She ran an estate in Kent and she compiled a "Book of Receits" listing a wide range of medicines to treat maladies from headache to plague.
Nothing else is known until 28 May 1616 when she married Sir William Brockman of Newington Manor and went to live at his estates in Kent.
Correspondence indicates that she and William operated as a team and she had financial freedom to spend their money.
William died in 1654 and her son James inherited the estate, but Ann was clearly involved.
[1] She and her husband had five children, Martha, Anne, James, Helen, and Margery, who lived to be adults.