into the U.S. Army and served in the 10th Mountain Division during World War II. He was injured in Italy and earned a Bronze Star and a Purple Heart. He married Fifine Johnson, daughter of Marjorie and Jerry Johnson of Plainfield, Vermont. They had a daughter, Margaret Ann Kent, in 1946. Their marriage ended in divorce after Margaret's birth. Hollister next married Edith Rudd in 1947, with whom he had four children, Bruce Rairdon, Polly Curtiss, Timothy Rudd, and Nicholas C. Kent. After World War II, Hollister Kent taught architecture at Hofstra College (N.Y.) and Cornell. From 1954-1955, he was general manager in charge of site selection for Brasilia, future capital of Brazil. From there, he moved to British Columbia as director of planning for the town of Kitimat. In 1958, he became Director of City and Regional Planning at the firm of Sargent-Webster-Crenshaw & Folley in Fayetteville, N.Y. Near the end of his life, he worked in Jordan designing refugee settlement communities. On July 9, 1974, Hollister Kent, age 58, died of a heart attack while attempting to rescue his uncle on Mount Katahdin in Maine.

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