Known in Upstate New York as "The Judge", Kinney was born in Ogden Township,
Monroe County, New York on June 20, 1860. His parents were William Deegan Kinney (1833–1888) and Julia Hough Kinney, of Adams Basin and later of
Spencerport, New York. William D. Kinney was a Democratic activist, clerk of the town of Ogden, and weighmaster on the
Erie Canal at Rochester from 1878 to 1879. The elder Kinney emigrated from Nappanee, Ontario in 1855, having settled at Erinville, Ontario during the Great Famine. The family was native to
Coolkenno on the
Wicklow–
Carlow county border,
Leinster Province, in the years when
Ireland was still a colony of the
United Kingdom. Maternally, Judge Kinney's family were from
Ballina, Co. Tipperary. They settled at
Herkimer, New York during the same period. Both families anglicized their names from "Kenny" to "Kinney" and "Hough" to "Howe" in order to mitigate discrimination and assimilate within the American Protestant majority. Kinney's great uncle, John Howe of Boston, mustered and fought with the
28th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment during the
American Civil War (1861–1865); his cousin James Howe of Herkimer mustered with the
22nd Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry. He was also a first cousin to the Rev.
John J. Cavanaugh, president of
Notre Dame University, and his brother, the Rev. Frank Cavanaugh. His granddaughter, Mrs. Captain Donald J. Meyer, USN, was sister-in-law to Mrs. George A. Meyer, niece to the Rev.
Edward B. Bunn, S.J., president and chancellor of
Georgetown University. John F. Kinney himself was educated at the public Union School of
Spencerport, New York and took the collegiate course at Saint Joseph's College, Buffalo, New York (later
Niagara University). He read the law with William H. Bowman and then matriculated at the
Albany Law School, boarding with the Edward and Mary (Foohy) Hanlon family on Eagle Street, Albany, next to the
Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception. His brother-in-law was the Reverend
John J. Hanlon. Graduating from law school in 1881, Judge Kinney returned to Rochester and was admitted to the bar. He practiced law. In 1883, he married Elizabeth "Libbie" J.
Hanlon, daughter of his landlady during his studies at Albany Law School. The Hanlons were native to
County Armagh. The Kinney family would eventually include eldest son, William Edward Kinney, an engineer and Rochester public works contractor; Helen Regina Kinney, a health care worker; John Joseph Kinney (spouse first to Marie Elizabeth Tobin and after her death, Kathryn J. Fitzsimmons), an engineer with the City of Rochester; and Dora Ellen Kinney, an instructor. == Professional and political career ==