Catharine Kenyon

Brief Life History of Catharine

When Catharine Kenyon was born about 1785, in Richmond, Washington, Rhode Island, United States, her father, William Kenyon, was 31 and her mother, Nancy Greene, was 25.

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Family Time Line

William Kenyon
1755–1841
Nancy Greene
1761–1824
Joseph Kenyon
1772–1840
Catharine Kenyon
1785–
Lewis Kenyon
1774–1849
Hannah Kenyon
1778–1794
Sarah Kenyon
1780–1860
William Kenyon Jr
1785–1830
Sally Sarah Kenyon
1786–1868
Jeremiah Austen Kenyon
1796–1843
Joseph Kenyon
1800–

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    World Events (3)

    1786 · Shays' Rebellion

    Caused by war veteran Daniel Shays, Shays' Rebellion was to protest economic and civil rights injustices that he and other farmers were seeing after the Revolutionary War. Because of the Rebellion it opened the eyes of the governing officials that the Articles of Confederation needed a reform. The Rebellion served as a guardrail when helping reform the United States Constitution.

    1787 · The Making of the U.S. Constitution.

    The Philadelphia Convention was intended to be the first meeting to establish the first system of government under the Articles of Confederation. From this Convention, the Constitution of the United States was made and then put into place making it one of the major events in all American History.

    1790 · 13th State

    On May 29, 1790, Rhode Island becomes the last of the original 13 colonies to become a state.

    Name Meaning

    English (Lancashire): habitational name from a place near Warrington, which is of uncertain etymology. There was formerly an ancient burial mound there and Ekwall has speculated that the name is a shortened form of a British name composed of the elements crūc ‘mound’ + a personal name cognate with Welsh Einion (see Eynon ).

    Irish: Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Coinín ‘son of Coinín’, a byname based on a diminutive of cano ‘wolf’, also Anglicized as Canning and Cunneen . The similarity to the borrowed word coinín ‘coney, rabbit’ has sometimes caused this name to be Anglicized as Rabbitt .

    Irish: Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Fhinghin, ‘son of Finghen’, a personal name meaning ‘fair-born’.

    Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.

    Possible Related Names

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