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John Keenen

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John Keenen

Birth
Nantmeal Village, Chester County, Pennsylvania, USA
Death
8 Dec 1880 (aged 72)
Chester, Delaware County, Pennsylvania, USA
Burial
Aston, Delaware County, Pennsylvania, USA Add to Map
Plot
Plot 2
Memorial ID
View Source
Son of James and Anna M. [nee SHENEMAN] KEENEN. Husband of Susan F. [nee WORRILOW] KEENEN. John Keenen was a sawyer at the port of Chester, Delaware County of Pennsylvania.

John took the surname of KEENEN, the same as his father's surname spelling of KEENEN. The family Irish/Gaelic surname was originally: O'Cianán.

Keenan (Cianán) is a male Irish name which means "ancient, distant". Keenan is an Anglicisation of the Irish name Cianán which is a diminutive of Cian. The Ó Cianáin clan (Keenan) were the traditional historians to the McGuire clan.

Recorded as O'Keenan and more usually Keenan, this is an Irish surname. Found mainly in the Ulster and northern counties of Fermanagh and Monaghan, it originates from the ancient pre 10th century Gaelic name O' Cianain meaning "The descendant of the faithful one" or similar. It may not have been entirely coincidence that the clan was famous throughout the Medieval Period for producing both high-ranking members of the church, and early historians, in several cases the same thing. The first recorded scribe was Adam O' Cianain, who was also the canon of Lisgool in Fermanagh. He is mentioned in the annals known as the "Four Masters" as being the historian to the famous Maguires of County Fermanagh.
Son of James and Anna M. [nee SHENEMAN] KEENEN. Husband of Susan F. [nee WORRILOW] KEENEN. John Keenen was a sawyer at the port of Chester, Delaware County of Pennsylvania.

John took the surname of KEENEN, the same as his father's surname spelling of KEENEN. The family Irish/Gaelic surname was originally: O'Cianán.

Keenan (Cianán) is a male Irish name which means "ancient, distant". Keenan is an Anglicisation of the Irish name Cianán which is a diminutive of Cian. The Ó Cianáin clan (Keenan) were the traditional historians to the McGuire clan.

Recorded as O'Keenan and more usually Keenan, this is an Irish surname. Found mainly in the Ulster and northern counties of Fermanagh and Monaghan, it originates from the ancient pre 10th century Gaelic name O' Cianain meaning "The descendant of the faithful one" or similar. It may not have been entirely coincidence that the clan was famous throughout the Medieval Period for producing both high-ranking members of the church, and early historians, in several cases the same thing. The first recorded scribe was Adam O' Cianain, who was also the canon of Lisgool in Fermanagh. He is mentioned in the annals known as the "Four Masters" as being the historian to the famous Maguires of County Fermanagh.


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