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Place of Birth
Nova Scotia
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Tribal Affiliation
Abenaki
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Surname Heritage
Ireland
Keen History, Family Crest & Coats of Arms
The surname Keen originally appeared in Gaelic as “O Cathain” or “Mac Cathain.”
Early Origins of the Keen family
The surname Keen was first found in County Londonderry (Irish: Doire), a Northern Irish county also known as Derry, in the province of Ulster. At one time, the areas was named O’Cahan Country.
Early History of the Keen family
This web page shows only a small excerpt of our Keen research.
Keen Spelling Variations
The Middle Ages saw a great number of spelling variations for surnames common to the Irish landscape. One reason for these variations is the fact that surnames were not rigidly fixed by this period because the general population had to rely on local official’s understanding of how their name should be spelt, hence spellings in records often changed through a person’s lifetime. The following variations for the name Keen were encountered in the archives: Keane, Kane, Kayne, Keaney, Keny, Keyne, O’Kane, O’Keane, O’Cahan, Cahan, Kean, O’Cain, McCloskey, McCluskey, McClaskey and many more.
Early Notables of the Keen family (pre 1700)
Prominent amongst the family at this time was Ruaidri Dall Ó Catháin (fl. late 16th/early 17th century), an Irish harper and composer; and Echlin O’Kane, one of the most famous of all Irish Harpists. Manus O’Cahan’s Regiment of Foot was a body of soldiers, many of who had fought in Europe in the early years of the Thirty Years War. McColla, and a cousin by marriage, Manus O’Cahan, were thrown together in a joint Catholic-Protestant Scots-Irish peace keeping force in 1641. In one Ulster battle, McColla was badly wounded. O’Cahan personally dragged his giant 7-foot-tall (2.1 m) friend.
Keen World Ranking
In the United States, the name Keen is the 1,624th most popular surname with an estimated 19,896 people with that name. [1] However, in Australia, the name Keen is ranked the 789thmost popular surname with an estimated 4,952 people with that name. [2] And in New Zealand, the name Keen is the 573rd popular surname with an estimated 1,243 people with that name. [3] The United Kingdom ranks Keen as 760th with 8,814 people. [4]
Keen migration to the United States +
Ireland became inhospitable for many native Irish families in the 19th centuries. Poverty, lack of opportunities, high rents, and discrimination forced thousands to leave the island for North America. The largest exodus of Irish settlers occurred with the Great Potato Famine of the late 1840s. For these immigrants the journey to British North America and the United States was long and dangerous and many did not live to see the shores of those new lands. Those who did make it were essential to the development of what would become two of the wealthiest and most powerful nations of the world. These Irish immigrants were not only important for peopling the new settlements and cities, they also provided the manpower needed for the many industrial and agricultural projects so essential to these growing nations. Immigration and passenger lists have documented the arrival of various people bearing the name Keen to North America: